delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellant was convicted by the court sitting without a jury of assault with intent to rape and murder in the first degree and sentenced to a life term under the jurisdiction of the Department of Correction. He contends on this appeal that the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions.
The nude body of Catherine Kantros was discovered in an open field located near the Beltway in Baltimore County on the morning of November 29, 1967. An autopsy was performed which indicated that numerous lacerations about the face and head of the victim had been inflicted shortly prior to or at the time of death, and that death occurred from loss of blood due to multiple stab wounds in her back and neck. The victim’s clothing, consisting of a pair of boots, red pants, and black panties, was discovered scattered alongside the roadway near John Avenue, that location being about one and four-tenth mile from where the deceased was found.
William Effinger testified at the trial that at approximately 5 :00 p.m. on November 28, 1967, he was parked in a white Valiant automobile in an alley behind the Carousel Lounge in Baltimore City, with Cathy Kantros, appellant, Garson Jackson and Romero Wright, the latter being the driver of the vehicle; that the others walked away from the automobile leaving Cathy and appellant in the back seat, Wright informing the others that appellant would attempt to “have sexual intercourse with Cathy and that if he did we all would”; that Cathy was “fairly drunk” when they returned to the automobile a short time later with a bottle of liquor; that Cathy threw the bottle to the pavement and began screaming that she would not retrieve it, and saying “let me go”; that because she was so noisy they drove from the area, with Cathy continuing to scream and attempting to leave the automobile, and appellant restraining her and slapping her face until she “passed out”; and that they continued
Effinger further testified that by the time they had stopped, appellant already had pulled Cathy’s sweater up so that it covered her face; that Wright pulled her boots and slacks off as appellant took her blouse and bra off; that some of Cathy’s clothing was left in the back of the automobile, while some was discarded outside; that they left appellant alone in the automobile with Cathy, but returned when they thought they saw another automobile approaching; that he (Effinger) observed that Cathy still appeared unconscious and appellant “was laying on top of her” and “it looked like he was moving, he was moving his body”; that they drove a short distance away and again all except Cathy and the appellant left the car until they heard appellant yell “ow, you bitch, you bit me,” and Cathy screaming; that appellant began striking her, and when her screams became louder, Jackson struck her until she could only make a “gargling sound” due to the blood coming from her mouth; and that they again left the automobile in order for appellant “to talk” to Cathy, returning thereafter three times until Wright declared that “we can’t wait any longer.” Effinger testified that Jackson then dragged Cathy from the automobile, remarking to appellant upon his return a short while later that “you’ve got a dull knife, I had to use both hands.”
Charles Lentini testified that between 8:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. on November 28, he was picked up in a white Valiant automobile driven by Wright and in which appellant, Jackson and Effinger were passengers; and that Wright said “the heat is on, now we’re involved in two murders * * * the nigger and a girl.” Noticing that appellant was silent and stared out the window while holding a hunting knife, Lentini inquired about him and Wright stated that “he’s upset about having to bust that girl,” to which Jackson added, “but at least he got some, we didn’t”; and that Jackson also said “you should have heard the sound of the knife, thump, thump” and that “I had to use two hands, the blade wasn’t sharp enough.”
Lentini testified that appellant produced a white dress shirt covered with blood, which he refused to surrender to anyone, claiming that “no one’s touching it”; that they then found a purse
Appellant testified that on the day in question he was riding in an automobile with Jackson, Wright and Effinger, when they saw Cathy Kantros, and that Jackson, who knew her, invited her to go with them; that after they had consumed several half-pints of liquor and shot some pool, he entered the back seat of the automobile and began “making out” with Cathy without any resistance on her part; that they had an argument over her throwing a liquor bottle on the pavement, and he slapped her; that she was hollering at Wright and they left because she was making too much noise; that while they were driving out of the city they were kissing and fondling each other; that when the automobile stopped Cathy was fully clothed and he asked her to have intercourse with him; that with Cathy’s assistance Wright undressed her from the waist down and thereafter he (appellant) and Cathy were left alone in the automobile; that she was fully clothed from the waist up when he had intercourse with her; that the others returned and they drove to a location nearby where Cathy bit him (appellant), and he hit her once with his fist; that she began screaming and Jackson struck her with his fist; that she was bleeding profusely and he (appellant) pulled her toward him, telling the others “to get the hell away from here”; that they left when he told them he would attempt to revive her and talk to her; and that they returned saying it was “taking too much time” and Wright held him while Jackson pulled the girl from the automobile and stabbed her. Appellant testified that he tried to restrain Jackson, but was unable to do so, and was told that “if I didn’t want to join her, shut up.”
The court found from the evidence that it was the intention of appellant and his companions to have sexual relations with Cathy; that from her actions, and those of appellant and his companions, Cathy did not consent thereto; that while the evidence was insufficient to establish penetration and hence rape, it did disclose that appellant assaulted the victim with intent to rape her, particularly since it was shown that Cathy was undressed and unconscious when appellant was lying on top of her in the
Appellant contends that to sustain his murder conviction under the felony murder doctrine utilized by the lower court, the evidence must be legally sufficient to support the underlying conviction of assault with intent to rape; and that there must be corroboration of the testimony of the accomplice Effinger legally sufficient to independently establish the corpus delicti of the alleged assault with intent to rape Cathy Kantros. More specifically, appellant maintains that the only corroborative testimony presented was of Lentini and himself, but neither corroborated any material points of Effinger’s testimony tending to prove that Cathy was ever assaulted by anybody with intent to rape; and this being so, he urges that a reversal of the assault charge is required which, in turn, dictates a reversal of the murder conviction, as it was predicated solely on the commission of the felonious assault.
By Maryland Code, Article 27, Section 410, “All murder which shall be committed in the perpetration of, or
attempt
to perpetrate any rape * * * shall be murder in the first degree.” Appellant was convicted of assault with intent to rape in violation of Section 12 of Article 27, the indictment specifying that he “feloniously did make an assault” in and upon Miss Kantros “with intent then and there feloniously to ravish and carnally know her, forcibly and against her will.” The essential in
We think that Effinger’s testimony clearly established that appellant assaulted Cathy with the intent to rape her and that the circumstances were such that the assault amounted to an “attempt” to perpetrate a rape within the ambit of Section 410. According to Effinger’s testimony, appellant was lying on top of Cathy, moving his body, at a time when Cathy was unconscious and unclothed; he struck her and restrained her from escaping from the car; she screamed and bit him; and her clothing was eventually thrown out of the car. The fact that appellant himself testified that he actually had intercourse with Cathy does not mean that the trier of fact could not properly convict him of the lesser crime of assault with intent to rape, particularly since the autopsy report did not indicate penetration, while it did show injury to the external genitalia. See
Farrow v. State,
The Maryland cases reflect a wide-range of factual situations in which the legal sufficiency of the corroboration of an accomplice’s testimony has been considered where the issue has been proof of the criminal agency of the accused. The cases are collected in
Boone v. State, supra,
at Footnote 4, and fall into three general classes, (a) those in which the corroborative evidence tended to identify the defendant with the perpetrators of the crime, (b) those in which the corroborative evidence tended to show the defendant’s participation in the crime itself, or (c) those in which the corroborative evidence tended both to identify the defendant with the perpetrators of the crime and to show his participation in the crime itself. That there was sufficient corroborative evidence of Effinger’s testimony showing ap
But as heretofore indicated, it is the gist of appellant’s contention that there is no corroboration of Effinger’s testimony that appellant ever committed an assault upon Cathy with intent to rape her, vis., that there was no corroborative proof of the corpus delicti of the crime of assault with intent to rape. It has been held by some authorities that the requirement of corroborative evidence extends only to the guilt of the accused and that the corpus delicti may be established by the uncorroborated evidence of an accomplice, while other authorities take the position that an accomplice must be corroborated even with respect to the commission of a crime, as distinct from the connection of the accused therewith. See 23 C.J.S. Criminal Law, Section 812 (2) c, and cases there cited. Assuming the law of Maryland to be that an accomplice’s testimony that a crime was committed must be corroborated by some independent evidence of the corpus delicti, we think it clear that there was such corroboration in this case. The fact that Cathy had been physically beaten about the face and head was corroborated by the autopsy report. The discovery of her nude body with injury to her external genitalia—a tearing at the vaginal entrance—indicated the likelihood of sexual attack, a conclusion fortified by the fact that her clothing was found strewn about the roadside near where her body was discovered. Appellant’s own testimony that Cathy bit him, and that he struck her is corroborative of the improbability of a consensual sexual relationship, particularly in view of his admission that Wright assisted in undressing Cathy.
Judgments affirmed.
