The defendant had sexual intercourse with the complaining witness, who, however, was in full possession of her faculties, and willingly consented without fraud or duress having been practiced upon her. No claim was or could have been made- in these circumstances that the crime of rape in the first degree was committed. The conviction followed the indictment, which was for rape in the second degree, and by the provisions of section 2010 of the Penal Law this crime is established by mere proof of the fact that the defendant had sexual intercourse with a female, not his wife, who was at the time under the age of -eighteen -years. By that enactment, and the statutory provisions from which it was taken, the Legislature, in its wisdom, determined to make the crime dependent upon the age of the female, and thereby sexual intercourse with a female the day before she attains the age of eighteen years, if not tinder cir-
The first act of intercourse between the defendant and the complaining witness took place on the 6th day of March, 1910, in a hotel in the borough of Manhattan, New York, where they registered under an assumed name as man and wife. Both the defendant and the complaining witness were at that time employed by a manufacturer of women’s jackets at a shop in-said borough. Frequently after’ that they spent the night at the .same hotel, defendant on some occasions registering and the complaining witness registering for them under assumed names on many other occasions. Prior to the first intercourse between them she had been arrested, convicted and fined- by a city magistrate on the charge of disorderly conduct for soliciting men on the street in said borough, and at that time she gave her age to the officer who made the arrest and in court. when sentence was passed as twenty-three. She did not know the year in which she was born and did not give her birthday, but testified that she would be .eighteen years of. age in July, 1910, or about four months after the first intercourse between
We are of opinion, however, that the appearance of the complaining witness could not materially aid the jury in determining whether her true age on March sixth was eighteen years and one second, which would have required an acquittal, or seventeen years and eight months, which, required conviction. There is evidence tending to show that defendant had been informed that the complaining witness was under eighteen years of age.' By not taking the stand and controverting that evidence of course he has left .it open to be accepted as-'true, but, as already observed, the crime does not depend upon his knowledge as to the age of the female, and if she were in fact eighteen there would be no crime even though he thought she were only fourteen and the hearsay information which had been communicated to him was no proof of the fact with respect to her age.
We think, therefore, that the interests of justice require that • the defendant be granted a new trial.
It follows that the conviction should be reversed and a new trial ordered. '
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin and Miller, JJ., concurred; Dowling, J., dissented.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered. Order to be settled on notice. "