142 N.Y.S. 782 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The defendant by the indictment herein is accused of rape in the second degree committed March 24, 1912, upon the person of Carrie Snyder, a girl eight years of age. The child testified that the defendant committed the assault upon her in his garage, which is immediately back of his house in the city of Elmira. It was on Sunday morning just after eleven o’clock. The complainant was walking down a lane, so she says, in the rear of the defendant’s garage when the defendant caught her, took her into his garage and perpetrated the act. The lane and the garage are in plain view from several houses. The defendant was twenty-four years old at the date mentioned in the indictment; he is a cripple having one wooden leg; he was a groceryman. The girl also testified that on the twenty-first of February, more than a month previous, the
The testimony of the complainant was contradictory of her previous statements, was unsatisfactory, and was somewhat improbable. It bore those indications, which the testimony of children of that age do so frequently bear, of being, to a considerable extent, the thoughts of others — thoughts developed after repeated conversations and much pressure. Her testimony was, however, sufficient, had it been well corroborated, to support the verdict. But it was not well corroborated; it was barren of corroboration. There must be corroboration of the essential elements of the crime. (People v. Page, 162 N. Y. 272; People v. Farina, 134 App. Div. 110; People v. Green, 103 id. 79; People v. Seaman, 152 id. 495.) The testimony of the mother that she saw the defendant standing near his garage just before the time of the alleged outrage, if it be taken as true, is at most only evidence of opportunity. It in no manner proves the defendant’s perpetration of the crime. If he was standing there at all he might have been standing there innocently.
The gonorrhea and the ruptured hymen were evidence pointing towards intercourse with somebody, but pointing no more in the direction of this defendant than in any other direction. The evidence that the defendant was at the time of the éxamination, or had been just previously, suffering with gonorrhea
After much urging the girl disclosed the occurrence to her parents. Disclosures made by the female within a reasonable time after the outrage are admissible, but such disclosures áre not “other evidence,” within.the meaning of section 2013 of the Penal Law. They weigh not at all as corroborative evidence. (People v. Seaman, 152 App. Div. 495; People v. Page, 162 N. Y. 272; People v. Green, 103 App. Div. 79.)
There was considerable corroborative evidence that this girl had been ravished by someone; but there was no corroborative evidence connecting this defendant with the crimed Strike out the evidence of the complainant and what is left ? Nothing, absolutely, implicating this defendant. The corroborative evidence must be not only corroborative of the existence of a crime, but corroborative of the defendant’s perpetration of the crime. (People v. O’Farrell, 175 N. Y. 323.)
Rape upon a child eight years old is one of the most heinous of crimes, but this is no excuse for punishing the innocent; no excuse for abolishing the rules of evidence. “Due process of law ” must be observed as well in trials for rape as in trials for any other offense.
There were other errors to which our attention has been called but we have not thought it necessary to refer to them, for this conviction should be reversed because of lack of evidence corroborating the testimony of the female defiled.
The judgment of conviction should be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concurred, except Kellogg, J., dissenting.
Judgment of conviction reversed and new trial ordered.