This is an appeal from a judgment wherein the appellant was convicted of violating the provisions of section 288 of the Penal Code.
In an information filed in Los Angeles County, it was charged that the defendant did, on or about July 17, 1956, commit a lewd act upon the body of Sandra L. Steiner, a child of the age of 9 years, with the intent of arousing, appealing to and gratifying the lusts, passions and sexual desires of the child and of the defendant. Following defendant’s plea of not guilty, the case was tried and a jury was unable to reach a verdict. The court declared a mistrial. The ease was tried a second time and on December 27, 1956, defendant was found guilty as charged.
Doctors were appointed under the provisions of section 5504 of the Welfare and Institutions Code to examine the defendant and to report their findings to the court. A probation officer’s report was filed. The court, on February 13, 1957, ordered the proceedings suspended and found, on the basis of the doctors’ report, the defendant to be a possible sexual psychopath and committed him to a state hospital for a period of not to exceed 90 days for observation and diagnosis, as provided for in the statutes. On May 6, 1957, the report of the superintendent of the hospital was filed. The report set forth:
“In my opinion said person is not a sexual psychopath and *281 he is not a menace to the health and safety of others as such. This man suffers from no personality disorder which predisposes him to sexual offenses. The incident with the child is isolated, out of character and not representative of pedophilic desire.”
On May 28,1957, the defendant was returned into court and sentenced to the state prison. The sentence was then suspended and probation granted for five years, the defendant to pay a fine of $500, abstain from alcoholic beverages, not associate with children, except his own, unless in the presence of adults, and maintain employment and obey all laws. The appeal is from the judgment.
A résumé of the facts is as follows; The child, aged 9% years, lived at an address in Los Angeles which was across an alley-way from the house in which the defendant lived. The child first saw the defendant during the summer of 1956, while walking along a sidewalk on her way to a girl friend’s home, which was in thе same court as the defendant’s residence. The child testified that on that occasion she saw Spigno standing by his back door which was opened 8 to 18 inches, attired in a T-shirt only; that appellant said “Hi” and she answered “Hi.” The child also testified that about a week later she saw the appellant in the same position at the same door with the same opening, and that he was attired as before. She stated that about a week after seeing Spigno on the second occasion, while on her way to a boy friend’s house, at about 5 o’сlock p. m., she saw Spigno again, and on this occasion he said, “Hi,” and asked her if she wanted to come into his house to see his parakeets. She said he was attired as she had seen him on the two previous occasions; that he was standing in the open door as before and that she saw his penis; that she then went into the house through the door, and on into the living room to see the parakeets. The child related that appellant then came into the living room with no clothes on; that she sat down on a couch and that he then pulled dоwn a blind on the door or the window and sat down on the couch with her. She stated that he then took her hand and placed it upon his penis, whereupon she immediately went home and told her 12-year-old sister what had occurred, and a short time later told her mother. The mother then told the child’s father of the episode.
The defendant was arrested about 1 a. m. on July 18, 1956, and was told that he was being arrested for “child molesting, that there was a complaint signed against him by a little *282 girl that had been there that afternoon.” In the court proceeding there was testimоny by the police officers that on the occasion of the arrest the appellant told his wife that the officers were going to take him to the station, to which she replied, “What have you done wrong this time?” to which appellant replied that he had “had a little girl in there that afternoon, and that was all, and that she must have gone home and said something.” An officer’s testimony continued: “She wanted to know what the charge was. . . . That this little girl had said she had been molested, or that he had bothered her, something to that effect, and my partner told her, yes, it was for child molesting, and she said, ‘I know this man, I am married to him, he is not a child molester.’ ”
The defendant was then taken to the police station where there was a conversation between the officers and the defendant. The officer testified as follows:
“. . . he said that this little girl had been out there playing with a kitten, and he had invited her into the house to see the parakeets. I asked him if he had pulled any blinds down and he said, yes. I asked him why, and he said to keep the sun out of her eyes, and I asked what he was wearing and he told me he was wearing a pair of рants,—I believe he said some of his army pants, and that he had a T-shirt on, and I asked him whether the pants were zipped up, and-all he said was that he kept the top button open and partly unzipped because they were too small, but he said that was all. He said, ‘You probably think I actually did this?’ and I told him it was hard for me to believe that a 9-year-old girl would make up a story that follows the normal pattern that we find in most of these cases, where they are told not be afraid, and how they are invited in on the pretense of looking at something, . . . [Defendant stated] ‘No, I don’t believe that a girl that age would know anything about sex.’ ”
The appellant testified in his own behalf and stated that he had seen the child three or four times in the neighborhood and that he did say “Hi” to her, the same as he did to anyone else around the place; that he never had stood at the partly opened back door, as the child had related, clothed only in a T-shirt. He related that on July 17th, he had gone fishing about 6 o’clock a. m., and had returned to his residence about 1 o’clock p. m. Mrs. Spohrer, a neighbor who was acting as a baby sitter for his children during his absence was there, and after he had conversed with her a bit, he permitted his children to go out into the yard to play. Mrs. Spohrer *283 left and he then did some housework and family washing, took a bath and changed into clothes which consisted of some army pants, shoes and stockings. While he was at the back door, the child came by and he asked her if she would like to see the parakeets he had purchased for his children. He said that the front door was open and there was no shade on the door; that a person standing outsidе in the courtyard could see through the screen door into the house. He said that the child walked over to the parakeets near the fireplace, looked at them and then said, “I’m going to have to go now,” and left the house through the same door by which she had entered. He denied that he had sat upon the couch with the child, and that he had put her hand upon his penis. He said that his children were playing in the yard, that the screen was unlocked and that the children went in and out of the place all day long. He stated that at the police stаtion he had told the officers over and over again that he had not molested the child, and that he was telling the truth.
The defendant produced witnesses who testified that his reputation for truth, honesty, integrity and morality was excellent; there was no effort upon the part of the prosecution to rebut such testimony. A witness who resided in the same court, and who knew the child, testified that the reputation of the child for truth, honesty and integrity was bad. The prosecution attempted to rebut the reputation testimony with reference to the child by a former teacher of the child, but on cross-examination the teacher admitted that “All little children tell lies at different times.” The child was repeatedly impeached by her own testimony as given at the first trial.
Milton Kenyon was called as a witness for the defendant. Immediately, the prosecutor sought a conference between both counsel and the judge at the bench. In the proceedings at the bench and out of hearing of the jury, the district attorney stated at first, “. . . counsel is trying to show a lie detector examination of this defendant.” The judge at once propеrly indicated that such would not be admissible, but told counsel for the defendant that he could make an offer of proof, whereupon counsel cited
People
v.
Jones,
“Well, this is a little bit different from that. He offered the man as an expert psychologist, and as a result of his training he’s going to ask this man to state his opinion as to whether the defendant was so psychologically constituted so that he could or could not have done that.”
The district attorney then, without giving the basis for any objection, said, “I object to it,” and the court sustained the objection.
Appellant contends (1) that the testimony of the child was improbable, and (2) that it was prejudicial error to refuse to permit Kenyon, as a psychologist, to give his expert opinion as to whether the defendant had the necessary lustful intent to commit the acts complained of.
As to the first contention, it is true that the child’s story about the events in question changed from time to time, and she was impeached as to many details, but contradictions and inconsistencies in the testimony of a witness alone will not constitute inherent improbability.
(People
v.
Huston,
It is the province of the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses.
(People
v.
Raich,
As to the second contention, counsel for the defendant, in his offer of proof and while at the bench, repeatedly referred to Kenyon as a lie detector operator and made reference to the results of a lie detector examination which Kenyon had conducted with the defendant. The district attorney properly objected to any such testimony having to do with the lie detector, because under the rules in this state such evidence is inadmissible.
(People
v.
Aragon,
Counsel for defendant apparently desired to qualify Kenyon as a psychologist, as an expert witness in the field of sexual psychopathy, although he did not clearly so state. If we may assume that counsel did not rely upon the lie detector test results as such, we may also assume that his purpose in introducing the lie detector test matters was to get before the jury the expert opinion of the psychologist, which may or may not have been based in part upon a lie detector test.
Counsel for appellant has placed complete reliance on the case of
People
v.
Jones,
The court in the Jones case held (at pp. 222-223) :
“ ‘All facts having rational probative value are admissible, unless some specific rule forbids. ’ (1 Wigmore on Evidence [3d ed. 1940], § 10, p. 293; and cf. Code Civ. Proc., § 1868.) The general test of relevancy of indirect evidence is whether it tends logically, naturally, and by reasonable inference to prove or disprove a material issue. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1832; (and cases cited).)”
Further, the court said in the Jones case (at pp. 223-224):
“In the determination of probabilities of guilt, evidence of character is relevant. (Citing cases and authority.) ‘The purpose of the evidence as to the character of the accused is to show his disposition, and to base thereon a probable presumption that he would not be likely to commit, and, therefore, did not commit, the crime with which he is charged. ’ (State v. Lee,22 Minn. 407 , 409 [21 Am.Rep. 769 ]. . . .) Proof of the good character of the defendant may be considered as a fact tending to rebut the truth of testimony of an incriminatory character which is sufficient to establish the truth of the charge against him. (Citing cases and authority.) *287 Character is proved by evidence of the accused’s general reputation in the community for the traits which are in issue. (Citing eases.) Such evidence is sufficient to create a reasonable doubt of guilt. (Citing case.) ”
The court then went on to declare that by the provisions of the Welfare and Institutions Code (chap. IY, §§ 5500-5522) the Legislature had clearly stated a legislative determination, in effect, that a person who commits sex offenses is more likely to violate section 288 of the Penal Code than one who has no such propensity; that “to some extent there is a cause and effect relationship. Evidence that a person has no such disposition is analogous to that in regard to character, for it bears upon the probability of the innocence of the accused.
“From evidence which tends to prove that a person is not a sexual psychopath, an inference reasonably may be drawn that he did not commit the act denounced by section 288. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1960.) ” (Pp. 224-225.)
The court then, unfortunately for the defendant in the present ease, concluded with the statement (at p. 225): “The competency of expert opinion in this field of evidence is established by the statutory procedure for the determination of sexual psychopathy (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 5504-5506.) ” (Emphasis added.)
Section 5504, Welfare and Institutions Code, sets forth as to the qualifications of the psychiatrists to be appointed, that each one shall be a holder of a valid and unrevoked physicians and surgeons certificate who has directed his professional practice primarily to the diagnosis and treatment of mental and nervous disorders for a period of not less than five years, and one of the three so appointed shall be from the medical staff of a state hospital or a county psychopathic hospital.
It can well be pointed out in the instant ease that the report of the psychiatrists at the Atascadero Hospital, after the conviction, confirmed what the defendant was apparently attempting to get before the court in the first instance, namely, that he was not a sexual psychopath, although as heretofore mentioned, he did not clearly so express himsеlf.
In California, we have not adopted the Model Code of Evidence (rules 306, 401-409), nor the Uniform Rules of Evidence (rules 46-57), each of which provides for opinion evidence as to the character of the accused in a criminal action, and as a consequence, this court is bound by the rules of many years standing (see Wigmore on Evidence, 3d ed., §§ 1920-1921). In the present case it is obvious, if the rule
*288
of the Jones ease is applied, that the witness Kenyon, so far as the record demonstrates, falls short of having the necessary qualification or comрetency to testify as an expert as to the sexual psychopathy of Spigno. There was no showing that as a psychologist Kenyon was competent to measure the propensity of the defendant to commit the act charged. There was no indication of any scientific recognition of the ability of any psychologist to make the determination. If we assume for the moment that the rule of the Jones case, to the effect that only a psychiatrist can testify in such matters, does not apply, it appears that there ought tо have been a showing of at least a semblance of scientific acceptance of the psychologist’s ability to formulate a dependable conclusion under all of the circumstances of the case. (See
Frye
v.
United States,
We are not unmindful of the sometimes expressed view that the psychologist is as capable as the medical man to express* dependable opinions in the particular field here involved. As said in
People
v.
Hawthorne
(1940),
“Today it is unanimously held ... by experienced psychiatrists that the complainant woman in a sеx offense should always be examined by competent experts to ascertain whether she suffers from some mental or moral delusion or tendency, frequently found especially in young girls, causing distortion of the imagination in sex cases.
*289 “. . . Thus the erotic imagination of an abnormal child of attractive appearance may send an innocent man to the penitentiary for life. The warnings of the psychiatric profession, supported as they are by thousands of observed cases, should be heeded by our profession.” And then the Committee recоmmended “that in all charges of sex offenses, the complaining witness be required to be examined before trial by competent psychiatrists for the purpose of ascertaining her probable credibility, the report to be presented in evidence.” (Wigmore on Evidence, 3d ed., § 924a.)
The Legislature has adopted, since the conviction in this ease, a Psychology Certification Act, chapter 2320, 1957 Statutes (Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 2900-2980), wherein the practice of psychology is now recognized for certain purposes. It is interesting to note that this act provides, in effect, that confidential relations and communications between a registered psychologist and his client are placed upon the same plane as those provided in the law between attorney and client, which is effective in all cases, whereas there is no patient-physician privilege in criminal cases in California.
(City of San Francisco
v.
Superior Court,
There are many scholars who are convinced that a good psychologist can reveal the intangible framework of a personality as effectively as medical men, by use of blood counts and X-rays, can reveal certain conditions of the physical being of man. (39 Marquette L. Rev. 239-240.) We all recognize that the services of psychologists are playing an increasingly important part in our everyday lives in widely varied fields, such as in advertising, factories, the armed services, prisons, hospitals and schools.
While it is true that a psychologist’s opinion cannot be accurate to a provable degree, it perhaps should be remembered “that the court is not the judge of the quality of the evidence, nor does the witness perform the function of a juror—he can only contribute something to the jury’s information and if he can, he should be permitted to do so.”
(Bratt
v.
Western Air Lines
(1946),
There has always existed a considerable lag between advances and discoveries in scientific fields and their acceptance as evidence in a court proceeding. Most middle aged lawyers can remember when evidence of the waves or currents given off by the cerebral tissue would have been inadmissible in any proceeding, and would have been considered fantastic. Today,
*290
no one would seriously contend that an electro-encephalogram would not be proper evidence in certain cases. It was not so very long ago that in some instances courts in California were deciding matters of paternity in illegitimacy proceedings against men whose innocence was scientifically established by the exelusory nature of blood tests.
(Berry
v.
Chaplin,
In this state, courts have determined as to whether psychologists’ expert testimony shall be acceрted in certain cases. This court, through Presiding Justice White, in
People
v.
Villegas,
In the case of
Michelson
v.
United States,
It is our opinion, as to appellant’s second contention, that the trial court did not, under the law as it now stands, commit prejudicial error. Counsel for appellant failed to offer proof that Kenyon, as a psychologist, was qualified to give an expert opinion as to whether the defendant had the necessary lustful intent to commit the acts comрlained of. The law in this state still limits the competency of expert opinion in the field of sexual psychopathy to those persons who have medical as well as a psychological training (People v. Jones, supra); hence while Kenyon’s testimony might have proved invaluable to the defendant, it was not legally admissible.
Justice Cardozo’s statement in his Law and Literature 108 (1931) is particularly applicable in the instant case: “The students of the life of the mind in health and disease should combine with students of the law in a scientific and deliberate effort to frame a definition and a system of administration that will combine efficiency with truth.”
Judgment affirmed.
White, P. J., and Drapeau, J., * concurred.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
