delivered the opinion of the Court.
James Smith, the appellant, was convicted of carnal knowledge of a female child under the age of 14 years by a jury in the Circuit Court for Allegany County. The presiding judge, James S. Getty, imposed a sentence of life imprisonment.
About 4:30 p.m. Smith drove a stolen automobile to the residence of his daughter who lived in a low rent housing development in the City of Cumberland, Maryland, known as Fort Cumberland Homes. After visiting with his daughter for a short *583 time, Smith took three of his grandchildren and several other children for a drive. While riding about the city he stopped and purchased soft drinks and confections for the children and returned to Fort Cumberland Homes at about 5:45 p.m. After all of the children, except his granddaughter, Jayma Lee Hamilton, who was then four years of age, exited from the vehicle, he drove away.
About 9:30 p.m. Smith returned the young girl to the apartment of Ruth Rhodes, his daughter’s neighbor. After the girl’s father carried her from the car into his house, he discovered that her hair was messed and her dress unbuttoned. He also noticed blood on her underpants. He testified that she was bleeding “between the legs.” The mother soon returned to the residence, and the child was taken to Memorial Hospital by her mother and Ruth Rhodes, arriving there at 9:30 or 10 o’clock p.m. The child was calm at the hospital and one examining doctor characterized her demeanor as “placid.” The victim was examined by Dr. Leland B. Ransom and Dr. John A. Topper, both of whom took specimens for laboratory analysis. Dr. Topper testified that two specimens were taken of the exterior of the female sexual organ by the use of glass slides and one specimen was taken in the vaginal area by use of a swab. Because of the way this latter specimen was obtained, the examining physician admitted the possibility that the material discovered by laboratory analysis came from the exterior rather than the interior of the victim. He explained that he had used a swab instead of a sucking technique through a tube because he felt that such examination at that time might have further injured the victim. Upon analysis of the specimens taken, Dr. Lester Kiefer, a pathologist, testified to the presence of male spermatozoa and male acid phosphatase on all slides. Dr. Ransom’s examination showed that Jayma needed surgical attention, and she was taken to the operating room, anesthetized, and treated for her injuries—a laceration described as similar to that found after the birth of a baby in an adult female, required three sutures to close. The doctor stated “the wound was caused by something that either entered or exited the vagina, and since the patient wasn’t pregnant, I presume it entered.” The doctor stated that some instrument could have been forced into the *584 vagina so as to have caused the laceration, but that a penis could have caused the tear.
After the child was treated by Dr. Ransom, her mother and Ruth Rhodes took her home, arriving there about 2:15 a.m. the following morning, January 18, 1968. The mother testified, over objection, as follows:
“Q. What did your daughter say, if anything, after she arrived back home ?
“A. Well she went to the bathroom and she came downstairs and I gave her a sandwich, and she said that her grandfather had hurt her, she didn’t like him any more and she did not want to ride with him any more. And there wasn’t none of the other kids awake to talk to her.
“BY THE COURT: What was the last ?
“A. None of the other children were awake to talk to her. They were all in bed. They hadn’t seen her.
“BY THE COURT: Did you say anything to your daughter ? Did you ask her any questions ?
“A. No.”
Cross examination revealed that the statement occurred under the following circumstances :
“Q. Now you say you left the hospital about 2:00 o’clock to bring the child home. Do you recall what time you got to the hospital ?
“A. It was around 9:30, something of 10:00, 10:00 o’clock, I don’t know. I didn’t stop to look at my watch.
“Q. You didn’t talk to the child at all on the way to or from the hospital, is that correct ?
“A. No, while she was in the hospital and while we were going there I cried the whole way up and in the hospital. I didn’t say anything to her.
“Q. You didn’t try to find out from her what happened to her ?
“A. No!
“Q. Not at all? Don’t you think it’s rather strange *585 that a mother whose child has been molested apparently, at least believes the child has been molested, wouldn’t try to find out from that child what had happened to her ?
“A. I wasn’t interested in who done it. I just wanted to see her fixed and get better.
“Q. All right, well then you got her fixed at the hospital, on the way back home you didn’t try to find out what had happened to her ?
“A. No. I just asked her who hurt her and she wouldn’t say anything.
“Q. It wasn’t until four and a half hours after she w’ent to the hospital that she told you the statements that you testified to here a few minutes ago ?
“A. It was about fifteen minutes after I got her home from the hospital.
“Q. Well you testified it was about 2:15 or 2:30 ?
“A. That’s right.
“Q. Did you suggest to the child it was grandfather that hurt her ?
“A. I didn’t mention his name to her.”
The record discloses that these were the first words the child had spoken to anyone since Smith had returned her to her home.
The victim did not testify because the court had previously ruled that she was not a competent witness. Smith testified, denying the crime, and also many important details as testified to by other witnesses.
It is contended on appeal that the trial court committed error in denying a motion for judgment of acquittal because there was no sufficient evidence to show a penetration by a male sex organ into any part of the female sex organ. Assuming, without deciding, that penetration is necessary to support a charge of statutory, as opposed to common law rape, see
Scott v. State, 2
Md. App. 709,
In his argument, Smith relies upon the case of
Craig v.
State,
Smith most strenuously contends that the trial court committed error in the admission of the testimony of the mother as to the statement of the child that “her grandfather had hurt her, she didn’t like him anymore and she didn’t want to ride with him anymore” after they had returned from the hospital which was some four or five hours after the victim had been returned by Smith to her residence. If the victim had testified in this case, the trial court’s ruling would have been supported by
Legore v.
State,
Green v. State,
What constitutes
res gestae
includes what was said during the crime,
Hall v. State,
“In the instant case the declaration was made at such a time and under such circumstances that the exciting influence of the occurrence clearly produced a spontaneous and instinctive reaction on the part of the declarant. She was still emotionally engulfed by the situation. We find no error in the court’s ruling.”
Smith argues that the lapse of time and the fact that the child was decribed as placid by one of the physicians and calm by the mother is sufficient to distinguish this case from
Reckard v. State,
Smith relies particularly on
Brown v. United States,
Smith also relies on
Ketcham v. State,
Smith finally contends the trial court committed error in allowing the state to introduce evidence concerning prior convictions for the possession of narcotics and for disorderly conduct since neither of these crimes was such as tended to impeach the defendant’s credibility as a witness. In
Gunther v. State, 4
Md. App. 181,
Judgment affirmed.
