On March 5,1975, the defendant, Robert Kennison, was found guilty by a jury of attempted rape, a felony. A motion for new trial was filed on March 6,1975, before the district court. On March 14, 1975, following a hearing before that court, *239 defendant’s motion was denied, and the State’s motion for judgment on the verdict was granted. On March 21, 1975, in response to the State’s later motion, the district court ordered the defendant temporarily committed to the custody of the Commissioner of Mental Health for a psychiatric examination pursuant to the mentally defective delinquent statutes, 18 V.S. A. §§ 8501 et seq. The defendant filed a notice of appeal with the district court on March 25,1975, stating that appeal was being taken to the Supreme Court “from the final judgment entered in this proceeding on the 14th day of March, 1975.”
On May 14, 1975, the defendant was returned to the district court for a commitment hearing. 18 V.S.A. § 8505. This hearing resulted in an adjudication that the defendant was a defective delinquent and that he constituted a threat to the public welfare and was dangerous while at large in the community, all as evidenced by the court’s written findings, judgment, and order of the same date. On May 15, the defendant filed with the district court a “Renewal of Motion for New Trial” based on newly discovered evidence; this motion was denied.
Before this Court, the defendant challenges certain evidentiary rulings made by the district court during the defective delinquency hearing and raises a broad-based constitutional challenge to those proceedings. In addition, he seeks a reversal of the attempted rape conviction because of the alleged failure of the state’s attorney to comply with a pre-trial discovery request and because of the trial court’s denial of his renewed motion for a new trial.
The only notice of appeal in this case, appealing the district court’s final judgment of March 14,1975, was filed in the district court on March 25,1975. It was not until May, 1975, that the hearing was held and the order entered by the district court under the defective delinquency statutes. No notice of appeal was ever filed subsequent to those proceedings.
Compliance with Rules 3 and 4 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure relating to notice of appeal is necessary in order to vest this Court with jurisdiction over a matter. Reporter’s Notes to Rule 3(b) of V.R.A.P. See also
Poulin
v.
Town of Danville,
On appeal, the defendant raises certain questions regarding the failure of the state’s attorney to comply with our discovery rule, V.R.Cr.P. 16, and challenges the trial court’s denial of his “renewal of motion for new trial”. The trial court’s denial of the defendant’s initial motion for new trial is not challenged on appeal. The defendant’s arguments before this Court relate to the post-trial surfacing of three psychological reports prepared on the defendant two years earlier while he was in the St. Albans Diagnostic Treatment Facility following a child molestation conviction. It is the defendant’s position that knowledge of the contents of these reports would have benefited the preparation of his defense to the attempted rape charge.
It is well-settled that this Court will not review questions on appeal unless the “trial court had a fair opportunity to consider, evaluate and rule upon such questions.”
State
v.
Bressette,
The appellant seeks to have this Court apply the rule enunciated in
State
v.
Morrill,
Judgment affirmed.
