Defendant was found guilty by a district court jury of a charge of criminal sexual conduct in the first degree, Minn.Stat. § 609.342(c)-(d) (1980) (sexual penetration accomplished by (c) causing complainant to reasonably fear imminent great bodily harm or (d) use or threatened use of a dangerous weapon). The presumptive sentence for this offense, which is a severity level VIII offense, by one with defendant’s criminal history score (zero) is 43 months, with the trial court being permitted to impose a sentence of any duration from 41 to 45 months without being required to file a departure report justifying the sentence. Departing from the presumptive sentence, the trial court sentenced defendant to 60 months in prison. On this apjjeal from judgment of conviction, defendant seeks alternatively (1) an outright reversal on the ground that the evidence of his guilt was legally insufficient, (2) a new trial on the ground that the trial court erred in (a) admitting Spreigl evidence and (b) requir *89 ing a state’s rebuttal witness, who had previously been called by the defense, to take the oath again on being recalled, or (3) at a minimum, a reduction of the sentence to the presumptive sentence established by the Sentencing Guidelines. We affirm.
1. Defendant’s first contention, that the evidence of his guilt was legally insufficient, is meritless. The evidence established that the victim, a 13-year-old child who knew the defendant, was forced by defendant, who was armed with a scissors, to commit fellatio in the garage of her family home early one morning when her mother was at work. As defendant apparently was preparing to commit sexual intercourse, the victim, clad only in night clothes, fled and sought help from a passing motorist. Corroborating evidence included evidence that defendant was not at his own house at the time of the offense, evidence that defendant knew the victim’s mother was at work, and evidence that defendant was seen in the vicinity of the victim’s house shortly before the offense was committed.
2(a). The Spreigl issue relates to the admissibility of evidence concerning a prior act of criminal sexual misconduct by defendant against the same victim a few days earlier. Defendant argues that the evidence of the prior offense was not clear and convincing and that the potential of the Spreigl evidence for unfair prejudice outweighed its probative value. We conclude that the trial court properly admitted the evidence.
In its preadmittance determination that the evidence of the other offense was clear and convincing,
see State v. Matteson,
(b) Defendant’s other claim of trial error relates to the trial court requiring a state’s rebuttal witness, who had earlier testified for the defense, to retake the oath before testifying. Defendant cites no cases. It appears that the trial court simply believed that whenever a witness is recalled by the other side or in a different phase of the trial (as opposed to being recalled by the same side during the same phase of the trial), readministration of the oath is required. We need not decide whether this is true because we fail to see how this could have prejudiced defendant in this case. In any event, defense counsel turned down an offer of the trial court to explain to the jury that it was routine for him to require readministration of the oath in this situation.
3. The remaining issue is the sentencing issue. The trial court gave the following reasons for departure: the particular vulnerability of the victim due to age, the use of the scissors, and the fact that defendant had been in some sort of position of authority over the victim by virtue of his friendship with the victim’s mother.
The legislature, to a great extent, has taken the vulnerability of the victims of rape and factors, such as the use of knives, into account in distinguishing rape offenses by degree. Each case must, nonetheless, be considered on its own.
State v. Martinez,
Affirmed.
