James B. Madary, hereinafter called the defendant, in a proceeding brought by the State of Nebraska as plaintiff and appellee, sometimes referred to as the State, at a trial had in the district court for Lancaster County, Nebraska, was found to be a sexual psychopath and was committed to the Lincoln State Hospital at Lincoln, Nebraska.
*385 , The proceedings were brought under. Chapter 29, article 29, of the Reissue Revised Statutes of Nebraska, 1943, as amended, being section 29-2901, R. R. S. 1943, section 29-2902, R. S. Supp., 1963, and sections 29-2903 to 29-2907, R. R. S. 1943. These statutes provide a special procedure in cases of sexual psychopaths. Section 29-2901, R. R. S. 1943, defines a sexual psychopath as follows: “As used in sections 29-2901 to 29-2907, unless the context otherwise requires, the term sexual psychor path shall mean any person who, by a course of misconduct in sexual matters, has evidenced an utter lack of power to control his sexual impulses and who, as a result, is likely to attack or otherwise inflict injury, loss, pain, or other evil on the objects of his uncontrolled and uncontrollable desires.”
Section 29-2903, R. R. S. 1943, provides that one adjudged to be a sexual. psychopath be committed to a state hospital and makes provision for his care and treatment while so committed.
Section 29-2904, R. R. S. 1943, provides among other things that competent evidence of defendant’s prior conduct to show sexual psychopathy be received at trial and places the burden of proof to establish the allegations of the complaint beyond a reasonable doubt.
The procedure in the present case leading to the adjudication and commitment closely follows section 29-2902, R. S. Supp., 1963, which is quite long and will not be separately quoted or reviewed as it is not claimed that there was a departure therefrom.
The State filed a petition by the chief deputy county attorney of Lancaster County on April 24, 1964, alleging the defendant to be a sexual psychopath and seeking a determination of that fact. On' the same day the trial court ordered the sheriff to hold the defendant in the county jail and appointed two doctors to examine him and report their findings not less than 10, days prior to a hearing to be held May 19, 1964. The defendant filed on April 27, 1964, an application for the ¡ appoint- •. *386 ment of counsel with an attached affidavit of indigency. The motion was sustained and counsel was appointed April 29, 1964. The physicians examined the defendant and made separate reports of their examinations which were served on the defendant’s counsel on May 8, 1964.
Trial was had on May 19,1964. A motion was made by the defendant immediately before trial to dismiss the proceeding and to grant the defendant a separate and preliminary hearing, to establish by evidence the matters set forth in his oral motion. The motion was overruled and the case proceeded to trial to the court, a jury being waived by both parties.
Dr. Robert Johnston Stein, a consultant at the Lincoln Veterans’ Hospital and Lincoln State Hospital, and Dr. Richard W. Gray, superintendent at the Lincoln State Hospital, both specialists in psychiatry with long experience in mental cases, each testified. Dr. Stein had examined the defendant on May 7, 1964, and Dr. Gray on May 4, 1964, at their respective offices. They each testified that the defendant had given them a long personal history admitting indecent exposures; in the past and of being arrested on many occasions because thereof. This commenced in the year 1958 when he was in military service. Each doctor severally gave his opinion that the defendant evidenced an utter lack of power to control these sexual impulses and that he was. likely to inflict injury, pain, or other evil on the objects of his uncontrollable desires. The written findings; and reports of each doctor were admitted in evidence. Dr. Gray testified when the doctor asked the defendant if he cared to discuss the problem with him, the defendant answered, “ ‘Let’s talk.’ ” There is no evidence of unwillingness to tell his story to either doctor.
On cross-examination each doctor stated that his findings and opinion were based primarily on what the defendant had told him in the examination. Each stated in substance that the defendant was passive in nature, and that it was his opinion that defendant would not at *387 tack or hurt anybody. Dr. Stein stated he had seen a list of offenses of the defendant at the county attorney’s office before the examination. He considered them part of the record and might have placed some reliance on these records but this would not have changed his subsequent and final diagnosis. Dr. Gray had not seen them until his findings and report had been made.
The defendant testifying on his own behalf stated he was arrested April 22, 1964, in the city of Lincoln and taken to the jail where he remained all night. The next morning he was brought, to the county attorney’s office and from there he was taken to the county jail where he remained until trial. He was refused permission to call an attorney shortly after going to jail and once or twice thereafter. •
On cross-examination he stated he knew counsel had been appointed for him and had discussed the matter with his attorney several times after he was at the doctors. When asked if he was arrested on April 22, 1964, for indecent exposure he said he did not know what for at the time of apprehension but was later so. told.
Eugene Robert Henninger, a captain in the Lincoln police department in charge of detectives who was called by the defendant, stated that the defendant was arrested at 9:30 p.m., on April 22, 1964, without a warrant by the Lincoln police department. Defendant was arrested because of a complaint of a lady but the witness was not permitted to state the nature of it.
After both parties rested the State was permitted to withdraw its rest and introduce a transcript of the county court of Lancaster County consisting of a complaint filed against the defendant therein on April 14, 1964, which charged him with willfully making an indecent exposure of his person, and a journal of a sentence thereon dated April 17, 1964, containing a finding that the defendant was guilty of the offense charged.
At the conclusion of the trial the defendant was found to be a sexual psychopath resulting in his commitment, *388 and his motion for a new trial having been overruled, he has brought the case to this court by appeal. The assignments of error will be set forth as discussed.
The defendant first assigns error to the trial court in overruling his motion made before trial to dismiss the proceeding and to grant a hearing to establish by evidence the matter set forth therein. In his motion defendant claimed he had been deprived of his rights under the Constitutions of the United States and the State of Nebraska by being denied due process of law, the equal protection of the law, and by. being placed in double jeopardy. Further, that the sexual psychopath law unconstitutionally provides for self-incrimination.
The only case of this court touching.any of the statutes under consideration is State v. Noll,
To support his contention defendant cites, several cases from the various courts of the United States, and from state courts including a decision of this court, State v. O’Kelly,
We think the defendant misconceives the nature of the *389 presént proceeding. An extended annotation on statutes relating to sexual psychopaths is set forth in 24 A. L. R. 2d 350. The preliminary discussion on page 351 of the annotation states: “Statutes of the type under consideration are a recent development in the law — a development occurring mainly during the last two decades. They are especially, designed to cope with sex offenders who, because of a psychopathic condition, commit, or have a tendency to commit such offenses. They recognize that the sexual psychopath is neither normal nor legally insane and, for that reason, requires special consideration, both fob his own sake and for the safety of society. Such statutes represent a new approach to an age-old problem of which the public has become increasingly aware — to the point of alarm in recent years — both because of the apparent increase in the number of sex crimes and because of the more widespread notoriety given such crimes in the public press. They represent a new approach, reflecting the thinking of modern psychiatry and psychology, in that they provide civil commitment, segregation, and treatment of the sexual psychopath rather than criminal punishment, whose ineffectiveness as a deterrent has been demonstrated by the number of sex offenders who have repeated their offenses after criminal conviction. The social objective of such statutes is. twofold: (1) to protect by sequestering the sexual psychopath so long as he remains a menace to others, and (2) to subject him to treatment to the end that he might recover from his psychopathic condition and be rehabilitated. Fewer than twenty jurisdictions have enacted such legislation.”
A general rule in section 2, Annotation, 24 A. L. R. 2d 352, states that: “Statutes providing for the commitment to a state institution for treatment of persons found to be sexual psychopaths have generally been held not to be criminal statutes.” It is supported by the cases of State ex rel. Sweezer v. Green,
The constitutionality of a quite similar Minnesota statute was upheld in State ex rel. Pearson v. Probate Court,
In the case of In re Keddy,
The statute providing for commitment of sexual psychopaths does not deny equal protection of the laws.
The sexual psychopath statute providing for investigation on affidavit of probable cause and commitment does not deprive the accused of his liberty without due process of law.
A statute providing for detention, investigation, and *391 commitment of alleged sexual psychopaths does not place the accused who has been previously convicted of sexual offenses in double jeopardy.
In People v. Chapman,
We think the rules previously quoted apply to similar provisions in the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of Nebraska, and that the provisions of section 29-2902, R. S. Supp., 1963, are not unconstitutional because thereof.
We see no occasion to consider any constitutional question with respect to the defendant’s arrest. He was arrested by a member of the Lincoln police department and taken to jail. Just why he was apprehended and taken to jail is not clearly shown. Nothing is shown to connect the county attorney who is by section 29-2902, R. S. Supp., 1963, given the responsibility of initiating proceedings under the sexual psychopath law with the arrest by a member of the Lincoln police department. The defendant had been charged and convicted of indecent exposure on April 14, 1964, 10 days before the *392 filing-of the petition in the trial court. The defendant was taken from jail to the county attorney’s office, insofar as can be inferred, for interrogation with respéct .to his physical and mental condition because of the record of his previous conviction. It was to inquire whether he should be committed and given treatment as a sexual psychopath for the protection both of himself and society and not for punitive incarceration. The examination by the doctors was pursuant to this proceeding instituted by the county attorney. As we view it, defendant’s arrest by the Lincoln police department is not connected with and had nothing to do- with the present proceeding. The trial court did not err in overruling ■the defendant’s motion.
The defendant next contends the trial court erred in' receiving in evidence the findings and opinions of Doctors Stein and Gray because they were based on the history given them by the defendant. The constitutional aspect concerning self-incrimination has hitherto been discussed. He further maintains that it is a rule of law that such opinions cannot be based at least wholly on the history of the defendant. He cites certain cases including Redding v. State,
The basis of the decision in Kaufman v. Kaufman,
The defendant further objects to the reception of the testimony and the reports of the doctors in the case because the defendant’s counsel was not present at the defendant’s examination by the .doctors. He maintains this resulted in the denial to the defendant of the right of cross-examination and again asserts this resulted in a finding and commitment without due process of law. The New Hampshire court in passing upon that state’s statute concerning sexual psychopaths which provided for an examination of the defendant by a board of medical experts quite similarly to that under consideration here in In re Craft, 99 N. H. 287,
The defendant further objects to the testimony, findings, and reports of the doctors being received in evidence because Dr. Stein testified he had seen a list of past violations at the office of the county attorney before his examination and findings were made, and Dr. Gray had seen them thereafter. Again we think the defendant was under a misapprehension as to* the office of these doctors and as to* the proceeding itself. He has assumed at all times that the position of the doctors is the same as an expert witness who* testifies in a lawsuit by the use of hypothetical questions premised on the evidence. We think the position of these doctors is entirely different. They were appointed by the court to conduct a sort of an inquest and report, their preliminary examinations being subject to* later cross-examination by the defendant’s attorney. We think they are given some latitude in the manner they ascertain information with respect to the defendant’s condition. If on cross-examination their opinions and findings are to be set aside because they received some outside information, it would result in nullifying the action of the court in appointing them to make the inquest. We do not think such was the intention of the Legislature in enacting the present statute. At any rate, each doctor’s testimony affirmatively shows his final opinion and findings would not be changed by the information re
*396
ceived. To warrant a reversal of the judgment it must affirmatively appear in the record the action with respect to which the error was alleged was prejudicial to the rights of the complaining party. Larsen v. Omaha Transit Co.,
The last assignment of error by the defendant is that the judgment is not supported by the evidence. No good purpose would be served by an extended review of the testimony of the doctors which plainly presents a history of repeated acts of indecent exposure on behalf of the defendant resulting in convictions therefor. It is sufficient to state it is shown that such conduct has continued over several years. Defendant makes reference to the testimony of both doctors that he was not dangerous. in the sense of attacking or hurting others, and maintains the judgment cannot be sustained under such circumstances. The evidence as plainly shows he was likely to make indecent exposures in the presence of women. It can be inferred this might occur in the presence of young girls because he is. utterly unable to control his actions. Section 29-2901, R. R. S. 1943, provides such commitment and treatment should be given those “likely to attack or otherwise inflict injury, loss, pain, or other evil on the objects of his uncontrolled and uncontrollable desires.” (Italics supplied.) Can it be said that such actions, in the presence of women and young girls would not inflict evil upon them and result in a moral loss both to. them and the community as a whole? We think not. The evidence is amply sufficient to sustain the judgment entered by the trial court.
We therefore conclude that the judgment of the trial court should be and is affirmed.
Affirmed.
