By information filed March 5, 1973, in the Circuit Court of Polk County, it was charged defendant was guilty of incest in that “on the 13th day of August, 1971, [defendant] did . . . commit fornication with . . . [h] is daughter” M, “age 14 (now 16) years.” § 563.220 RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S. The jury failed to agree upon punishment after finding “the defendant guilty as charged in the Information,” so the court assessed and declared the punishment to be five years’ imprisonment and rendered judgment accordingly. Rule 27.-03, V.A.M.R. Defendant appealed.
In substance, M testified that defendant first had intercourse with her the week of August 13, 1971. She said defendant repeated the act twice thereafter in the next two weeks but that nothing of this nature occurred after the “later [sic] part of August [1971].” Over defendant’s repeated and continuing objections, the trial court permitted another daughter, P, to testify during the state’s case-in-chief that between the time she was 12 and 14 years of age (she was 15 when the trial was held August 22, 1973) defendant had “a whole bunch of times . . . put his hands in my pants . . . played with my bus’th [bust]” and threatened “he was going to screw me before I was fifteen.”
The sole point relied on by defendant in this appeal is that the trial court erred in admitting testimony tending to show that he was guilty of crimes separate and distinct from the one charged by having attempted or threatened incest on or by performing acts of lascivious familiarity with a person other than the prosecutrix.
Even though they are of the same nature as the one charged in the information, [State v. Hudson,
This is not a case where evidence relating to defendant’s conduct with a person other than the prosecuting witness was of a continuous nature so as to be inseparable, in fact, from the crime charged [State v. Parton,
For examples of cases involving similar sex crimes see State v. Bowman,
The rule excluding evidence of similar sex offenses between defendant and a person other than the prosecuting witness extends to proof of threat, intention or willingness on the part of the accused to commit such other crime, and in State v. Atkinson,
In this case, the state does not seek to justify the admission of the testimony of the daughter other than prosecutrix under any of the exceptions to the general rule which excludes proof of the commission by the accused of another independent and unconnected crime. The state’s contention that the trial court did not err in admitting the testimony of daughter P orbits the point that “in a prosecution for incest with one daughter, testimony of another daughter as to accused’s sexual relations with her ... is admissible as corroborative proof of the offense charged.” In pursuit of this point the state argues that “in incest cases, additional evidence is required as corroboration where the evidence of the prosecutrix is of a contradictory nature or is not convincing,” and that “in a prosecution for incest with one daughter, testimony of another daughter as to accused’s sexual relations with her is admissible as corroborative proof of the offense charged
Defendant does not contend the testimony of prosecutrix was in need of corroboration. Crimes are different if the evidence required to establish one differs from that necessary to establish the other. 21 Am.Jur.2d, Criminal Law, § 8, pp. 88-89. Therefore, if proof of one offense has no legitimate and logical tendency to establish the defendant’s guilt of the charge for which he is on trial, it is untenable to suppose that proof of a separate and unrelated crime could serve as a corroborant to contradictory and unconvincing testimony relating to another. Uncorroborated testimony of a prosecutrix will sustain a conviction of incest or rape, and it is only where her testimony is so unconvincing and contradictory as to cloud the mind of the court with doubts that her evidence must be corroborated. State v. Akers,
An argument akin to the statement made in
Nash
was advanced by the state in State v. Atkinson,
Albeit there exists contrariety of opinion on the admissibility in prosecutions for incest of testimony showing defendant guilty of that crime with a person other than prosecutrix (77 ALR2d, Anno: Evidence- — -Similar Sexual Offense, § 30, pp. 881-883), and although some courts profess the dubious ability to distinguish among rape, sodomy, incest and other sex crimes in permitting or excluding proof of defendant’s guilt of that or similar offenses with persons other than the prosecuting witness, the distinguishable niceties, if so, of such sexual deviations needed to gauge evidentiary permissibility vel non are more artificially conceived than real. Based upon the exact same incident and facts, a father in Missouri may be charged and convicted either of statutory rape of his daughter under § 559.260 RSMo 1969, V. A.M.S., or of incest under § 563.220 RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S. Mackey v. Kaiser,
It was highly prejudicial to defendant, thus reversible error, for the trial court, over the specific objections of defendant, to permit testimony that defendant was guilty of separate and distinct lascivious acts with a daughter other than the prose-cutrix. For this reason the judgment nisi is reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.
Notes
. The admissibility, vel non, of evidence relating to defendant’s sexual intercourse with prosecutrix after the charged crime is not for our consideration because defendant did not object to that testimony at trial and does not complain of it on appeal.
