Defendant appealed from a conviction of rape by forcible compulsion. Among his contentions on appeal were points contending that the mother of the complaining witness should not have been allowed to testify regarding her daughter’s psychological and mental condition following the date she claimed to have been raped and that two physicians should not have been allowed to testify regarding psychological aftereffects of forcible rape victims. This court filed an opinion affirming the conviction. Thereafter, application for transfer was made to the supreme court. While the application was pending the supreme court decided
State v. Taylor,
“Following jury trial, defendant was convicted of rape by forcible compulsion. § 566.030.1(1), RSMo 1978. He was thereafter found to be a persistent offender and sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment.
In defendant’s first point he contends that the evidence was insufficient to establish the crime charged. In our review of such a contention we accept as true all of the evidence favorable to the state, including all favorable inferences drawn from the evidence, and disregard all evidence and inferences to the contrary.
State v. Manning,
The complaining witness testified that defendant forced his way into her house, struck her several times and intercourse occurred due to that force and threats of further force. Defendant testified that she voluntarily let him in the house, led him into the bedroom, removed her clothes, and lay on the bed. He said that he had just gotten the straps undone on his overalls and was still standing up when there was a noise in front of the house that sounded like ‘footsteps’; she ‘freaked out’, said, ‘Oh, shit’, jumped out the window and hollered, ‘rape, rape, George Ogle did it.’ The evidence of the other facts material to this contention was substantially the same as that of a prior trial for this charge which was reversed for instructional error. See
State v. Ogle,
Points two and five are closely related and we discuss them together. In his second point defendant contends that the trial court erred in allowing the mother of the complaining witness to testify regarding her daughter’s psychological and mental condition after the date of the alleged rape. The rape allegedly occurred at approximately 11:00 p.m. on January 15th. The complaining witness was examined at a hospital early on the morning of January 16th. Her mother went to the hospital early that morning and took her daughter home with her. The mother testified to her daughter’s condition that morning. She also said that her daughter had nightmares for a year after the incident; still has trouble sleeping at night; and was afraid to be alone at night.
In point five defendant contends that the trial court erred in allowing two physicians to testify generally regarding psychological aftereffects of forcible rape victims. Defendant contends that the testimony of the physicians was immaterial with regard to the offense charged and was calculated to *140 appeal to the emotion and sympathy of the jury.
One of the physicians testified that a rape victim often has psychological damage that ‘may last for some time’. He stated that this is ‘quite frequent’. Defendant’s counsel objected to this testimony. The other physician testified later, without objection, that a rape victim can have psychological problems for a long time thereafter. Both physicians were called as witnesses for the defendant and this testimony was brought out by the state on cross-examination. Neither physician knew whether the complaining witness had suffered any ‘emotional trauma’ or ‘emotional problems’ from the incident charged.
The complaining witness’s condition shortly after the offense charged was relevant on the issue of force and clearly admissible. See
State v. Berry,
Neither party has cited any cases to us involving expert testimony of a forcible rape victim’s mental condition due to the rape or involving other evidence of a victim’s condition a considerable time after the alleged rape. Our research has disclosed two Missouri cases which discuss evidence of the victim’s physical condition after such time.
State v. Houx,
State v. Johnson,
People v. Egan,
Bynum held that testimony that the prosecutrix gave birth to a dead baby and ‘never recovered from that birth,’ that it ‘left her in a bad condition; she lay for five weeks, that she could not walk, and for three days she was senseless’, was not material and was prejudicial. The prosecution there was for ‘statutory rape’ and force apparently was not involved.
Bailey was a prosecution for seduction. It held that evidence that the woman whom the defendant was charged with seducing had committed suicide two days after the *141 alleged seduction was inadmissible. There apparently was no evidence as to the reason she committed suicide.
When
Egan
was decided the psychological effects of forcible rape were probably not as well documented as now and then even premarital consensual intercourse might cause emotional problems, such as that which may have occurred to the victims in
Bynum
and
Bailey.
That psychological problems often result from forcible rape is now well documented. See
In the Matter of Pittsburg Action Against Rape,
State v. LeBrun,
State v. Saldana,
In
State v. Marks,
‘The identification of rape trauma syndrome is a relatively new psychiatric development. Even so, if the presence of rape trauma syndrome is detectable and reliable as evidence that a forcible assault did take place, it is relevant when a defendant argues the victim consented to sexual intercourse. As such an expert’s opinion does not invade the province of the jury. It is merely offered as any other evidence, with the expert subject to cross-examination and the jury left to determine its weight.’
People v. Bledsoe,
In many forcible rape prosecutions the jury’s decision has to be based on who it believes as between the participants. Anything that aids the jury in making that determination should be presented to them, unless its relevance is outweighed by improper prejudice to the defendant or other reasons that might prevent justice from occurring.
It is common knowledge that a violent crime can cause changes in the mental condition of a person. Where, as here, the evidence shows that the change was caused by the crime, we think it is some evidence that the crime occurred. If there was no question but that a rape had occurred, such evidence would not be relevant, but where there is a question whether the complaining witness was forcibly raped, her condition long after the rape may be relevant. That is particularly true where, as here, the defendant contends that the complaining witness lied about the rape. See
People v. Brown,
We hold that the mother’s testimony was admissible as an aid to the jury in deter *142 mining if forcible rape occurred. We realize that symptoms such as that testified to can be fabricated, but whether they were was a credibility issue for the jury. The potential prejudice to the defendant due to the possibility that the complaining witness’s continuing problems may be faked or due to other causes is overweighed by the desirability of presenting to the jury as many of the relevant facts as possible. Sympathy for her, which might be prejudicial to the defendant here, was likely only if the jury believed that her continuing problems were caused by rape, and if they believed that, then, under the facts presented to them, they should have found defendant guilty.
The testimony of the mother regarding her daughter’s nightmares and condition to the date of trial was remote from the incident, but remoteness in time ordinarily affects the weight rather than the admissibility of testimony, and whether evidence is inadmissible because it is too remote is a matter resting largely in the sound discretion of the trial court.
State v. Stanley,
The physicians’ testimony was relevant as it supported the mother’s testimony by showing that victims of forcible rape often have emotional problems.
In determining that the evidence was properly admitted here, we recognize that when there is expert testimony seemingly well qualified experts often reach conflicting results and that observers may be justified in feeling that experts often slant their testimony in favor of the party who employs them. When that occurs, a party with substantial funds available to hire experts may have a distinct advantage by being able to hire multiple, and more expensive and presumably better qualified experts. Allowing expert testimony without restriction could lead to the ‘battle of experts that would invade the jury’s province of fact-finding and add confusion rather than clarity’, feared in
Saldana,
Defendant also contends that the physicians were not qualified to testify regarding the psychological problems of forcible rape victims. No objection was made to the testimony of one of the physicians and the trial court’s finding that the other physician was qualified was not an abuse of its discretion. In addition to his education, the physician had treated approximately fifty rape victims. The qualifications of an expert witness rest in the sound discretion of the trial court.
State v. Rhone,
Defendant contends in his third point that the trial court erred in failing to give his requested instruction submitting assault in the third degree. MAI-CR 2d 19.-06.2. Defendant asserts that assault in the third degree was a lesser included offense of rape under the facts here and was supported by the evidence at trial. He contends that because the complaining witness testified that he struck her, and he testified that they did not have intercourse, the jury might have found that no rape occurred, but that he was guilty of assault in the third degree.
The evidence established that if defendant struck the complaining witness, he did so to force her to have intercourse with him. That was the only evidence on why he struck her and no other inference can be drawn from the record. Section 565.070, Assault in the third degree, appears to replace and is similar to former § 559.220, RSMo 1969. The present criminal code divides assault into three degrees similar to the former law, with assault in the third degree being akin to former § 559.220, *143 RSMo 1969, ‘Common assault’. See Comment following § 565.050, 40A V.A.M.S., p. 448.
Common assault requires a general intent to injure and where there is no evidence to support a finding of general intent to injure, it is not error to omit an instruction on common assault as a lesser included offense.
State v. Strubberg,
For his fourth point, defendant asserts that the trial court erred in allowing the father of the complaining witness to describe her physical condition when he saw her during the early morning hours following the time that the rape allegedly occurred. Defendant contends that this testimony was ‘inflammatory’ and was cumulative as it had been amply proven by other testimony.
When cumulative evidence should stop is within the discretion of the trial court, said discretion being exercised with relevance as the main criterion; the same test is applicable to the introduction of potentially prejudiced or inflammatory evidence.
State v. McCabe,
supra,
As his final point, defendant contends that the trial court erred in permitting the state to cross-examine him concerning an assault on Steve Loftis and stolen stereos belonging to Dale Neal because the cross-examination exceeded the scope of his direct examination in violation of § 546.260, RSMo 1978.
The state is not confined to a rote recitation or a categorical review of matters covered on defendant's direct examination but may inquire into all matters within the fair purview of the direct examination.
State v. Black,
Defendant testified on direct that his purpose in going to the complaining witness’s house when the incident occurred was to look for the stereos. His earlier trips to her house and his other activities for that purpose had included Loftis. By cross-examination of him the state attempted to show that defendant had abandoned looking for the stereos and went to her house to have intercourse with her, by force if necessary. The trial court has considerable discretion in controlling the scope of cross-examination,
State v. Black,
supra,
We have reconsidered points two and five in light of
Taylor,
a decision we agree with not just because we are obligated to follow it, but because of its logic and practical application. The expert testimony in
Taylor
was held improper because it boosted the complaining witness’s credibility by showing that she suffered from “rape trauma syndrome” created as a result of a rape by the defendant. The court said that under the qualifications given the most the expert “could legitimately state would be that the prosecutrix’ symptoms were consistent with the traumatic experi
*144
ence—even a stressful sexual experience.” See
We do not think that allowing the evidence complained of here violated the holding in
Taylor
or is inconsistent with
State v. Nobles,
Neither physician testified that the complaining witness suffered from any psychological problems as a result of a rape but only that rape victims might have such problems. If this bolstered the complaining witness’s testimony it was only to the extent that emotional problems can be caused by rape, and, as previously noted in our original opinion, it is unlikely that this told the jurors any more than they already knew. That this can occur is not a matter that we feel can be legitimately debated.
Taylor
also indicates that the use of “rape trauma syndrome” in testimony may be improper “for it suggests that the syndrome may only be caused by ‘rape’ ”. See
As there was no expert testimony indicating that the complaining witness was telling the truth, and no expert said that she had “rape trauma syndrome” or other problems caused by rape, we do not find that Taylor calls for a different result than we previously reached.
The judgment is affirmed.
