143 A. 413 | R.I. | 1928
Defendant was convicted of the crime of rape. The trial justice denied his motion for a new trial and the case is in this court on bill of exceptions.
In defendant's brief and argument most of the exceptions were grouped and will be thus considered.
At the trial the defence was an alibi; it was admitted that the prosecutrix had been ravished and the issue was whether defendant was the perpetrator of the crime. Without stating unnecessary details the facts are as follows. The prosecutrix was a young unmarried woman. On the night of April 13, 1926, after an automobile ride with a friend, she returned to the house in which she was a boarder. After entering the lower hallway, she was called to the street door by a strange man who told her that he was a police official, that she must accompany him to the police station and there explain her conduct in "parking" an automobile without lights thereon. Despite her protests, she was led by this stranger to an automobile in which she was taken to an open lot, not far distant, where she was ravished after she had vainly struggled to protect herself and had fainted. Her assailant returned with her to a street near her home and there allowed her to get out of the automobile. On leaving the automobile she saw the registration number. When she got home she told two of her friends of the assault. At seven o'clock on the following morning she went to work in the mill where she was employed. The attention of the foreman and of her employer was directed to her by her crying and nervousness. As a result of their inquiry as to the cause of her trouble, she told them, and also the wife of her employer, of the occurrences of the previous night. The *388 police department was notified by the employer and a criminal complaint was made by the Chief of Police in which the defendant was charged with simple assault. Defendant was arrested and after a trial by a judge of a district court was found not guilty of assault. He was later indicted for rape and found guilty by a jury.
The objections to the admission of the complaints made by the prosecutrix are without merit. The offence was committed about eleven o'clock at night, and the complaints on the following morning were made before nine o'clock, within ten hours after the injury. In the recent case of State v. Russo,
The defendant admitted that he was driving the automobile in which the offence was alleged to have been committed on the night in question. He testified that he left his home in Pawtucket that night about seven o'clock and with a companion drove to Brockton, Massachusetts, where he remained for several hours and that he did not return to his home until two o'clock the following morning. The automobile was registered as the property of defendant's father but he never operated it and did not have a driver's license. The State claimed that defendant was the actual owner and regular driver of the car. In the direct examination defendant testified that he did not have an operator's license and that he had not applied for a renewal of a license formerly held by him which had expired in 1924 because he did not need to use an automobile in his business. In the *389 cross-examination of a clerk of the state automobile department, defendant's counsel asked this question: "34 Q. So far as your record goes there had been no complaint filed with your board that would hold up a license? . . . A. There is nothing in his record that would hold up the driver's license." The witness on redirect examination stated that this testimony was incorrect and asked permission to correct it. Defendant objected to any correction and took exception to the ruling of the court allowing such correction to be made. The witness then testified that there was a complaint in his record against defendant made by the police department, that defendant had falsely represented himself to be a police officer. Such testimony, although inadmissible for the State, was elicited by defendant's counsel's questions in cross-examination and the exception thereto is overruled.
The defendant sought to attack the credibility of the prosecutrix, who was a witness, by evidence of her reputation for chastity. The exclusion of such evidence was correct. Evidence of chastity is generally held to be admissible when the question of consent of the prosecutrix is in issue. Although there is considerable authority in other jurisdictions to support defendant's contention, the established practice in this state and in many other states does not permit the introduction of such evidence to impeach the credibility of a witness. Thus in State
v. Fitzsimon,
In discussing the conflict of the authorities, Wharton, Vol. 1 of his work on Criminal Law, 10th ed., § 568, states: "That it is no defence to an indictment for rape that he prosecutrix was a woman of loose character there can be no question; and if the fact of a forcible connection against the prosecutrix's will be established, her prior looseness would have nothing to do with the issue." The objection to such testimony in this case is that it brings into the trial a collateral issue which is not relevant to the question of defendant's guilt. The dangerous tendency of such evidence to divert the consideration of the jury from the real issue is obvious. As was pointed out in the Kolb case, an exception to the above rule was recognized in Mitchell v.Work,
The exception to the exclusion of evidence of the acquittal in the district court on the complaint for simple assault is without merit. This defence, if not waived by defendant, should have been made by a special plea of autrefois acquit which strictly should have been pleaded and tried before the general plea of not guilty. It can not be proven under the general issue. Wharton Cr. Pl. Prac. (9th ed.) § 478; Commonwealth v.Chesley,
The evidence to support the verdict is ample. This verdict has been approved by the trial justice. We find no error of any consequence in the record. All of defendant's exceptions are overruled and the case is remitted to the Superior Court for further proceedings.