Rick Schill appeals from a judgment of conviction of gross sexual imposition. He contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury verdict. We affirm.
In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to convict, we look only to the evidence most favorable to the verdict and the reasonable inferences therefrom to see if there is substantial evidence to warrant a conviction.
State v. Dubs,
*661 Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the verdict, the record shows that on separate occasions when Schill’s seven-year-old niece stayed overnight at his residence, Schill entered the room where she was sleeping, removed her panties and touched her inside the vagina. While she could not remember how many times this occurred, she testified at trial that it happened more than once and at different locations, depending upon where Schill was living at the time. Using anatomically correct dolls, she described these incidents in an interview with a Grand Forks County Social Services social worker. She was also deposed by Schill’s attorney. Both the interview and the deposition were videotaped and played to the jury.
Schill argues that because the child’s testimony at trial is so inconsistent with her prior statements in the interview and deposition, it is insufficient to sustain a felony conviction. The inconsistencies relate to the frequency and the intrusiveness of each occurrence, as well as the scene of each occurrence.
While the child may have given inconsistent testimony about the specifics of each incident, she did not deviate from her basic position that Schill touched her in her “private parts” while she was staying with his. family. The jury heard her testimony at trial and viewed the videotaped deposition and interview. The inconsistencies were argued to the jury by Schill’s attorney in closing argument. Nonetheless, the jury deemed the child’s testimony credible and rendered a guilty verdict.
It is the exclusive function of the jury to weigh the evidence and judge the credibility of witnesses.
State v. Manke,
Schill also argues that some corroboration is necessary to provide sufficient evidence in cases where the sole witness to the alleged act is a seven-year-old child whose testimony contains inconsistencies. It appears that Schill’s argument for corroboration is grounded on his skepticism of a child’s testimony. This skepticism appears to be shared by juries that are reluctant to convict for sexual abuse when the only evidence of the alleged crime is from the child’s own mouth. See generally National Legal Resource Center for Child Advocacy and Protection, Recommendations for Improving Legal Intervention in In-trafamily Child Sexual Abuse Cases, at 32 (American Bar Association, Washington, D.C.1982). See also Goodman, Golding and Haith, Jurors’ Reactions to Child Witness, 40:2 J.Soc. Issues, 139 (1984). A child’s tendency to confuse fact and fantasy frequently has been cited as a reason to bar the child from testifying or to discount such testimony once given. Whitcomb, Shapiro, and Stellwagen, When the Victim Is a Child: Issues for Judges and Prosecutors, at 36 (printed by National Institute of Justice, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 1985); see also Berliner, The Child Witness: The Progress and Emerging Limitations, 40 U.Miami L.Rev. 167 (1985).
However, a relationship between age and honesty has not to date been established, and age is a somewhat arbitrary discriminator of legal competency to testify in court.
See
Whitcomb, Shapiro and Stellwagen,
supra
at 38. As early as 1907, this Court held that an eight-year-old child, the victim of rape, was competent to testify as a witness.
State v. Werner,
Under Rule 601, North Dakota Rules of Evidence, every person is competent to be a witness. Of course, with certain exceptions not relevant here, a witness must have personal knowledge, Rule 602, NDREv, and must be able and willing to testify truthfully. Rule 603, NDREv. As the explanatory note to Rule 601 makes clear,-the evaluation of a particular witness is best made by the trier of fact through the process of weighing the testimony and assessing its credibility, rather than by the prior imposition of standards of competency. Here, there was evidence that the child understood the difference between truth and falsehood and the need to tell only the truth.
Furthermore, it is well established in North Dakota that the uncorroborated testimony of a rape victim is sufficient to sustain a conviction.
See State v. Janda,
In this case, the child’s testimony established the essential elements of the crime of gross sexual imposition and is sufficient to sustain the conviction. Accordingly, the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
