Commonwealth v. McCafferty

54 Pa. D. & C.2d 190, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 128
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Warren County
DecidedOctober 20, 1971
Docketnos. 57 and 58
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Pa. D. & C.2d 190 (Commonwealth v. McCafferty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Warren County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. McCafferty, 54 Pa. D. & C.2d 190, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 128 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

WOLFE, P. J.

Defendant has filed post trial motions following his conviction by the court, nonjury, on a charge of incest and sodomy.

The motions are for arrest of judgment and new trial and the reasons given are substantially the same, namely, the verdict was against the evidence, against the weight of the evidence, contrary to law and was founded on hearsay testimony.

The court is of the opinion if the evidence as admitted was proper there is sufficient weight and credibility thereto to sustain the verdict.

Defendant’s main argument is the court erred in admitting an extra-judicial sworn statement by the victim, defendant’s 14-year-old daughter that she committed sodomy with defendant and had sexual relations with him at his demand and threats. Defendant argues that this statement was not admissible as falling within the realm of the hearsay exclusion and, even it if were admitted procedurally properly, it was totally repudiated by the victim, both at the magistrate’s preliminary hearing and before the court at time of trial, and, therefore, is insufficient evidence to sustain the conviction.

No cases on point have been found by the court and counsel has presented none relating particularly to this issue of the admission other than the general [192]*192rules that hearsay evidence is not admissible and that ex parte affidavits are not admissible.

We think the lack of ample cases is obvious considering the nature of the alleged acts. Sodomy and incest are not committed in public parks. Generally the victim of this type of crime is of tender years, reluctant to disclose even to their closest associates and relatives what occurred and are more reluctant to appear in court and testify against a parent.

Stated briefly, the victim gave a sworn statement before a magistrate in the presence of the Pennsylvania State Police and her sister that defendant, her father, had sexual intercourse with her and compelled her to commit sodomy upon him on various occasions approximately seven to eight months prior to the date of her statement made on June 2, 1970. These acts were done while defendant was drunk and the victim was reluctant to tell her mother about it but being fearful her father might do the same with her younger sister she advised her mother, who told her to go to the State Police and file the charges.

On the basis of the written statement, the State Trooper as well as the victim executed the complaint.

At the preliminary hearing, however, the victim totally repudiated and recanted her written sworn statement but, notwithstanding, the magistrate bound defendant over to court and again, at trial, the victim repudiated and recanted the written statement and advanced as her reason therefor she was originally angry with her father because he had “grounded her” for misconduct and that her 'sister’s boyfriend had encouraged her to sign the statement as well as her sister because of her father’s negative attitude towards the boyfriend and also the juvenile personnel of the county encouraged her to make the statement.

Defendant presented no witnesses on his behalf but [193]*193testified himself and denied that the charges were true.

The Commonwealth presented the victim as a hostile witness and gave its reasons therefor that the victim had repudiated her written statement at the prer liminary hearing and likely as not would do the same at trial. Over objection, the Commonwealth was permitted to present the victim as a hostile witness. The Commonwealth also presented testimony from the juvenile personnel and personnel from Child Welfare, who both testified they had prior conversations with the victim concerning the drinking habits of her father and her fear of him, and that they were summoned by the school director to talk to the victim after she had disclosed to the school principal her fathers activities and that they both believed the victim at that time and did not believe her in her repudiation of the written statement.

The court is of the opinion that if the victim were the complainant solely, it would be difficult to find that there was sufficient evidence to convict. We think, however, there is sufficient evidence in the Commonwealth’s case through the complaining officer who executed the complaint and who believed the victim at the time he filed the charges on the basis of his two prior conversations with her and he being present also when she executed the complaint.

To this, however, defendant asserts that the conviction was totally based upon hearsay testimony (to the officer), which was repudiated and, therefore, there is insufficient evidence to sustain this conviction.

We do not interpret the rules of evidence in this light.

Hearsay evidence is that given by a person who relates not what he knows of his own knowledge but [194]*194what he has heard from others and, hence, his evidence which derives its value, not from the credit to be given to the witness upon the stand but, in part, from the veracity and competency of some other person for the probative force of that to which he testifies: Corser v. Hale et al., 149 Pa. 274, 24 Atl. 285 (1892). Statements not made in court under the sanctity of an oath which are sought to be related by the witness on the witness stand are hearsay: Rudsill v. Cordes, 333 Pa. 544, 5 A. 2d 217 (1939). A writing may be hearsay: Halberstadt v. Bannan, 149 Pa. 51, 24 Atl. 82 (1892).

On the other hand, the testimony of a witness as to what some other person said is properly excluded when offered as evidence of the truth of the facts asserted, but the rule does not apply where the testimony is offered merely to prove that the statement was made: Commonwealth v. Ricci, 332 Pa. 540, 545 (1939). Hence, we think defendant’s argument must fall for two reasons. First, the written statement given by the recanting procecutrix was not obtained by her through another person, but, in the first instance, was given by her, not as a witness but as the victim of the assault; second, the statement was used by the Commonwealth not in corroboration of the victim’s original oral statements to the Commonwealth and others, but to attack her credibility after she repudiated the statement. Defendant fails to consider the witness was the prosecutrix. If his position be correct, we do not see how any charge could be legally filed against one alleged to have committed a crime unless defendant is first arrested before the complaint is made out and presented before the magistrate spontaneously with the complainant.

The fact the prosecutrix later recants her testimony does not relegate her original statement as the victim to the role of hearsay testimony. In this event, the [195]*195issue then becomes for the court one of credibility of which statement to believe when the Commonwealth presses its complaint.

It is at this point that the court concludes it committed error. At trial, the Commonwealth offered the victim as a hostile witness and, over objection of defense counsel, she was permitted to be treated as a hostile witness at length, being confronted with her prior written inconsistent statement upon which the Commonwealth based its case. The Commonwealth had knowledge prior to trial that the victim had repudiated her allegations and indeed, had done so at the preliminary hearing. For this reason, the Commonwealth was not, in fact, surprised. Commonwealth v. Turner, 389 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Pa. D. & C.2d 190, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mccafferty-pactcomplwarren-1971.