Garden v. State

318 P.2d 652, 73 Nev. 312, 1957 Nev. LEXIS 120
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1957
Docket4000
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 318 P.2d 652 (Garden v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garden v. State, 318 P.2d 652, 73 Nev. 312, 1957 Nev. LEXIS 120 (Neb. 1957).

Opinion

*314 OPINION

By the Court,

Merrill, J.:

This is an appeal from judgment of conviction of the crime of statutory rape.

The first assignment of error is that the jury verdict of guilty is unsupported by any substantial evidence; that the trial court, under the evidence, should have advised a verdict of not guilty. Appellant has cited authority upon the proposition that a scintilla of evidence is not enough; that there must be substantial evidence to provide support for the verdict. This proposition does not meet the problem presented by this case, however. There can be no doubt of the substance of the proof if that proof be regarded as credible. The problem is exclusively one of credibility.

The prosecutrix was appellant’s stepdaughter, age 12 years. She testified that the offense took place on Monday, May 21, 1956 in the family home in Las Vegas at about 5:30 o’clock p.m. Corroborating her testimony was that of her sister, age 10 years, who testified to having witnessed acts of intercourse between her sister and her stepfather on several occasions. The prosecutrix testified in some detail to the nature of the acts constituting the offense. These acts, if committed, unquestionably constituted the crime of statutory rape. This testimony, if believed, unquestionably provided substantial proof of guilt.

In four respects doubt is cast upon the truth of this testimony. (1) The prosecutrix had testified under oath at a juvenile court hearing that the offense had been committed Sunday, May 20. At the time of trial she was unable to explain this discrepancy but insisted that Monday, the 21st, was the true date. (2) Testimony of several witnesses called by the appellant accounted for his presence elsewhere during the late afternoon of Monday, the 21st. (3) The prosecutrix testified that she had engaged in acts of intercourse with appellant over a substantial period of time, commencing when the family resided in Oregon, continuing as the family moved to California, to Nebraska, to Keno, Nevada, and, finally, *315 to Las Vegas. A Nebraska physician called as witness by the appellant, testified that he had examined the prosecutrix in March 1955 and that at that time she showed no indication of having engaged in intercourse.

These issues and inconsistencies constitute no basis for reversal. It was the jury function to resolve these matters and the manner in which it did so and the weight it gave to the evidence will not be questioned upon appeal. “Contradictions and inconsistencies in the testimony of a witness alone will not constitute inherent improbability.” People v. Amadio, 25 Cal.App. 729, 731, 145 P. 151, 152, as quoted in People v. Holman, 72 Cal.App.2d 75, 89, 164 P.2d 297, 305.

The fourth and most serious respect in which the testimony of both girls is impeached is found in the fact that both had, prior to trial, wholly repudiated their original statements as to the guilt of their stepfather and had insisted upon his innocence. Upon cross examination the prosecutrix admitted that four days after the juvenile court hearing she had told her mother that she had made up the story of her stepfather’s misconduct because she was angry with him for punishing her; that during the following few days she had made the same statement of repudiation to appellant’s attorney and to four other persons and had signed a statement to that effect at the office of appellant’s attorney. Her sister had likewise made a statement to appellant’s attorney repudiating her earlier statement to the police that she had witnessed the commission of acts of intercourse.

Notwithstanding their admissions of earlier inconsistent statements, both girls at the time of trial insisted upon the truth of their testimony then given and upon the fact of their stepfather’s guilt. Their earlier inconsistencies they explained as due to their desire to prevent their stepfather from having to go to prison.

These earlier repudiations cannot be said to have destroyed the probative value of testimony to the contrary given at the time of trial or to have rendered that *316 testimony incredible as a matter of law. The explanation given by the girls for their inconsistent statements was not inherently improbable. The inconsistencies, then, posed a question of credibility which it was the jury’s function to resolve. The jury obviously chose to disbelieve that the detailed description of the manner in which the offense had been committed was a creature of imagination which had been related in juvenile court and on trial below out of longlasting anger. It obviously chose to believe that, while anger may originally have caused the complaint to have been made, still the circumstances of the offense were truly related; that it was the repudiation of the complaint which was false, but that a false repudiation was understandable in the light of the children’s affection for or loyalty to their stepfather.

In two California cases the identical problem was faced by the court. Both cases involved statutory rape committed by the defendant upon his own child. In People v. Crawford, 24 Cal.App. 396, 141 P. 824, 827, the court stated, “It can be readily understood how the jury must have viewed the situation and made allowance for the natural desire of the child to protect her father. No doubt the jurors believed that,' while it was not strange nor incredible that the prosecutrix would falsely avow her father’s innocence, it was almost unthinkable that she would falsely charge him with the crime.” In People v. Avena, 34 Cal.App. 500, 168 P. 148, the prosecutrix and her sister both admitted that their testimony at the trial was directly contrary to that given by them at the preliminary examination. Their explanation of the testimony given at the preliminary examination was that they had been told that if their father was convicted he would be sent to the penitentiary and they to the reform school. The court stated, “It was for the jury to decide whether these contradictory statements under all the circumstances and facts placed before the jury so far impeached these witnesses as to render their testimony at the trial improbable or unbelievable.”

*317 We conclude that it was not error for the trial court to leave the verdict to the jury; that the jury’s determination of credibility may not be disturbed on this appeal.

Appellant next asserts as error the rejection by the trial court of certain testimony offered for purposes of impeachment. The testimony was to the effect that the prosecutrix had stated to the witness that her stepfather was innocent and that she had made up the story upon which her complaint had been based. The court rejected the testimony upon the ground that the prosecutrix had already admitted the fact. The record demonstrates that she had not admitted the conversation in question. As to this witness she first denied the conversation and then, upon being pressed, modified her testimony to state that she did not remember having it.

The court’s recollection of the precise state of the record was faulty. However, even should this constitute its ruling erroneous as a matter of law, no prejudice can be found.

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624 P.2d 494 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1981)
DeBello v. DeBell
394 A.2d 895 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1978)
Zessman v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
318 P.2d 652, 73 Nev. 312, 1957 Nev. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garden-v-state-nev-1957.