Kiefer v. State

44 N.W.2d 537, 258 Wis. 47, 1950 Wisc. LEXIS 279
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 44 N.W.2d 537 (Kiefer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kiefer v. State, 44 N.W.2d 537, 258 Wis. 47, 1950 Wisc. LEXIS 279 (Wis. 1950).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The facts are these: The victim of the assault was born December 22, 1945. On September 16, 1949, she was living with her parents in a house on the main street of the village of Eden in Fond du Lac county. Defendant conducted a garage and filling station about half a block away, and lived with his family in a residence immediately adjoining the garage. The house of a Mr. Grahl was between the little girl’s home and the defendant’s garage.

*49 . The evidence shows that on F.riday, September 16, 1949, at about 1:30 p.m. the little girl went over to the garage where she frequently played with one of the defendant’s 'children, and returned home at about 2 p.m. She cried that evening and continued crying off and on all night but did not complain of being hurt in any particular place. Her father went to work at 4 a.m. on Saturday and about 9 or 9:30 that morning her mother dressed the daughter. She had not given her a bath the night before and had not observed anything wrong about her person. The child had difficulty in going to the bathroom the next morning and started to cry. It was at that time her mother examined her and saw that she was all sore in the region of her private parts. The child then told her mother what had happened to her. Later in the day she told her father, the deputy sheriff, and sheriff, but the witnesses were not permitted to testify as to the conversations.

The father arrived home about 4:30 or 5 o’clock that afternoon, and the mother told him of an alleged offense having been committed on the daughter. He examined the little girl andv asked her questions, and then went to the sheriff’s office at Fond du Lac. The sheriff told him to bring the little girl in for examination.

She was examined by Dr. Kief in Fond du Lac who found that both the vulva and the labia minora were excoriated, that the hymen was intact, and there was no abnormal vaginal discharge. He testified that the marks which he found might have been caused by the indiscreet and indiscriminate use of the finger or fingernails. On cross-examination he testified that the condition could be caused by sliding on a rough surface “if this surface would have come in contact with the parts we are speaking of.”

At about 6 or 6:15 p.m. the sheriff sent a deputy to the home of defendant to bring him in for questioning. Defendant accompanied him willingly. On the way back to Fond du Lac, the deputy told defendant what it was about and advised *50 him to tell the truth about it, saying, “I may be able to help you."

When they arrived at the county jail and defendant saw the sheriff, he started to cry and said, “John, I done it.” The sheriff and the deputy then took the defendant into the sheriff’s office and within approximately one-half hour, the defendant signed a statement on a prepared form on which the deputy had typed the facts related by the defendant. These were to the effect that the little girl had gone into the toilet at the garage, that he went into the toilet and fingered her vagina and had tried to insert his penis but found the vagina too small, after which he had given her an apple and sent her home saying she should not tell her mother and dad. The defendant was then locked in a cell until Monday morning.

On Monday morning, September 19th, the sheriff and another deputy took the defendant to the district attorney’s office to obtain a warrant. Another statement was prepared and signed by the defendant at about 10 a.m. The second statement was in substance the same as the first one with the addition that defendant said he thought he heard a car outside pull into the station and he then ceased his efforts.

The accused was charged with assault with intent to commit carnal knowledge and abuse. A warrant was issued out of the municipal court of Fond du Lac county and he was arrested and taken before the court at 10:50 a.m. The case was tried on December 5, 1949.

The defendant asserts that the testimony of the child determines without doubt that because of her infancy she was incompetent as a witness.

The little girl was seventeen days less than four years, old. We have examined the record and find that neither at the time that she was called as a witness nor at any time during her testimony was any objection to her competency or to any question put to her raised by the defendant. No objection was made to the fact that she testified without being sworn *51 or affirmed or to the sufficiency of the preliminary investigation to determine her appreciation of the necessity of telling the truth. No objection was made to the fact that a part of the examination of the little girl as a witness was conducted by her mother. Defendant’s counsel participated in the examination and then made the following statement:

“Mr. O’Brien: Well, if the court please; I wish it to appear in the record that the little girl, who will b.e four years of age on the 22d of December, 1949, and who was three years-plus of age at the time of the alleged incident making the basis of this prosecution, was called to the stand and seated on the lap of her mother, and then afterwards seated on an ottoman beside the judge’s chair, and asked many questions as to identification of the defendant, and other questions as appear in the record. That thereafter it was suggested that possibly if she would be taken into the judge’s chambers that she might speak more freely, and that was done, and that she was seated on her mother’s lap, adjacent to the judge’s desk, and was asked further questions by the court and by the attorney for the defendant as well as by her mother; and that the testimony given appears from the record as having been taken in chambers as to the latter part, and in open court as to the first part of her testimony. That the case was tried to the court without a jury, and the questions and answers propounded by her mother and by the court and by the attorney for the defense — -well, I’m repeating there — were as appears from the record, and so answered.
“Mr. Murphy: If the court please; there’s just one addition I’d like to make to that: That the defendant, Peter L. Kiefer, was present in chambers at the time the testimony was taken there.
“The Court: Oh, yes.
“Mr. O’Brien: As well as in open court.
“The Court: Yes. All right, Mr. Murphy, are you through ?
“Mr. Murphy: The state rests, Your Honor.”

Defendant’s counsel then renewed his motion to have the confessions (Exhibits 2 and 3) stricken from the record, but no objection was made to the little girl’s testimony.

*52 It was held in Dickinson v. Buskie (1883), 59 Wis. 136, 138, 17 N. W. 685, that if the fact that a witness is intoxicated is brought to the attention of counsel while such witness is on the stand, the objection to his competency must be taken then, and will not avail if made for the first time on a motion for a new trial.

The rule that objection to the competency of a witness must be properly taken at the trial or it cannot be reviewed by this court is applicable where the alleged incompetency is due to infancy.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W.2d 537, 258 Wis. 47, 1950 Wisc. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiefer-v-state-wis-1950.