People v. Brehm

218 A.D. 266, 218 N.Y.S. 469, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5911
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 12, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 218 A.D. 266 (People v. Brehm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Brehm, 218 A.D. 266, 218 N.Y.S. 469, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5911 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Manning, J.

The act with which the defendant was charged was an assault committed, on the evening of May 22, 1925, upon a thirteen-year-old girl. It is undisputed that if he did commit the assault, the act was committed on that evening only. The defendant had been tried on this charge twice before, and on each of those trials the jury disagreed.

Upon the present trial a physician testified to having made . a physical examination of the girl in the forenoon of the day following "the alleged assault. The examination disclosed an absence of the hymen and an irritation of the organs. The doctor testified that he could not say how long the hymen had been ruptured before the date of his examination, and that there was no way of telling ” when the irritation had been caused. When asked whether the causation might not-have taken place two weeks before the date of the examination, he said: “ I do not know how you are going to judge it.” On cross-examination the complainant was asked whether she did not, prior to May 22, 1925, have sexual intercourse with defendant’s brother, and also whether she did not, within two weeks prior to that date, have similar intercourse with one Milton Parker. An objection to these questions was sustained, and the complainant was not permitted to answer.

In connection with rape upon one who is under the statutory age of consent, it is immaterial whether the prosecutrix had had connection with other men or whether she did or did not consent to the performance of the particular act involved. (People v. Marks, 146 App. Div. 11.) But here the situation is peculiar. The physician had testified that the hymen was absent and that he could not say when the condition disclosed had been caused. The irritation and the absence of the hymen might, therefore, have been due to acts committed by others. The complainant had testified that defendant’s act, committed on the evening preceding the examination, was the cause. So it became highly important for the defendant to show, if he could, that she had had illicit relations with other men — this not for the purpose of showing that her acts were promiscuous, for that, as has been stated, was immaterial, but for the reason that it bore upon the very close question in this case, i. e., whether the condition which the doctor found, and of the origin of which he was uncertain, was due [269]*269to the alleged act of the defendant on the evening of May 22, 1925.

A similar situation arose in People v. Betsinger (11 N. Y. Supp. 916, decided by the General Term, Fourth Department, in 1890). There the prosecutrix, at the time of the trial, was fifteen years of age. A physician testified that nearly three months after the offense was alleged to have been committed he examined her and found the hymen absent, that there were traces of it but that it was not intact and not in a normal condition for a virgin. An attempt was made to show, by cross-examining the prosecutrix, that she had had illicit intercourse with other men. The trial court excluded the evidence, stating: “ I deem it non-essential, entirely, whether this child has been raped or otherwise ill-treated a dozen times prior to this.” Commenting upon the trial court’s ruling and statement, the General Term said: Surely, if she had ' been raped or otherwise ill-treated a dozen times prior to this,’ the time when Dr. Head made the personal examination of her, the force of the facts stated by him in his narration of the condition in which he found her at the time he made the examination would have been broken, and it would have been for the jury to say whether or no the condition in which he found her was by reason of any act of the defendant, or by reason of her practices with other parties. (People v. Crapo, 76 N. Y. 288, affirming 15 Hun, 269.)”

In the circumstances here disclosed the defendant should have been permitted to present such evidence' as would tend to show that others, not he, had caused the condition concerning which the physician testified.

On the evening of the alleged assault, after the girl had gone to bed, and also on the following morning, her father and mother, having discovered that she had been with defendant in his automobile, went to her room and questioned her. The mother was permitted to testify that at the first interview her husband asked the girl whether she had been out with the Brehm fellow,” and that the girl said she had. The mother also testified that at the second interview, on the following morning, she asked her daughter “ if Brehm had bothered her the night before,” and that the daughter answered “ yes.” This testimony of the mother was corroborated by the girl herself in the following language: “ She asked me if Brehm had bothered me and I said 1 yes.’ * * * She says, ‘ Did he do anything to you? ’ and I said ‘ yes.’ ”

The fact that the prosecutrix made a complaint, and the circumstances under which it was made, are relevant, but the terms of the complaint itself are not relevant. (Regina v. Walker, 2 M. & Rob. 212.) In every case the virtue of the disclosure lies in the fact [270]*270that the prosecuting witness, shortly after the occurrence, went to some one voluntarily and complained of her experience. In the case in hand the girl did not go to any one, did hot complain to any one, and did not make a voluntary statement. The disclosure was drawn from her by leading questions put by her father and mother. The admission of such evidence is condemned in People v. Deitsch (237 N. Y. 300). In that case the complaining witness was eight years of age. Her condition after the assault, as disclosed by the medical examination, was sufficient to support her story that a rape had been committed. There was testimony that immediately after the assault she had complained to a neighbor. There was also testimony that half an hour later, “ not as the natural result of reaction to the crime, but in reply to questions,” she gave the details concerning it to a policeman. The testimony as to her voluntary general disclosure was held to be competent. The admission of her testimony as to details was declared to be •error, the court saying: “ Any incompetent testimony tending to strengthen in the minds of the jury the identification of the [defendant by the] complainant was harmful.” In People v. Clemons (37 Hun, 580) the court said: And the governing rule here must be deemed such that the particulars of the complaint made by the prosecutrix to a third person, in the absence of the person charged, are not, to any extent, admissible in chief upon the trial, but that the fact that complaint by the prosecutrix of the outrage, giving the nature of it, was made may be received. And it may also be shown that the name of the person complained of, and other particulars, were mentioned by her to the witness, but what was stated in those respects is not admissible.” In Baccio v. People (41 N. Y. 265) the court quoted with approval from Russell on Crimes (8th Am. ed. vol. 1, p. *689) as follows: “ It is the usual course, in cases of rape, to ask the prosecutrix whether she made any complaint, and, if so, to whom: and if she mentions a person to whom she made complaint, to call such person to prove that fact; but it has been the invariable practice not to permit either the prosecutrix, or the person so called, to state the particulars of the complaint, during the examination in chief.”

To admit such testimony was reversible error, first, because the disclosure was not spontaneous, and, secondly,

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Bluebook (online)
218 A.D. 266, 218 N.Y.S. 469, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brehm-nyappdiv-1926.