State v. Dorathy

170 A. 506, 132 Me. 291, 1934 Me. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 170 A. 506 (State v. Dorathy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dorathy, 170 A. 506, 132 Me. 291, 1934 Me. LEXIS 11 (Me. 1934).

Opinion

Barnes, J.

The respondent was tried and convicted, on an indictment under Sec. 6 of Chapter 135, R. S., for taking indecent liberties with a female person under the age of sixteen years.

During the trial, the prosecutrix, in cross-examination, was asked whether, at about the time when respondent is charged with having committed the offense set out in the indictment, she did something naughty with a boy of the village; and whether she had told her mother anything about him. On objection the court excluded these questions, and exception was noted.

The record then shows the following:

• Q. “Do you know a boy by the name of Raymond Collins ?”

A. “No, Sir.”

Mr. Eames: “I object.”

Mr. Dubord: “You say you don’t know a boy by the name of Raymond Collins?”

The Court: “I shall have to exclude that as the case now stands.”

To this ruling the second exception was noted.

A nurse having supervision of the children in the local schools was introduced as a witness for the respondent and asked whether the prosecutrix said anything to her to the effect that boys had infected her with gonorrhea.

She was not allowed to answer the question, and the third exception was noted.

The nurse was then asked whether she was “familiar with an investigation in connection with” prosecutrix and a boy of the town.

[293]*293This question was excluded and the fourth exception noted.

The nurse was asked if she had any talk with the prosecutrix concerning whether or not she acquired venereal disease from or gave it to a local boy, and whether she had any talk with the prosecutrix concerning her actions, with a young man named, at or about the same time she accused respondent of committing the crime.

The exclusion of these questions gave rise to the fifth exception. Another exception, taken at the trial, was waived.

The prosecutrix was a girl, eight years old at the time of the trial.

She was examined by the presiding Justice, in the presence of counsel for both sides, and later presented as a witness.

The questions that resulted in the first and second exceptions were asked as affecting the credibility of the witness. The nature and extent of cross-examinations of a child of tender years is left to the discretion of the court.

The credibility to which the child is entitled is for the jury.

Should contradiction or apparent misunderstanding arise, or discrepancies appear, by reason of testimony of others, respondent’s counsel might well ask the privilege of making searching examination of a child of eight.

At the stage to which the trial had advanced when these questions were asked, the respondent was not hurt by their rejection.

The court excluded them, “as the case now stands,” and properly.

The State rested after the production of the prosecutrix, and the respondent introduced testimony that on the last day of September, 1932, respondent showed no symptoms of gonorrhea; and that after the middle of that month the prosecutrix was suffering from that disease.

After verdict of guilty, motion for a new trial was presented to the court, alleging as grounds therefor that the verdict was against the law, evidence and the weight of evidence, and that the State did not prove that the respondent was twenty-one years of age or more when the crime was committed.

This motion was denied, and appeal taken.

[294]*294The appeal was argued on the issue of evidence of the respondent’s age.

Not failing to note that no witness was asked the age of the respondent, and that the best practice would be to put into the written record direct evidence thereof, it remains for this court to say that we find evidence that justified the decision of the jury.

That evidence is in the record of the court proceedings, and we cannot say, after the jury has passed upon the weight of the evidence, that the evidence was so slight the respondent should be discharged.

In arguing his motion for a new trial respondent stresses the claim that there was no evidence that he was twenty-one years or more of age when the offense was committed, and if admissible evidence thereon be found urges the court to rule that all the admissible evidence on the issue of respondent’s age at that time be held insufficient to prove beyond reasonable doubt this material issue.

The right of a jury in a criminal case to determine a person’s age by inspection or observation has been decided in many of our states, with some diversity as to conclusions.

Some few hold that the jury may not determine one’s age by inspection or observation where attention has not been called to the fact that such person was on inspection for that purpose.

A small class hold that one’s appearance can never be taken into consideration by the jury, the reason advanced being that such evidence cannot be preserved for review.

We find, however, a very respectable collection of authorities which hold that one’s personal appearance may be observed by the jury, in connection with other evidence or standing alone, for the purpose of determining his or her age.

The gravity of the hazard the respondent at the bar faces is fully appreciated by the court, and it is borne in mind that he “shall not be compelled to furnish or give evidence against himself.”

He was presented for a felony. So he was required to be present in the court room, before the'jury which was to try the State’s case against him was empanelled, and in the presence of Court and jury throughout the trial. We take judicial notice that when the trial was at its beginning respondent was informed, by statement [295]*295of the court, through its clerk, that certain persons were about to be qualified to try the case; that if he were to object to any persons called, he must do so before they were sworn.

And the inference is unavoidable that every alert and intelligent juror sworn then must have seen respondent, whom probably to know aright as to age was but to see.

We take judicial notice that after the jurors were sworn, the respondent, if physically able to rise and stand, did so while to him and to the jury was read the indictment, which charges that at the time of commission of the alleged felony respondent was seventy-four years old.

It is in the record, sufficiently for purposes of review, that the jurors saw the respondent, on the day of trial.

Later, in the record we find that while the little girl was being examined, she was asked, “Do you know that man who sits down there in that chair (indicating respondent) ?”

She answered, “Yes, Sir.”

Then followed:

Q. “What is his name?”

A. “Henry Dorathy.”

So that again each juror had his attention directed to the respondent. It may be argued that no juror can be allowed to review in the conference room the concept formed if he saw with his eyes a man of more than tw'enty-one years, or an infant in his minority.

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 506, 132 Me. 291, 1934 Me. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dorathy-me-1934.