United States v. Walter E. Ashe

427 F.2d 626, 138 U.S. App. D.C. 356, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1970
Docket22654_1
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 427 F.2d 626 (United States v. Walter E. Ashe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Walter E. Ashe, 427 F.2d 626, 138 U.S. App. D.C. 356, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9300 (D.C. Cir. 1970).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal of appellant’s conviction under an indictment charging him with carnal knowledge of his ten year old daughter. Appellant’s contentions relate to the sufficiency of the evidence and to the procedures by which the defense of insanity, raised by the court over the personal objection of appellant, was presented to the jury.

Our review of the record reveals that this was indeed a very close case with respect to the sufficiency of the required evidence of corroboration of the elements of the offense.

The Government’s case against appellant rested primarily on the testimony of the complainant and her nine year old brother. Appellant’s wife, the mother of the complainant, invoked her marital privilege and did not testify. The complainant gave straightforward testimony, but only after persistent questioning by the prosecutor. Indeed, when first called to the stand she failed to testify to any sexual relationship with appellant; she gave this testimony incriminating defendant only after she had been recalled, made aware of the presence of the investigating police officer in the courtroom, and permitted to read over to herself the statement that she had given to this officer. Moreover, her prior account, which she gave to a policewoman shortly after the alleged offense, was that her father had not bothered her.

The brother was called by the Government as an eyewitness to the alleged offense. Before he testified the trial judge properly conducted an interview in chambers, in the presence of counsel and court reporter, to determine whether the 9 *628 year old was competent to testify. We are disturbed, however, because the questioning was almost casual, and the questions were leading. The deficiency is underscored by the fact another district judge had already declared a mistrial, after a jury had been sworn in this case, due to the problems raised by this witness’s competency (JA 69).

Turning to the brother’s testimony at trial, it is riddled with confusion about just what he saw and when he saw it. We do not see any specific corroboration of the nighttime episode described by the daughter complainant. His testimony concerning an incident occurring first before his father moved out of the house was that his father was on top of his sister while she was on her stomach. This does not amount to corroboration of an incident of carnal knowledge. He did give testimony which can be taken as relating a pattern of events of intercourse by defendant with his daughter. There is a difficulty with using that testimony as corroboration since it contradicts the testimony of complainant that there was only one act of intercourse. The Government argues that even though the two lines of testimony are inconsistent they are in an ultimate sense reinforcing. Passing this problem we are confronted with the more basic difficulty that his testimony is so undercut by his misunderstanding of questions, and his inability to relate a comprehensible narrative, that it is with the greatest reluctance and uneasiness, if at all, that a court could rely on this scattered testimony as satisfying the rule requiring independent corroboration. We have set out in the footnote portions of his testimony illustrative of some of these deficiencies. 1

The need for corroboration cannot be dispensed with simply because this is a case of incest. We appreciate the Government’s position that as a practical matter corroboration is difficult to establish as to an intra-family sex crime. We conclude on reflection that the reasons for the rule requiring corroboration as to sex crimes, 2 a rule turning in the last analysis on the possibilities of distortion and misrepresentation, are present for crimes like incest, particularly if account is taken of the complexity and in *629 tensity inherent in familial relationships, including the problems of divided loyalties.

A more troublesome question is raised by prosecution’s claim that there was corroboration in the fact that the complainant’s hymen was perforated. The inference that the hymen was perforated by an act of sexual intercourse is speculative. And in the nature of things there could be no establishment of the time of perforation.

However, we need not decide the vexing question of whether the prosecution evidence was sufficient to go to the jury. The most that could be said for that evidence is that it was a very “thin” case. In that context, and taking into account the firm position of the defendant on the issue of insanity raised by the court (defendant did not want this defense presented and told the trial court that an insanity defense would prejudice his quite substantial case on the merits), we cannot overlook the impact of the testimony given by the psychiatrist, Dr. Morris Platkin of St. Elizabeths Hospital, on the issue of insanity. In this trial it was that psychiatric, testimony that provided, in the apt words of defense appellate counsel, the really strong “corroboration” for the prosecution. He testified that the defendant was not improbably capable of the acts charged, that these were consistent with his condition (which had organic features with sexual deviation), and that the defendant’s selection of his daughter is explainable on the ground of convenience. 3

The trial judge was correct in investigating the issue of insanity and in saying that the court would take the burden of raising this defense off the shoulders of defense trial counsel. Whalem v. United States, 120 U.S.App.D.C. 331, 337, 346 F.2d 812, 818 (1965). But in taking on that obligation in the circumstances of this ease the trial judge assumed the *630 corollary burden of assuring that the issue would be presented and considered in a way that would not prejudice the defendant’s substantial defense on the merits.

A sound approach might well be to hear at least the essentials of the testimony of the witness in the first instance outside the presence of the jury, in order to assess the problem. In the case at bar, at least one remedy available to the judge was the procedure of a bifurcated trial, which has been approved by this court 4 and has been applied in trials in the District Court. Under this procedure evidence of insanity could have been reserved until the jury had first decided the issue of guilt or innocence apart from the defense of insanity and returned either a verdict of not guilty, which would stand as a general verdict, or a verdict of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, which would constitute a special verdict pending consideration of the insanity issue. Neither this nor any other protective procedures was invoked by the judge.

The mere fact that the insanity defense is raised by the court over the objection of the defendant does not of itself require the court to invoke protective procedures sua sponte. Harried v. United States, 128 U.S.App.D.C. 330, 389 F.2d 281 (1967). But here, unlike Harried,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
427 F.2d 626, 138 U.S. App. D.C. 356, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-walter-e-ashe-cadc-1970.