Wentz v. State

150 A. 278, 159 Md. 161, 1930 Md. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 15, 1930
Docket[No. 5, April Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 150 A. 278 (Wentz v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wentz v. State, 150 A. 278, 159 Md. 161, 1930 Md. LEXIS 99 (Md. 1930).

Opinions

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, David O. Wentz, was indicted on a charge that he “feloniously, knowingly and incestuously did have carnal knowledge of the body of Florence Wentz, who was then and there the daughter of the said David O. Wentz, contrary to the form of the statute,” etc. The traverser demurred to the indictment and was -overruled. The trial of the case proceeded before the court sitting as a jury, the verdict was guilty, and from the sentence thereon this appeal is taken. In addition to rulings on the demurrer, there were fifteen exceptions to rulings on the evidence presented to this court.

The appellant contends that the indictment is defective because it does not sufficiently describe the offense. The section'of the Code under which the indictment was found is section 314 of article 21, which reads as follows:

“Every person who shall knowingly have carnal knowledge of another person, being within the degrees of consanguinity within which marriages are prohibited by law in this State, shall be deemed guilty of felony, and upon conviction thereof sbfl.TI be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term not less than one nor more than ten years, in the discretion of the court.”

*163 The appellant sums np his contention by saying “that the indictment was fatally defective in failing to allege that the appellant did the act with which he is charged, then and there well knowing that Florence Wentz was his daughter.” What the appellant says the indictment failed to say is what in effect it did say. The word “knowingly” is the word in the statute and it is a cardinal principle that an offense literally or substantially charged in the language of the statute shall be sufficient. Kearney v. State, 48 Md. 16, 24; Stevens v. State, 89 Md. 669; Benesch v. State, 129 Md. 505; Hicken v. State, 146 Md. 251; Weller v. State, 150 Md. 278; Dunbar v. United States, 156 U. S. 185, 39 L. Ed. 390. “The word ‘knowingly’ or ‘well knowing’ will supply the place of a positive averment that the defendant knew the facts subsequently stated.” Rawle’s Ed., Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, If theprosecutrix was not the appellant’s daughter, or if he did not know that she was, these would be matters of defense. The indictment as drawn put the appellant on full notice of the charge he was to meet, and in our opinion was a sufficient compliance with the requirements of the statute.

Of the fifteen exceptions to- rulings on the evidence, the major part of the appellant’s brief is devoted to the eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh. They were on questions to Della Thomas, another daughter of the appellant, asking whether the father had had intercourse with her, to which she answered that he had. The appellant contends that it was not admissible, as raising another issue not included in the indictment; and the State as evidence showing the traverser’s sexual disposition, passions and emotions, and thus rendering the charge as laid in the indictment more probable. “It is well settled that evidence which is relevant is not made inadmissible by reason of the fact that it tends to prove the defendant guilty of a crime other than the one for which he is being tried. Such evidence is not admitted because of its proof of the other crime, but because of its relevancy to the charge upon trial.” Cothron v. State, 138 Md. 101, 109. Evidence of other crimes of the same character has been allowed as tending to show the guilty knowledge of the offense for which the de *164 fendant was indicted (Luery v. State, 116 Md. 284, 288), or of other offenses so connected that they form parts of one entire scheme or transaction from which may be gathered the purpose or intent with which the act was done for which the accused was then being tried. Meno v. State, 117 Md. 435, 440. In the case of Cothron v. State, 138 Md. 101, 110, citing State v. Hyde, 234 Mo. 200, Ann. Cases 1912D, 191, it was said that evidence of other crimes had been admitted “to prove the specific crime charged when it tends to establish (1) motive, (2) intent, (3) absence of mistake or accident, (4) a common scheme or plan embracing the commission of two or more crimes so related to each other that proof of one tends to establish the other, (5) the identity of the person charged with the commission of a crime on trial.”

The general rule undoubtedly is, as stated in People v. Sharp, 107 N. Y. 427, that “when a man is put upon trial for one offense he is to be convicted, if at all, by evidence which shows that he is guilty of that offense alone, and-that, under ordinary circumstances, proof of his guilt of one or a score of other offenses in his lifetime is wholly excluded.” Curry v. State, 117 Md. 587, 593.

In cases involving sexual offenses, and especially those grouped together by Mr. Wigmore in the second edition of his Evidence, sec. 398, viz. adultery, bigamy, fornication, criminal conversation, sodomy, indecent liberties, and incest, there seems to be, under the decisions in this country, a very well recognized exception to the general rule that evidence of other offenses than the one charged is admissible. In Wharton on Criminal Evidence (10th Ed.), p. 170, it is said: “It has been repeatedly held that upon a trial of a charge of having committed any of the crimes known as ‘sexual offenses,’ evidence of prior acts of the same character are admissible, although such prior act is in and of itself a crime.” The same authority, however, says (page 186), “Offenses against other persons than the one against whom the offense with which the defendant is charged was committed are inadmissible.”

This is the first time the question has been before this court, but the number of decisions digested in Wigmore on *165 Evidence (2nd Ed.), pp. 731 et seq., and in the note to 62 L. R. A. 329, shows that it is not new in other states. An examination of the cases there mentioned shows the great weight of authority is to allow evidence of acts of adultery and incest between the same parties prior to the offense charged; in some cases confined to the period of limitations. The decisions as to the admissibility of subsequent acts are so evenly divided that it is difficult to say what the trend of opinion in this respect is. As to illicit relations with others than the prosecutrix, the only case cited by either side (except in indictments for rape or carnal knowledge of a girl under the age of consent), is People v. Letoile, 31 Cal. App. 166, 169, in which it was held that a sister of the prosecutrix in a charge of incest could not testify to a like offense committed on her by her father. In the case of People v. Luce, 210 Mich.

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Bluebook (online)
150 A. 278, 159 Md. 161, 1930 Md. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wentz-v-state-md-1930.