Langford v. State, 4 Div. 320
Decision Date | 22 April 1975 |
Docket Number | 4 Div. 320 |
Citation | 54 Ala.App. 659,312 So.2d 65 |
Parties | L. A. LANGFORD v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals |
Charles T. Morris, Opp, for appellant.
William J. Baxley, Atty. Gen., and Brent Thornley, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.
This is appeal from a conviction under an indictment charging defendant with abusing a girl under the age of twelve years, in the attempt to have carnal knowledge of her. The indictment followed substantially the language of the applicable statutory law contained in Title 14, Section 398, Code of Alabama as follows:
'Any person who has carnal knowledge of any girl under tweleve years of age, or abuses such girl in the attempt to have carnal knowledge of her, shall, on conviction, be punished, at the discretion of the jury, either by death or by imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than ten years.'
The jury fixed the lightest punishment possible, imprisonment in the penitentiary for ten years, and the trial court duly sentenced him accordingly.
The victim, a mentally retarded girl ten years of age, testified definitely as to circumstances which, if true, clearly show defendant's guilt of the crime charged. There was corroborating testimony by a younger brother and by an older brother, who said that they saw defendant while he was in the process of sexually abusing the child.
The child's mother was not present at the time of the alleged occurrence. She testified that upon returning home soon thereafter the child complained to her.
Defendant stoutly denied any abuse or attempted abuse of the alleged victim. He had the benefit of witnesses who testified as to his good reputation.
That there was substantial evidence to support the verdict there can be no doubt. The strength of evidence could better be determined by an impartial arbiter who saw the witnesses and heard what they said than by anyone else. The contradiction between the evidence for the State and the evidence for the defendant raised a question of fact solely within the province of the jury. The trial court correctly overruled defendant's motions to exclude the evidence and correctly refused requested affirmative charges in favor of defendant.
We see no necessity for, and we refrain from setting forth the sordid deails, other than those essential to full consideration of questions hereafter discussed.
A line of cleavage between the parties on appeal is as to the action of the trial court in permitting the mother of the alleged victim to testify what the child told the mother soon after the mother first saw her after the alleged occurrence. The contentions of the parties center upon a part of the record as follows:
'Q and did you talk to . . . (the alleged victim)?
'A Yes, sir.
'Q Did . . . (she) tell you anything that day?
'A Yes, sir, she told me.
'Q What did she tell you, Mrs. . . .?
If it goes to something else I will sustain it. I'll just have to hear it, and exclude it if it is not proper.
'Q All right, did she make a complaint to you? Your daughter, did she complain to you about something?
'A Yes, sir.
'Q What did she tell you about it?
'A She told me about L. A. trying to mess with her. I took her to my bedroom because I didn't want . . .
'A In the bedroom.
'Q And was this shortly after this incident was supposed to have happened?
'A Yes, sir.
'Q How long after?
'A Well, it happened between . . .
'Q What did she tell you about Mr. Langford messing with her?
'A She told me that L. A. hurt her with his thing.
'Q Hurt her with his thing?
'A Yes, that's what she told me.
'Q And did you ask then what time this happened?
'A Yes, sir.
'A And what did they say?
'Q Did you ask her did he hurt her?
'Q Did she tell you anything about whether he hurt her?
'Q And then what did you do, Mrs. . . .?
'A I didn't have any way to the doctor so I called Mr. Johnny Metcalf.
'Q Is he a city policeman?
'Q Yes, sir.'
There seems to be no disagreement between the parties on appeal as to the well established principles in rape and related cases well stated in McElroy, Law of Evidence in Alabama, (2d ed.) § 178.01 as follows:
'. . ..
That the admission of the quoted testimony cannot be justified by the principles of law above stated is apparently conceded with admirable candor by the State by the following language in its brief:
(Emphasis supplied)
We agree that the evidence contained more than the recital of a more complaint, but we do not agree that it is made admissible by reason of any proper application of the 'res gestae' rule. Appellee relies upon the principle set forth clearly and comprehensively in McElroy, Law of Evidence in Alabama, (2d ed.) § 265.01 under the heading of Spontaneous Exclamations and referred to therein also as 'excited utterances.' Judge McElroy convincingly shows that the length of time between the actual 'act done' and the utterance is not as important a factor in determining the admissibility of a particular utterance 'if made under the nervous excitement produced by a startling occurrence' as it would be if the utterance is made under placid circumstances. Nevertheless, the necessity for spontaneity is definitely recognized. According to Judge McElroy:
In Daniell v. State, 37 Ala.App. 559, 73 So.2d 370, cert. denied, 261 Ala. 145, 73 So.2d 375, the court held:
testimony, after she succeeded in escaping from the appellant's truck and thus thwarting appellant's avowed intent to ravish her, she was followed by the appellant who was attempting to get her back in his truck. Upon their meeting Rowe and Maze the appellant threatened to kill her if she got into their truck. It was during this continuing time that her complaint to Rowe was made. The court was therefore correct in it's conclusion that the complaint should have been admitted as part of the res gestae.
In our opinion the circumstances presented in the instant case fall far short of those found in Daniell, as well as in all other cases to which our attention has been directed in which the identification of the assailant (abuser) or other details of a complaint of a sexual assault (abuse) have been held to meet the test of spontaneity. In Daniell the prosecutrix made the complaint just as she saw the witnesses after she had escaped the defendant and had run down the road about a quarter of a mile. The defendant had followed her on foot half that distance and then returned to his truck and followed her in it and 'was insisting that she get back in his truck.' The record shows her great excitement at the time of her statement, one of the witnesses stating that 'she...
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