Citation Numbers: 134 A. 148, 151 Md. 265, 48 A.L.R. 342, 1926 Md. LEXIS 103
Judges: Bond, Urner, Adkins, Offutt, Digges, Walsh
Filed Date: 6/29/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
The appellant was convicted of bastardy by a jury in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City, whereupon the court suspended sentence and paroled him on condition that he pay the sum of $2.75 weekly for the statutory period, for the support of the alleged illegitimate child, and from this action of the court this appeal was taken.
The State has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that a suspension of sentence is not a final judgment and that hence no appeal can be taken, but for the reasons stated by us in the case of Kelly v. State, *Page 267
There are twenty-six bills of exceptions in the record, all pertaining to rulings on the evidence, and, as many of them relate to or raise the same questions, we will, so far as possible, group them together in disposing of them. The first exception was taken to the court's action in permitting the prosecuting witness to state who was the father of her child. The objection to this is apparently based on the theory that the answer of the witness would be only the expression of an opinion. This is not always true. Usually the prosecuting witness testifies, as she did in this case, that the defendant is the only person with whom she has had improper relations, and under such circumstances her testimony as to who the father is cannot properly be said to be an expression of opinion; it is a statement of fact. But even where it is an opinion, we think the prosecuting witness has sufficient special knowledge to justify her expressing such an opinion. The whole proceeding is based upon her allegation as to who the father is, and we see no reason why she should not be permitted to tell the jury the name of the man who she claims is the father.
The defendant endeavored to show at the trial below that a married man, with whom the prosecuting witness had some association and who, on June 4th, 1924, the day the child was born, committed suicide, was the child's father, and most of the exceptions were taken to the refusal of the lower court to admit certain testimony which the defendant claimed tended to prove the guilt of this man. The third to the sixth exceptions, inclusive, relate to certain alleged admissions made by this man to his relatives, and these exceptions will be considered in connection with the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth, which were taken to the court's refusal to permit the defense to show the contents of a letter found on the married man's person at the time of his death. The seventh and eighth were taken to the court's ruling that the married man's wife could not be asked whether *Page 268 she accused her husband of having gone out with the prosecuting witness and what he said, and why she sent for the prosecuting witness at the time she did, but we see no error in these rulings. The facts proposed to be shown are not relevant to the issue and would open up a line of inquiry which might lead very far afield. The wife's suspicions are certainly not competent to prove her husband the father of this child, and as there was no denial of the husband's acquaintanceship and association with the prosecuting witness there was no occasion or reason to try to prove this association by mere hearsay evidence.
The ninth exception was taken to the court's refusal to permit a witness to testify that on the day the child was born relatives of the prosecuting witness visited the married man at the store where he was employed. It is difficult to understand on what theory this evidence was offered, and we find no error in its exclusion. The second and tenth exceptions relate to testimony showing the manner in which the married man died, and these exceptions will be considered later. The eleventh to the twenty-second exceptions, both inclusive, all pertain to efforts on the part of the defendant to show that about three months before the child involved in this case was born the married man had a baby carriage sent to the home of the prosecuting witness. Most of the rulings involved in these exceptions were clearly correct, because of the failure of the questions to indicate any connection between the sending of the carriage and the married man, or because of the inability of the witnesses to testify of their own knowledge that the carriage was ever delivered; but, aside from these objections, we do not think, under the circumstances of the case, that the testimony was admissible at all. It appears from the record that this married man was quite intimate with the family of the prosecuting witness; that about a month before the baby carriage was alleged to have been sent to her home her mother gave birth to a child and this man became the child's godfather, and it would seem to be a great deal more likely *Page 269 that the baby carriage was intended for this child rather than for the then unborn child of the prosecuting witness. There was not even a proffer to show that the carriage was sent to the prosecuting witness, the only proffer being that it was sent to her home, which was also that of her parents.
The general rule is that declarations of a third party are not admissible to show that such third person is the father of the child. Baehr v. State,
We find no error in the twenty-third exception. It was taken to what appears to us to have been an entirely harmless remark by the trial judge, and we are unable to understand how the remark could have prejudiced the appellant.
The second exception involves the striking out by the *Page 270
court of the statement of a sister of the married man that he committed suicide on June 4th, 1924. This was hearsay and clearly inadmissible. The remaining exceptions we will consider together. The third and fourth involve the court's refusal to permit this same witness to state whether her brother ever told her of his relationship with the prosecuting witness or admitted that he was the father of the unborn child of the prosecuting witness; and the fifth and sixth exceptions were taken to the exclusion of testimony that this married man tried to borrow money from his sister for the purpose of having an abortion performed on the prosecuting witness. These questions were followed by a proffer to prove the matters just mentioned and a further proffer to show that this married man had stated that he had been threatened by the family of the prosecuting witness because of his responsibility for her pregnancy. The tenth exception was taken to the refusal of the court to permit the death certificate of the married man, showing his death by suicide, to be introduced in evidence. The twenty-fourth exception was not pressed and could not have been successfully pressed. The twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth exceptions were taken to the court's refusal to permit a witness to testify to the contents of a letter in the handwriting of the married man which was found on his person at the time of his death, and was subsequently lost or mislaid. These last two exceptions were followed by a proffer to prove that this letter "recited accusations and threats against" the married man "because of his responsibility for the pregnant condition of" the prosecuting witness "and setting forth that reason as the motive for his suicide." The State contends that the manner in which the married man died is immaterial, and that the testimony covered by the other exceptions simply amounts to declarations by a third party that he committed the offense charged against the defendant and so is hearsay and inadmissible. Both of these contentions would ordinarily be correct. That the manner of the third party's death is, considered by itself, immaterial, would seem to be obvious, while the rule holding inadmissible *Page 271
the extra-judicial declarations of a third party, not made under oath, that he committed the crime charged against a defendant, is supported by the great weight of authority. Munshower v. State,
The case is a close and difficult one, but we think that under all the facts and circumstances disclosed by the record the defendant is entitled to the benefit of the testimony covered by the seven exceptions just discussed, provided he proves by competent testimony that the married man actually committed suicide, not because of any threats against him by the relatives of the prosecuting witness, but because of his own conviction that he was responsible for her condition. For this reason the case will have to be reversed and a new trial granted.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded, with costs to theappellant.
URNER and OFFUTT, JJ., dissent. *Page 274
Donnelly v. United States , 33 S. Ct. 449 ( 1913 )
Kelly v. State , 151 Md. 87 ( 1926 )
Seibert v. State , 133 Md. 309 ( 1918 )
Harris v. State , 40 Md. App. 58 ( 1978 )
Thomas v. State , 186 Md. 446 ( 1946 )
Brady v. State , 226 Md. 422 ( 1963 )
Dyson v. State , 238 Md. 398 ( 1966 )
Foster v. State , 297 Md. 191 ( 1983 )
Ferguson v. Smazer , 151 Conn. 226 ( 1963 )
Staley v. Staley , 25 Md. App. 99 ( 1975 )
Wilkins v. State , 11 Md. App. 113 ( 1971 )
Jacobs v. State , 45 Md. App. 634 ( 1980 )
State v. Reed , 332 N.J. Super. 575 ( 2000 )
Laumer v. United States , 1979 D.C. App. LEXIS 511 ( 1979 )
State v. Patton , 102 Mont. 51 ( 1936 )
Alexander v. State , 84 Nev. 737 ( 1968 )
State v. Larsen , 91 Idaho 42 ( 1966 )
I. v. D. , 60 N.J. Super. 211 ( 1960 )
United States v. Dovico , 261 F. Supp. 862 ( 1966 )
Ragler v. State , 18 Md. App. 671 ( 1973 )
Baker v. State , 336 So. 2d 364 ( 1976 )