People v. Frese
People v. Frese
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Ramón Frese appealed from a. judgment of conviction of rape consisting in having had sexual intercourse with an insane woman who was not his wife.
The only error assigned by the appellant in support of his appeal is that the court denied his motion for a nonsuit filed on the ground that the evidence of the district attorney was not sufficient to sustain a conviction.
At the trial, the district attorney presented the testimony of a doctor to the effect that Adela Cardona, 24 years of age, who is the woman referred to in this prosecution, was in the fifth month of pregnancy at the time he examined her. The beginning of her condition coincides with the time when the defendant, as charged, had sexual intercourse with the woman in question, who was not his wife. Another doctor, Director of the Insular Insane Asylum, stated that Adela Cardona has been an imbecile since childhood and that her mentality is that of a girl nine years old: that she can relate things that happened to her, as she is not entirely devoid of memory, but that she is incapable of fully understanding the significance of her acts because her discernment is very rudimentary. Some witnesses testified that on one occasion when they went to the defendant’s small store or shop, they saw Adela in the back room of the defendant, close to his bed, that he was holding her hands and that he tried to hide her. Others stated that the defendant rented a site for a small store or shop adjoining the house in which Adela and her family lived, being aware of Adela’s insanity and that he moved from there shortly after a month; and others stated that on Adela being found to be pregnant, the defendant went to her house and said to her mother, in the hearing of some neighbors, that he defiled her and that he was going to marry her.
At the close of the district attorney’s evidence the defendant submitted a motion for nonsuit alleging that as insane people cannot testify under oath, the fact that Adela Cardona had been called to the stand by the district attorney shows that she was not insane and that, consequently, the defendant had not committed the crime of rape with which he was charged.
For a long time insane persons and imbeciles were held incompetent to testify in the courts, but now the rule is different. In the year 1882, in the case of District of Columbia v. Armes, 107 U. S. 519, in which an' insane person was permitted to testify as a witness, the Supreme Court of the United States said: “. . . It is undoubtedly true that a lu
Confining the issue now to cases like the present one, concerning the rape of insane women or imbeciles, it has been held that such a condition is not in itself sufficient to establish that said female is incompetent to testify. In the case of Weeks v. State (1915), 126 Md. 223, 94 Atl. 774, a prosecutrix who was an imbecile was permitted to testify, and an appellate' court held that her testimony was admissible because the fact that she was alleged to be or was shown to be an imbecile' did not necessarily make her an incompetent witness, citing-several text writers and eases.
The testimony of the doctor who made the examination of the mental condition of Adela Cardona showed the court that she was capable of relating correctly the things that she had seen or heard in reference to the question in controversy, and the testimony of the prosecutrix at the trial fully confirmed the statement made by the doctor.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.