
    SUPREME COURT—APP.DIVISION—SECOND DEPT.,
    May 9, 1912.
    THE PEOPLE v. JOSEPH SARACENO.
    (150 App. Div. 786.)
    Endangering morals of minor—Penal Law, seo. 483.
    
    Evidence in a prosecution for endangering the morals of a female child in violation of section 483 of the Penal Law examined and judgment of conviction reversed.
    Appeal by the defendant, Joseph Saraceno, from a judgment of the Court of Special Sessions of the city of New York, rendered against the defendant on the 7th day of April, 1911.
    
      Walter A. Saxon'j for the appellant.
    
      Kersey Eggington, Assistant District Attorney (James C. Cropsey, District Attorney, with him on the brief), for the respondent.
    
      
       See also Note on Admission of Minors to Places of Amusement, Vol. 19, p. 7.
    
   Woodwabd, J.:

The defendant was charged with, and has been convicted of, the crime of endangering the morals of a minor child in violation of the provisions of section 483 of the Penal Law. Mr. J usfcice Blackmar has granted a certificate of reasonable doubt because, as he says in a memorandum handed down, “ the evidence of the child is so conflicting 'and is so directly contradicted by the witnesses for the defendant that the appellate court should pass on its sufficiency; and, second, it seems to' me a matter of serious doubt whether the -acts of the 'defendant testified to constitute an offense under section 483 of the Penal Law.” We will assume, without deciding, that the acts of the defendant, as testified by the child, constitute the crime alleged. (See People v. Donohue, 114 App. Div. 830.) Her testimony is to the effect that the defendant came into her room at seven o’clock in the morning, where she was then dressed, and removed all of her clothing; that he then took off all of his clothes, with the exception of his trousers, and that he displayed parts of his person toller. The defendant positively denied this story; stated that he was not 'present in the house with this child, a girl of thirteen;, that he did not remember to have seen her on the day in question; that he started from his home, some distance from that of the complainant, at about five o’clock in the morning, and that he was with his friends, or with a portion of them, all the time down to and including the day.- The child testified that this man lived in the house with her, hut the overwhelming weight of the evidence is that he left the house where the complainant lived with her parents at least five days before the alleged assault: -She is absolutely without corroboration in a single fact or circumstance. She testified that she was -alone in the house, and it is 'sought to find corroboration upon this point from the testimony of the 'child’s mother. She testified: “ 'On the twenty-fifth day of February I did not see my daughter; I was in Hew York that time. Aho-ut two o’clock in the afternoon I returned home.” Asked if she was away all day she answered in the negative. Asked if she was away from home >at seven o’clock in the morning she answered: “ I don’t know the clock; I don’t know the time.” Asked if she left home early in the morning, she replied: “ Well, it was late. This man -didn’t go- to- work that day; their custom wa-s five o’clock in the morning. I could not say how long after the men went to work that it was I went out.” So there is no evidence from which -the inference that the child’s mother left before seven o’clock can be drawn, -and the statement of the child that she was. alone in the honse at. seven o’clock, the time of the alleged exposure, is without corroboration. The mother’s assertion that the -defendant did not go to his work that day is flatly contradicted by the defendant and his four witnesses, and she gives no facts which would in any manner support her contention.

The highly improbable character of the story calls for strong proof to warrant the conclusion which two of the -three judges of the court below have reached. We ¡are 'asked to believe that this man entered the room of this girl of thirteen years of age, disrobed her, took off all of his clothes except his trousers, and got into bed with her, and contented himself with this, for it is conceded on rail hands that the child showed 'absolutely no evidences of violence upon her person. The impulse which would have permitted the defendant to do ¡the things which are here charged would not be thus1 limited if he is to he judged by the ordinary conduct of men of his class under like circumstance®. Accepting the child’s statement that there was no one in the house (and no one suggests that there was 'any interference), we are asked to believe that this man took all of 'these liberties with a girl of thirteen years of age, and that he then laid down in the bed with her “ calmly as to a might’s repose,” for there is not a particle of evidence that he made a single move after getting into the bed. When it is remembered that -this same child had charged that on this occasion the defendant had sexual intercourse with her, and that a doctor was called to make an examination, and that subsequently the charge was changed to that of violating the Penal Law (§ 483), and that it is conceded that there is not the slightest evidence that the child was touched after the alleged disrobing, it becomes obvious that it would he a great injustice to- permit this conviction to stand.

The evidence is overwhelmingly against the contention of the prosecution, and the judgment should he reversed. .

Hirschberg, Burr, Thomas and Garb, JJ., concurred.

Judgment of conviction of the Court of ¡Special Sessions reversed and new trial ordered. , <  