James Smallwood was found guilty of statutory rape and on September 2, 1938, was sentenced to imprisonment for a term from 10 to 30 years. The case was tried without a jury. The prosecuting witness against whom it is alleged the *51crime was committed was defendant’s own daughter, a girl 15 years of age. The wife of defendant and mother of the girl had disappeared and deserted defendant and their four children. Defendant did not obtain a divorce. He was 39 years of age and had been out of work for a year prior to the time the alleged crime was committed. The family was poor.' Most of the members slept in one bedroom, defendant and a son occupying one bed and the girl and her sister the other one. Defendant at one time had a housekeeper and after she left his employ, he still kept company with her. He attempted to show that he had illicit relations with the housekeeper four or five times a week and therefore was not apt to have any unnatural desires. The judge in denying motion for a new trial, however, called attention to the relations of defendant with his former housekeeper, probably for the purpose of showing defendant’s lack of credibility.
The conviction was based solely on the daughter’s testimony. Defendant categorically denied the charges. When it was shown from a physical examination that the girl must have had previous illicit relations, she testified that defendant had begun them with her two years previously. The daughter was a wayward girl and previously had been interviewed by the authorities. After defendant’s trial, she was sent to the girls’ training school at Adrian, Michigan. Defendant showed that he had had considerable difficulty with the girl. At one time he consulted a child psychologist connected with the Highland Park public schools and later the girl went to see the psychologist without defendant. It is questionable'whether a guilty man would run the risk of being exposed in this manner.
The day before the charge against defendant was made, he had an altercation with the girl. She had persisted in wearing what was called a “sun” or *52“gymnasium” suit, and her father objected, claiming that it caused indecent exposure. As a punishment, he told the girl she would have to remain indoors that evening. She, however, ran away. Defendant sought the aid of the police in order to find her. It was not until early the following morning that the girl was found.' She claimed a man had forced her into a garage but that she escaped. While defendant was at the police station cooperating with the police, he was arrested. The charge against him was made for the first time by the girl when the police had her in custody.
The trial judge undoubtedly was very much troubled by the case. Defendant sent him letters from prison and the v judge interviewed the prisoner a number of times. He also arranged to have defendant brought to East Lansing, where a' lie detector was used and defendant’s reaction was not favorable. When the girl’s veracity was tested in a similar manner, she refused to answer crucial questions. In an affidavit made after she was sent to the Adrian school, the girl stated that her father was innocent, that she had previously lied in the belief that if she stuck to her story, she would be released and that she was angry with her father when she made the charge,and believed if he were out of the way, she would be free to do as she pleased. She named two different persons with whom she had had the alleged illicit relations. She positively stated her father was not guilty. This recantation occasioned a further investigation by the trial judge, as a result of which a motion for new trial was denied.
The superintendent of the girls’ training school at Adrian also made an affidavit in which she stated that the girl told her that the charges she had made against her father were untrue, that she had made *53them in the belief that she would not be sent to any institution, and that she had been antagonistic towards her father because he had unjustly reprimanded and punished her.
When the daughter was on the witness stand she was asked on cross-examination whether she had not been in trouble with the juvenile authorities before. On objection, the court excluded the question, stating that the “juvenile records are not admissible.” The applicable statute is as follows:
“A disposition of any child under this act or any evidence given in such case, shall not in any civil, criminal or any other cause or proceeding whatever in any court be lawful or proper evidence against such child for any purpose whatsoever, except in subsequent cases against the same child under this act.” 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12834 (Stat. Ann. § 25.291).
There is no question but that this salutary statute is for the purpose of protecting a child when it becomes a ward of the State. Its aim is “to hide youthful errors from the full gaze of the public and bury them in the graveyard of the forgotten past.” State v. Guerrero, 58 Ariz. 421 (120 Pac. [2d] 798). It prohibits the use of juvenile court proceedings or evidence obtained therein against a child in any other court to discredit him as one possessing a criminal history. Malone v. State, 130 Ohio St. 443 (200 N. E. 473). However, in the present case there was no effort to impeach the child’s character but rather to ascertain her credibility. The question of how far the statute should reach is not new. It has been the subject of comment by the textbook writers. We quote from 1 Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.), p. 675:
“In charges of rape, incest, et cetera, where the complainant is a young girl, her credibility may be *54affected by her unchaste tendencies. False charges of the sort by girls of such tendencies are not uncommon. Unless that tendency is inquired into, the story becomes plausible, and many ,a man has probably gone to the penitentiary as the innocent victim of such tales. The juvenile court record of the complainant should unquestionably be admitted; to exclude it is a suppression of means of truth, and is indefensible on any ground; in this aspect these statutes are unscientific and antisocial.”
In 3 Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.), p. 460 et seq., quotations are given from many leading authorities showing that errant young girls frequently have psychic complexes that lead them to contrive false charges of sexual offenses by men, resulting sometimes in expressions of imaginary sex incidents of which the narrator is the heroine or the victim. While we agree with the judge that the juvenile records are not admissible, the question asked did not refer to the “disposition of the child” or any evidence given in the case. The question as framed was proper and it should not have been excluded. As was stated in People v. Cowles, 246 Mich. 429:
“We think the testimony should have been received, not in extenuation of rape, but for its bearing upon the question of the weight to be accorded the testimony of the girl and the question of whether the mind of the girl was so warped by sexual contemplation and desires as to lead her to accept the imagined as real or to fabricate a claimed sexual ex-peiience.”
We can well appreciate the -difficulties that the trial judge had with the case, and also the advantage he had of seeing the witnesses. However, this is a case where the word of one person against another is determinative. Although the girl’s waywardness *55was shown to a certain extent by subsequent testimony, a careful reading of the record does not satisfy us that the entire facts were disclosed. Where the question was so close, all facts pertaining to the credibility of the principal witnesses should have been brought out. The ease in many respects is similar to People v. Van Ben Dreissche, 233 Mich. 38, where the court held that a motion for a new trial based upon the affidavit of the daughter in which she recanted the testimony given by her upon the trial was properly denied, under the circumstances there presented. In a dissenting opinion signed by two justices, it was stated that they could not understaud why so much credence was given to the girl’s veracity on the trial and so little after she had shown herself to be unworthy of belief. It may be further added that there was nothing in the opinion to show that the girl in that case had any motive in charging her father with the commission of the crime. In the instant case, such a motive seems to have been present. As a rule the court is not impressed by the recanting affidavits of witnesses who attempt to show that they perjured themselves at the trial. People v. Simon, 243 Mich. 489; People v. Shilitano, 218 N. Y. 161 (112 N. E. 733, L. R. A. 1916 F, 1044); People v. Marquis, 344 Ill. 261 (176 N. E. 314, 74 A. L. E. 751). However, in the instant case, the girl has shown both a lack of morals and a hostile motive for having made the charge. We believe the interests of justice will be subserved if there is a new trial.
Defendant raises other questions that we do not believe it is necessary to answer. He appears in pro. per. and we are quite satisfied that if he had counsel, the questions would not even be raised. There is merit in his claim that too much latitude *56was given one witness and hearsay evidence was thus introduced. This will not occur on a new trial.
Judgment reversed and new trial' ordered.
Chandler, Starr, Wiest, and Btjshnell, J J., concurred with Butzel, J.