DocketNumber: Crim. No. 3965
Judges: Shinn
Filed Date: 5/3/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
In a trial by the court, defendant was convicted of assault with intent to commit rape and was sentenced to state prison. He appeals from the judgment, and urges as the sole ground for reversal that the judgment is contrary to the law and the evidence.
Defendant testified that he grabbed prosecutrix and threw her to the ground; that he removed her slacks part way, and opened his own trousers. He testified that she did not resist him or call for help. At this stage of the affair a policeman approached and fired two shots and, according to defendant, prosecutrix then called for help. Defendant admitted on the stand having struck prosecutrix in the face once and having attempted an act of intercourse, and he testified that he threw her to the ground with that purpose in mind. He struck her, he said, because she would not cooperate. He also testified
The occurrence took place near the residence of the police officer, who testified for the prosecution. He was awakened shortly before 5 o’clock by a woman’s call for help, clothed himself, took his gun, and went to the scene of action, some 60 to 80 feet from his house. There he saw a man standing-some 15 feet from a person who was lying in the grass; the man started to run, the officer followed him, called on him to stop, and fired two shots in the air, but the man escaped. The officer returned and found defendant lying on top of the prosecutrix. Defendant refused to move from his position, saying to the officer, “What business is it of yours?” and the officer then used force to lift him to his feet. Defendant started getting rough with the officer but was subdued at the point of a gun. Defendant argued with the officer, threatened him and spoke, apparently to the other man, saying, “Let him have it, Prank [or some similar name].” The officer testified that defendant was not intoxicated.
Another witness, who lived across the hall from the officer and heard a call for help, looked out of the window and saw nothing, but immediately left the house to go to work, and arrived at the scene while defendant was lying on top of prosecutrix, whose legs were bare. He heard another man say, “Come on, Prank, let’s get out of here.” The witness testified that he was not “tangling up with no two men,” and that he “backed away” and waited for the officer, who he knew had gone ahead of him. Defendant testified that he had no companion with him at the time.
There is no merit whatever in this appeal. A more detailed recital of the evidence would only tend to refute the argument that defendant’s conduct, while rough, was merely playful and without a criminal .purpose. We concur in the statement of his counsel that “If he [defendant] was trying to rape her, then if it was coupled with an assault, there is a sufficient showing to establish guilt.” But we are wholly unimpressed by the argument that there was no connection between the assault and the attempted act. The testimony of the defendant alone was. enough to convict him of the offense charged. He struck the prosecutrix in the face and threw her to the ground, for the purpose of accomplishing an act of intercourse, and he persisted in his efforts until he was
The judgment is affirmed.
Desmond, P. J., and Wood, J., concurred.