Judges: Winkler
Filed Date: 7/1/1879
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction for rape. The indictment charges that this appellant, “ on or about the seventh day of April, A. D. 1874, in the county of Robertson, and State aforesaid, with force
The first and second errors complained of assume that the jury should have been instructed to the effect that it should appear from the testimony that the female upon whom the offence was charged to have been committed, made such resistance to her assailant as she was enabled to make under the circumstances, considering the relative strength of the parties ; and that this resistance should have been continued until her person had been penetrated by the defendant, in order to warrant a conviction. And it is argued that the charge of the court was faulty in not presenting these views of the law, and that it erred in refusing special instructions asked, intended to correct the error and supply the supposed omission. On this branch of the subject the court charged: “To constitute the offence of rape by force, the force necessary to be used by defendant to obtain carnal knowledge of the woman must have been such as might reasonably be supposed sufficient to overcome resistance,
We are of opinion that the charge of the court sufficiently instructed the jury, both as to the amount and kind of force which should be employed by the accused, as well as the nature and character of resistance to be made by the female, to warrant conviction. It is provided by the Code that the definition of “force,” as applicable to assaults and batteries, applies also to the crime of rape; and, further, “it must have been such as might reasonably be supposed sufficient to overcome resistance, taking into consideration the relative strength of the parties, and other circumstances of the case.” Penal Code, art. 542; Jenkins v. The State, 2 Texas Ct. App. 346.
The charge, in so far as force by the defendant was concerned, was, in substance, the language of the statute; and we are of opinion that, so far as it concerns the subject of resistance by the female, it clearly intimates that this, too, is to be measured by the relative strength of the parties, and the other circumstances of the case. To attempt a more definite rule would be impracticable. All that the law seems to require is, that the amount of force on the one hand, and the amount of resistance on the other, must necessarily depend on the relative strength of the parties and the other circumstances surrounding the parties at the time, of which the jury must determine by the testimony. We are of opinion the defendant has no just ground of complaint at this charge, and that there was no error in .refusing the special charge asked by his counsel.
The whole subject of resistance in such cases relates to, and is referable alone to, the question as to whether the act
Carnal connection with a female under ten years of age is rape, no matter what the circumstances; and the question of consent of the female, or whether there was force, threats, or fraud employed in obtaining the connection, or not, is wholly immaterial. Penal Code, art. 523. Females under this age are, in contemplation of law, incapable of comprehending the nature of the act or judging of its criminality, and hence are incapable of consent, or of resisting fraud, force, or threats. After they have attained the age ¡of ten years, our Penal Code presumes that they have obtained sufficient information as to the enormity of this crime, and law no longer holds that she is incapable of giving her consent; and so, agreeably to the Code, it is not rape for a male to have carnal knowledge of a female over ten years of age, with her consent. Penal Code, art. 523.
Yet we are inclined to the opinion that, by a former construction of the provisions of the Code, the law does not wholly abandon the youthful female to the abuse of the licentious and depraved, but permits the jury trying a charge of rape, as among the “other circumstances of the •case” mentioned in the Code, to inquire into the age, «development, and moral training of a youthful female upon whom this foul crime is charged to have been committed, in so far as those considerations bear upon the question of assent, or whether the crime was committed without her •consent. Our idea on this subject is expressed by Mr. Wharton, in this wise : “An infant under ten years of age cannot consent to sexual intercourse, so as to rebut the presumption of force. And it would seem that when sexual intercourse is had with one over ten, who is still a child
We are of opinion, as to the third error assigned, that the attention of the court should have been called to this subject when the jury were being instructed as to the law of the case at the time of the trial; which, from a statement appended to a bill of exceptions signed by the judge, appears not to have been done. Still, the Code provides that an indictment for the offence of rape may be presented within one year, and not afterwards. Code Cr. Proc., art. 184. So that, if the indictment in this case was not presented within one year from the time the offence was committed, the prosecution was barred by limitation, and cannot be maintained.
It is assigned as error that the court erred in permitting the jury to take with them, in their retirement, the indictment, upon which was written the verdict of a former jury; which, it is claimed, was to the prejudice of the defendant. This subject is not so presented by the record as that we are authorized to inquire into it. It was the business of counsel to see to it that the jury were permitted to-carry with them.such papers only as were proper to be used in their retirement; and if the attention of the court had been called to the subject, and it had refused to give the proper direction, it should have been presented by bill of exceptions. Cook v. The State, 4 Texas Ct. App. 256. In practice, it is usual and proper for the jury in charge of a criminal case to take the indictment with them in their retirement. If, in any case, there should be any valid reason why this should not be permitted, it would be an easy matter to obviate it by the use of proper caution at the trial, and before the jury retired.
It is shown by the statement of facts that the witness named in the juror’s affidavit testified on the trial. It does not appear that her testimony was attacked or her credibility called in question. We cannot say that her testimony, if true, was unimportant. The statement made to the jurors by one of the jurymen, as stated in the affidavit, is more significant than it would otherwise be, from the fact that the offence is charged to have been committed in Robertson County, and that the venue had been changed from that county because of prejudice against the defendant.
There are nine grounds, in cases of felony, upon which new trials will be granted. These are set out in art. 672' of the Code of Criminal Procedure, where it is expressly stated that these are the only grounds upon which new trials shall be granted. The seventh ground is, where the jury,
Other misconduct on the part of one of the jurors is complained of in the motion for a' new trial, and .is supported by affidavits, and is the subject of a separate assignment of errors. This other misconduct, however, is so explained by counter-affidavits that it would not alone vitiate the verdict. But as to the matter set out in the voluntary affidavit of the juror, as mentioned above, no explanation whatever is offered. The juror swears that the statement set out in his affidavit did influence his verdict, to the prejudice of the defendant. And we are of opinion that, when considered in the light of surrounding circumstances, it was well calculated to have that effect.
, In Wharton v. The State, 45 Texas, 2, a question arose which involved, to some extent, the same principle as the present case; and there, too, as here, there was conflicting testimony. In Wharton’s case, as reported, after the jury had retired, they returned into court and asked the question, “ Can we judge a witness just by what he says on the stand, and not by what we know of him privately? ” The judge, in answering the question, repeated his former charge, and gave to the jury some general directions as to the manner and means by which the jury might arrive at a conclusion as to the credibility of witnesses; and charged that, they being the exclusive judges of the testimony, “the court cannot inform you, in reference to the question you
And so we say of the present case. ■ It is apparent that, in Wharton’s case, the jury were permitted to consider and judge of the credibility of the witness by other means than by what had transpired on the trial, by the failure of the court to answer the question propounded by the jury, which is the same as that in the present case in principle, although the question arose in a different form. The opinion of one of the jurors, not testified to at the trial, and which was not evidence in any legal sense, did, agreeably to the affidavit of the juror, influence the verdict of the jury, to the prejudice of the appellant, and no effort was made to contradict or to neutralize the effects of the juror’s affidavit. On this ground alone, under the circumstances, we are of opinion that the verdict was vicious, and should have been set aside. The present case differs from Gilleland v. The State, 44 Texas, 356, in that the statement of the jurors in that case was met by counter-affidavits.
The sixth error assigned needs no further notice than what is said as to the fifth.
It is complained, in the seventh assignment of error, that the court erred in permitting the counsel for the State to propound leading questions to the prosecuting witness. We are of opinion that, when we take into consideration the circumstances under which those questions were permitted, as shown by the explanations given by the judge in signing a bill of exceptions to his ruling, that the questions were admissible. Leading questions are permitted in some cases even on direct examination, “ namely, when the witness appears to be hostile to the party producing him, or in
It is stated in the eighth error assigned that the court erred in allowing the prosecuting attorney, in his closing argument, to use this language: “That the defendant, though his skin is white, his heart is blacker than the midnight of hell. He is more of a brute than any negro in the jungles of Africa; ” which, it is claimed, was to the prejudice of the defendant.
We are not informed as to the circumstances under which those strong expressions were uttered, or what called them forth ; and whilst we cannot approve the language used, yet we are not prepared to say that it was not a merited comment upon the conduct of the appellant, if the testimony of some of the witnesses given on the trial is to be believed. Still, we are unable to perceive that strictures of this character could perform any legitimate service, and they are not to be encouraged. We make no ruling on the question, however, because it is not properly presented for revision. Matters of fact relied on for a new trial must be shown by bill of exceptions, or otherwise by the record, to entitle them to consideration on appeal. Cook v. The State, 4 Texas Ct. App. 265.
The remaining error necessary to be noticed is the refusal of the court to grant a new trial. The most material of the grounds of the motion have already been passed upon, so far as likely to arise on another trial.
The theory of the defence does not controvert the fact of carnal knowledge of the female, even to the extent required by law in prosecutions for rape, but controverts only the want of consent on her part. On this subject the proofs are conflicting and unsatisfactory; and on the subject of outcry and resistance, and prompt complaint after the injury, they are equally so; and, to our minds, must necessarily have
We are of opinion the court below erred in overruling the motion for a new trial, and for this error the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.