DocketNumber: No. 2288.
Citation Numbers: 156 S.W. 929, 70 Tex. Crim. 459, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 295
Judges: Harper
Filed Date: 4/23/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellant was prosecuted and convicted of the offense of seducing Anna Belle Bullington and his punishment assessed at two years confinement in the penitentiary.
That appellant had carnal intercourse with the prosecuting witness is'not denied, he testifying himself to several acts of intercourse. He, however, denies that he was engaged to marry the prosecutrix, and that she yielded her virtue to him in consideration of said promise. The prosecutrix by her testimony makes a case of seduction, and she is corroborated sufficiently by John Wright both as to the promise of marriage and intercourse and other circumstances to sustain the verdict.
There was no error in overruling the motion to continue the case. Appellant was indicted and arrested in March, 1912. The case was not tried until the following September. If he relied on his sister’s word that she' would attend court, this would not be diligence in law. In addition to this the testimony he stated he expected to prove by her would be impeaching in its nature, and this would be such testimony that we would not be authorized to hold the court erred in refusing to continue the case.
On cross-examination of the prosecutrix defendant proved by her that he and his brother had given her $278 to go to Fort Worth and give birth to her child, and thus seek to conceal her shame, and in consideration of the money being furnished she had agreed to release him from- all obligation to her. On redirect examination the State was allowed to show that defendant did not pay all the expense, but her father paid part of it. Under the circumstances this was not such error as would call for a reversal of the case. Appellant was seeking to elicit the sympathy of the jury by showing that he had paid all these expenses, for this would be no defense to a prosecution for the offense, if committed, and if he did not do so, it was permissible to so show. He seemed to have succeeded, however, for the jury gave him the lowest penalty authorized by law.
As to who informed J. D. Bullington of the condition of his daugh *461 ter, and when he was so informed, would be immaterial in the condition of this record. Appellant does not deny that he had intercourse with the daughter; that she gave birth to a child, his sole contention being that it was under such circumstances as would not constitute seduction, therefore when and where the prosecutrix’s father learned of her condition could not injuriously affect appellant. The court, at the time witness testified he was informed by Dr. Boyer, verbally instructed the jury not to consider any statement of Dr. Boyer, unless the evidence would show that he was acting under the instructions and at the instance of defendant. Defendant objected to the court verbally instructing the jury. In approving the bill the court states: “First. I thought then and now that what I said to the jury was in his, defendant’s, behalf and for his benefit, and was intended by me as a precaution for the proper protection of his rights before the jury. Second, the evidence of the defense as well as that of the State clearly shows that Dr. Boyer was the ‘go between’ of prosecutrix and the defendant, and that he had been selected by them to conduct the negotion going on between the prosecutrix and her father and the defendant. Third. However, I left the question of Boyer’s authority to act for defendant to the jury in the instruction I gave to them in question.” As thus'qualified the bill presents no error.
It would have been immaterial whether or not appellant was present in Dr. Boyer’s office when the money was given to the prosecutrix to leave the county and go to Fort Worth. It was being done with his knowledge, consent and acquiescence, and he was furnishing the money, therefore, the testimony he had to be persuaded by his brother to go would not be material to any issue in the case.
The court instructed the jury: “You are instructed that under the law the witness Anna Belle Bullington is an accomplice, now you can not convict the defendant upon her testimony alone, unless you first believe her testimony is true and that it shows the defendant is guilty of the offense charged in the indictment, and even then you can not convict the defendant upon said testimony alone unless you further believe that there is other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the offense charged. In this connection you are instructed that corroborative evidence need not be direct and positive independent of the testimony of Anna Belle Bullington, but proof of such facts and circumstances as tend to support her testimony, and which satisfy the jury that she is worthy of credit as to the facts essential to constitute the offense of seduction as hereinbefore defined to you and which tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense charged, will fulfill the requirement of the law.” Defendant objects to that portion of the charge wherein the court instructs the jury that the accomplice may be corroborated by circumstantial evidence. We think this a correct rule, and any fact that may be proven in a case by positive testimony can also be proven by circumstantial evidence, if of sufficient probative force. In this case the witness was corroborated both as to *462 the promise of marriage and intercourse by positive testimony. Nor was it necessary to in this paragraph instruct the jury in regard to reasonable doubt, for in the very next paragraph the court applied the doctrine of reasonable doubt to the whole case, instructing the jury: “The defendant in a criminal case is presumed to be innocent until his guilt is established by legal and competent evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, and in this case if you have a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt you will acquit him and say by your verdict not guilty.”
There are two special charges contained in the record, but they are neither marked “given” nor “refused,” and we are wholly unable to determine whether or not they were given, except as to charge No. 2. In a bill of exception it is shown this charge was refused, and as no bill was reserved to the other, we must presume that it was given. This second charge, we think, sufficiently covered by the main charge under the facts in this case. The intercourse was admitted by the defendant. So the sole issue left for determination was, did she submit by reason of his promise of marriage, and seductive conduct. The court instructed the jury: “You are instructed that seduction as used in the statute means to lead an unmarried female under the age of twenty-five years away from the path of virtue; to entice or persuade her by means of a promise of marriage to surrender her chastity, and have carnal intercourse with the man making the promise. The promise of marriage by the man, and the yielding of her virtue in consideration of that promise, constitute the gist of the offense, and the evidence must show beyond a reasonable doubt, that the female yielded her virtue alone upon the consideration of the promise to marry her made by the man to whom she does so yield. The offense is not complete until the female has been seduced, that is, corrupted, deceived, drawn aside from the path of virtue which she was pursuing.” It is thus seen the court instructed the jury there could be “no seduction unless she yielded her virtue alone upon consideration of a promise of marriage.”
As to whether a case will be reopened after the testimony has closed, is a matter within the sound discretion of the court, and under the facts in this case we can not say he abused his discretion in deciding not to permit the case to be opened the morning after the testimony had closed. Nor could the testimony have been conducive to any different result if all the testimony admissible on the issue sought to be injected into the case had been adduced.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.