Davis v. State

Moore, J.

The objections urged against the indictment are not well taken. It is not drawn with grammatical accuracy, or in strict conformity with common law precedents. The only material defect in it', however, in these particulars, is in the improper substitution of the noun “rape” for the verb “ravish.” It is unquestionably well settled that an indictment for this offense under the common law must contain the word “rav- “ ish.” To charge merely that the defendant “ did carnally “ know,” etc., is not sufficient to support the indictment. The reason given for this is that, by the charge did ravish,” force and violence, by the man, and want of consent of the woman, are implied, while by that of carnal knowledge ” merely, they are not (Harman v. The Commonwealth, 12 S. & R. 69). But the offense with which the appellant in this ease is charged, is the rape of a female under ten years of age, which as defined by the code, is the carnal knowledge of such female, with or without consent, and with or without the use of force, threats or fraud. (C. C., Art. 523). Whether the. averment, as in this indictment, that the carnal knowledge was had by force, and without consent, would obviate the necessity of the specific charge that the defendant “ did ravish ” in an indictment for the rape of a female over ten years of age, or if not, whether the averment that he “ did rape ” would not be understood in “ common language, taking into consideration the context and “ subject matter relative to which ” these words “ are employed ” in the indictment, should not be held to impart the same meaning as “did ravish,” need not be determined at present.

The essential fact which constitutes the offense with which appellant is charged, is unquestionably alleged in the indictment with as much fullness and perspicuity as is required *229Indeed, the most plausible objection to the conviction under the indictment ’ is, that although it was unnecessary to do so, still, as the offense is alleged to have been committed without consent, and by force, it became thereby incumbent upon the State to prove these unnecessary averments. They were probably inserted in the indictment lest it might turn out on the trial, that the female alleged to have been injured was, in fact, over ten years of age ; in which event, unless the word rape, as we have said, should be held as synonymous, as used, with ravish, the indictment would have been unquestionably insufficient to sustain a conviction. But when the facts were developed in the trial, the offense committed by appellant, if guilty of rape, was by injury done a female by reason of whose tender years neither force, or threats, or want of consent were essentia] constituents of the offense, and looking at and treating the indictment as applicable to the case before the court, we think we are warranted in regarding these averments as mere surplusages which it was unnecessary for the State to prove in order to warrant appellant’s conviction.

It is positively enacted and ordered by the code that persons under the age of fourteen are incapable of committing rape. But this is in a distinct and subsequent article from that in which the offense is defined and prohibited. It was, therefore, under the well-settled rules of criminal pleading, unnecessary to allege appellant’s age in the indictment for the purpose of affirming his capacity to commit the offense.

The instruction of the court, to the extent to which it went, is unquestionably strictly accurate and correct. In view, however, of the nature of the case, the passion and feeling, if not prejudice, which such> charge as that preferred in the indictment is calculated to arouse, and the character of the essential question upon which its proper determination evidently turned, and meagre, indefinite, and, to some extent, at least, unsatisfactory, if not contradictory evidence, from which the conclusion of the jury was to be drawn, we cannot but think the charge of the court was neither so full nor perspicuous in *230directing the attention of the jury to the real issue in the case as it might and should have been.

The only question' upon which the testimony left any room for dispute or ground upon which to rest an opinion was, whether the alleged oflense had been completed by penetration. While the slightest penetration is sufficient, still there must be satisfactory proof of some to consummate the ofíense. It must be shown, says Tindal, C. J., that the private parts of the male entered, at least, to some extent, those of the female. Unless this is the . case, the accused may be guilty of .an attempt to commit the crime- of rape, but not of its actual commission.

The proof upon this point, consisted of the evidence stating the position in which appellant and the girl, alleged to have been ravished, were found by her mother, the red and swollen condition of her private parts, and the witness’s statement that she was convinced and fully satisfied from what she saw take place at the time, and also from her examination of the person of her daughter, that there had been penetration. On the other hand, she testified that there was no laceration "or blood that she could discover, resulting from such penetration, and a surgeon, who was examined as a witness, stated, after having made a private examination of appellant, that though there were exceptions to the rule, a man of his dimensions could not evidently, or probably, penetrate a female of the age and size of the girl alleged to have been injured, without laceration. He also stated, however, if she could be so penetrated, the condition of her parts, as described by her mother, would be a natural consequence of the act.

This reference to the testimony shows (as, we regret to say, we find of nmch too frequent occurrence in cases of the greatest importance) a want of that full and thorough development and exploration of all the facts and circumstances connected • with and bearing on the case, of which it would seem to be reasonably susceptible, and such as its vital importance evidently demands. Ho medical examination of the child was made, nor was the physician, who testified" in the case, interrogated in *231reference to the symptoms described by the mother, except in the particular previously referred to. The time and circumstances under which the mother made her examination are not shown. The neighbor, to whose house she was taken immediately after the alleged act, was not examined. It does not appear whether the child’s under-clothing was inspected, and many other matters tending to aid in a correct conclusion, do not appear to have been adverted to, so far as we can see from the statement of facts.

It is said by Wharton, in his work on' criminal law, after commenting on several English cases, discussing the necessity of proof of penetration : “ The practice seems to be, to judge “ from the cases just cited, not to permit a conviction in these “ cases, in which it is alleged violence has been done, without “ medical proof of the fact whenever such proof was attainable. “ It seems but right, both in order to rectify mistakes and to “ supply the information necessary to convict, that the prosecu- “ trix should be advised at the outset, so that she can take the “ necessary steps to secure such an examination in due time. “ If this principle be generally insisted upon, there is no dan- “ ger of any conviction failing because of non-compliance with “it, and, on the other hand, many mistaken prosecutions will “be stopped at the outset.” (Sec. 1138.)

While we cannot say that the necessity of a medical examination has been regarded as absolutely indispensable to a conviction in all cases by the American courts, or that we are prepared to yield our assent to so broad and unqualified a proposition as seems to be approved by this able commentator, yet, we think, the great and essential importance of this character of evidence cannot be denied, and especially in cases like this, where the party alleged to be injured is incapable of testifying, and the proof of penetration can be established by circumstantial testimony only, and that by no means of an absolute or conclusive character, it can hardly be overestimated.

These considerations lead us to the conclusion—without, how*232ever, intending to intimate any opinion as to the proper conclusion which should be reached in a more full and careful consideration of the case—that, in view of the vague and indefinite, and somewhat contradictory testimony on which it was tried, the absence of such instructions as would probably have enabled the jury to have given a more full and thorough consideration to the evidence applicable to the only real and vital question in the case, the nature of the offense, the circumstances under which it is alleged to have been committed, the difficulty of disproving the charge in most cases of this kind when unfounded, the extreme penalty of the law imposed by the verdict, and the humane and merciful principle of our criminal law, giving the accused the benefit of all reasonable doubt, the motion for a new trial should have been granted.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.