State v. Bateman

BURGESS, P. J.

At the March term, 1905, of the circuit court of Lawrence county, upon an information duly verified and filed by the prosecuting attorney of said county, the defendant was convicted of the crime of rape, and his punishment assessed at death. Defendant’s motions for new trial and in arrest having been overruled, he perfected his appeal to this court.

At the time of the commission of the alleged assault, the defendant, a negro, twenty-two years of age, was employed as day porter in the hotel of E. J. Shelpman, at Aurora, Lawrence county. Myrtle Digby, the prosecutrix, a white girl, twenty years of age and unmarried, was employed as waitress and chambermaid at the same hotel, and had been working there for about a week prior to February 28, 1905, the date of the al*217leged assault. Her room was on the third floor of said hotel building, and defendant’s room was some distance away in an attic of the building. A gravel roof extended from just under the window of the room occupied by the prosecutrix and over the window of the room occupied by the defendant.

The State’s evidence tended to prove that the prosecutrix had retired early, and that about midnight she was awakened by the presence of defendant in her bed. She asked who it was, and defendant replied that it was Peck, alluding to the hotel clerk, and told her to hush up. She told him to get out, but defendant immediately put his hands on her throat and grabbed her arm in his teeth which he bit severely. He then told her that she might as well behave and submit to him, for he was going to have what he came in for if they hung him. The prosecutrix screamed several times and struggled to free herself from the clutch of the defendant, but he nevertheless succeeded in having sexual intercourse with her. He then made his escape through the window and went to his room, but before leaving he told the prosecutrix he would kill her if she moved while he was in there. While defendant was on the bed with her the prosecutrix heard footsteps at the door and heard some one turning the door knob, but the defendant prevented her from screaming by grabbing her throat. As soon as he left she unlocked the door and found Mr. Shelpman and the night porter there. The porter had heard the girl’s screams and he awoke Mr. Shelpman and both came up to see what was the matter. She immediately told them of the assault made upon her by the defendant and showed them the marks of his teeth upon her arm and the finger prints and bruises on her neck. Her night clothes were torn, the bed clothes rumpled and some of them on the floor, and the rugs on the floor disarranged. Meanwhile Miss Belle Bilue and Miss Lucy Siler, who were also employees in the hotel, came out in the hall, and to them the prosecutrix made com*218plaint in full. They stayed with her the remainder of the night in another room. Mr. Shelpman went to the defendant’s room and found him in bed, but not asleep. Defendant told him that he had been down to the brick hotel to sing with another negro.

Thomas Collins, night porter at the hotel, testified that the defendant came in that night about half past eleven o’clock, and that he remained to the defendant that he was a little “jagged,” and defendant replied, “No, I ain’t, I am going to bed.” That about ten minutes later he heard the girl scream, and he grabbed a club and went up to the door of her room, but could not get in, as the door was locked. That she kept hallooing, and he went down and awoke the landlord, and both went up after the landlord had put on his clothes. That he proposed pushing the door open, but the landlord would not allow him to do that. After a little while the girl opened the door and said, ‘ ‘ Tom, it was a nigger.” He asked her what nigger, and she said, “The day porter.” Witness also testified that on the morning before the assault he heard the defendant express a desire to have sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix.

The defendant’s testimony was to the effect that the first day the prosecutrix began working at the hotel she made advances to him, and suggested that he get men to come to her room. That she invited him to come to her room, saying that’he was as good to her as if he was a white boy. Pie stated that he had sexual intercourse with her in her room on two different occasions prior to the night of this particular assault. That on the night of the alleged assault he had been down to a negro minstrel show at the opera house, and after the show was over he went with some of the performers over to another hotel and then went with them to the depot. That, by an arrangement previously made with the prosecutrix, he went to her room and got in bed with her. That while having sexual intercourse with her she accused him of running about with some of the *219minstrel girls, and then struck him on the nose. That he then turned and bit her on the arm, and she screamed, whereupon he told her not to yell any more, as somebody might hear her and catch him in there. That he heard some one turn the door knob, but that prosecutrix assured him the door was locked.

The justice of the peace to whom prosecutrix first made formal complaint testified that she came to his office and told him that she wanted to make complaint against defendant. He said that there were two other men in the- office at the time; that she was somewhat embarrassed and did not tell him the real character of the assault, and he, supposing it was merely a case of common assault, wrote a complaint to that effect, which she signed and swore to. Afterwards, on learning of the nature of the assault, he went to the hotel, when the girl gave him the details of the outrage, and he then prepared another complaint, charging the defendant with rape.

In rebuttal, the State proved that defendant had not been in the room of the prosecutrix prior to the night of the alleged assault, and before that night she occupied a room with another girl. The good reputation of the prosecutrix was established by a number of witnesses.

The contention.that the verdict is against the evidence, and the result of prejudice and passion, is entirely without merit, as the evidence, if believed by the jury, who are the sole judges of the weight to be given to it, shows the guilt of the defendant beyond any question. The testimony of the prosecuting witness as to the outrage upon her by the defendant was corroborated in several respects, and to an extent such as to fully justify the conviction and repel the assertion that the verdict was the result of prejudice or passion.

It is absurd to say that there should not have been a conviction in the absence of medical proof of the perpetration of the outrage, when the prosecuting witness *220testified to it in unequivocal language, and the defendant himself acknowledged that he had connection with her at the time and place' stated, but with her consent. Medical proof was wholly unnecessary under such circumstances.

It is earnestly contended by counsel for defendant that the charge of rape is unsupported save by the testimony of the prosecutrix, and is contradicted by all the surrounding facts and circumstances. In support of this contention the fact that the prosecuting witness stated in her affidavit for the arrest of defendant, made a few hours after the offense was committed, that he did unlawfully and willfully assault, strike, beat and wound her, is relied upon as being so entirely inconsistent with human experience of the conduct of a ravished female, and so consistent with defendant’s testimony, as to exclude the reasonable probability of his guilt. But a proper consideration of the attending circumstances and of the testimony of other witnesses renders this contention untenable. Pluman nature revolts at the crime of rape, and a female of ordinary modesty upon whom the criminal assault has been made reluctantly relates the details of the outrage upon her. Besides, many of them do not know the difference in law between a common assault or battery and assault and rape, and it is not to their discredit that they do not so know. The justice of the peace before whom the prosecutrix made the affidavit testified that when she came to his office and told him she wanted a warrant for defendant there were two men present in his office; that he asked what she wanted the warrant for, and what the defendant had done to her, and that she said, “He bit me and bruised me;” that when about to make out the warrant he asked her if that was all, and she replied, “I don’t know, but I reckon so.” He further stated that he was not as careful as he should have been in questioning her as to the facts; that the girl seemed timid and backward about talking in the presence of *221one of tlie men who remained in his office; that a few hours afterwards he went to the hotel where the girl was to talk to her about the matter again, and asked her if the defendant forced her, when she assured him that he did. Under such circumstances, the most that can be said regarding the variance between the affidavit and the testimony of the prosecutrix upon the trial is that it went to her credit as a witness, nothing more.

Counsel for defendant next insists that the court erred in permitting witnesses Belle Bilue and Lucy Siler to give the particulars as detailed to them by the prosecutrix, of what occurred between her and the defendant, instead of stating the conversation or the substance of it between themselves and her and thus enable the court to determine whether what she said to them amounted to a complaint of ravishment. After the witness Bilue testified that she went into the room of the prosecutrix immediately after the offense was committed and found her raised up in bed and crying, and saw her night gown and waist torn, she proceeded to state, without other than a general objection from the defendant, what the prosecutrix stated to her regarding the assault and rape; but after the witness had thus testified counsel for defendant moved “to strike out all the-testimony of this witness in regard to what the prosecuting witness told her after the commission of the crime.” The motion was overruled, and defendant excepted. However, after the evidence was all in, the State, with the permission of the court, withdrew from the consideration of the jury all of the testimony of this witness which was objected to, and the court orally ‘directed the jury to disregard it.

The authorities are uniform in holding that in prosecutions for rape, the particular facts of the crime as related by the prosecutrix at the time of or after making complaint of the injury are not admissible in evidence, except when drawn out from the complainant by cross-examination, or introduced as confirmatory of *222her testimony after testimony has been introduced tending to impeach her. [State v. Jones, 61 Mo. 232; 3 Russell on Crimes, 232; 23 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, 874.] That such testimony was inadmissible we think clear, and the withdrawal of it by the State and the exclusion of the same by the court from the consideration of the jury did not cure the error if the evidence was of such a character as to prejudice the defendant’s case (State v. Hopper, 71 Mo. 425; State v. Fredericks, 85 Mo. 145; State v. Thomas, 99 Mo. 235), but its withdrawal will be sufficient if it be apparent from the evidence that it did not have or was not calculated to have that effect. Defendant testified in his own behalf that he had criminal connection with the prosecuting witness at the time and place as testified to by her, and the detailing by witness Bilue of the circumstances of the assault, as related to her by the prosecuting witness, could not, in our opinion, have in any way prejudiced the rights of the defendant.

The only objection made during the examination of witness Lucy Siler was that the questions propounded to her by the prosecuting attorney were leading. The court overruled the objection. As a general rule leading questions should not be asked a witness, but it rests almost entirely in the discretion of the court to allow or refuse to allow such questions to be asked, and a judgment should not be reversed upon that ground, unless it appears that such discretion was unwisely exercised, which does not appear to be the case in this instance. [State v. Napper, 141 Mo. 401; State v. Whalen, 148 Mo. 286, and authorities cited.] Belle Bilue was asked by counsel for defendant, upon cross-examination, “How'did you come to wake up?” to which she replied: “The proprietor and porter came and woke me. And the time they were knocking at her door the nigger was choking her, and she could not move, and they woke me up and thought he was in her room, but did not know for sure and they woke me *223up, and I jumped up in my night clothes and went to her door and I could not raise her, and I went and put on a loose dress, and when I got back to her door the second time the nigger had went out the back window, and the key was turned and I went in and saw Myrtle. ’ ’ Counsel for defendant interposed an objection to this answer upon the ground that it was not responsive to the question, which objection was overruled. He made no motion, however, to strike out the answer, as he should have done in order to avail himself of the right to have such evidence excluded, and must be considered as having waived it. [State v. Foley, 144 Mo. 600; State v. Lehman, 175 Mo. 619.]

It is said for defendant that the court erred in permitting the State to. elicit from D. L. Rickman, on cross-examination, the statement that the prosecutrix told him, in answer to his question, that defendant forced her to yield to his demands. Rickman was a witness for the defense. He was a justice of the peace. He testified that the prosecutrix made complaint to him at first of an assault and battery made upon her by defendant, and that she said nothing that time about her having been forced by defendant to have connection with him; but witness was permitted to testify, over the objection of defendant, that thereafter, on the same day, he went to the hotel where the assault was committed, and that the prosecutrix, in answer to a question propounded by him, stated that the defendant forced her to comply with his wishes. Conceding this to be error, was it, under the circumstances as disclosed by the record in the case, of such a character as to prejudice the defendant’s easel Ye think not. It added not one iota to the testimony of the prosecutrix, and this being so, it is inconceivable that the defendant could have been prejudiced in the remotest degree by its admission.

Defendant claims that the court erred in permitting the State to introduce testimony of the good char*224acter of the prosecutrix before it had been impeached. The record does not show that there was any objection whatever to the introduction of such testimony, and it must be held that the objection was waived. It is true that after witnesses Albert Daniels and J. W. Davis had testified, without objection, to the good character of the prosecutrix, the defendant moved to strike out this testimony upon the ground that it was of their own knowledge of her character and not of the girl’s general reputation, but the objection was then too late. As was said in State v. Foley, supra, “A party cannot speculate upon evidence which is objectionable upon its face when offered, and afterwards complain of a refusal to reject it later in the trial. [Maxwell v. Railroad, 85 Mo. 95; State v. Hope, 100 Mo. 347; Hickman v. Green, 123 Mo. 165; State v. Marcks, 140 Mo. 656.] ’ ’ It is also claimed that the court erred in giving the fourth instruction, at the instance of the State, in that it east upon the defendant the burden of establishing his innocence. State v. Blue, 136 Mo. 41, is relied upon as sustaining this contention; but it does not do so. In that case reasonable doubt was defined by the trial court as being ‘£ a substantial doubt growing out of and consistent with the evidence,.” while in this case it is defined as a ££ substantial doubt arising from the evidence, and not a mere possibility of his innocence.” It is apparent from a casual reading of the instruction that it did not impose upon defendant the burden of proving his innocence. An instruction couched in substantially the same language as the one challenged in this case was approved by this court in State v. Sacre, 141 Mo. 64.

The instructions covered every phase of the case, and are free from error. The evidence was of the most convincing character, and such as to leave no possible doubt in the minds of the jury as to the defendant’s guilt. The jury found him guilty of the offense *225charged against him, and their verdict met with the approval of the court.

We have been unable to find reversible error in the record, and, therefore, affirm the judgment, and direct that the sentence pronounced be executed.

All concur.