Conviction for statutory rape, committed on the prosecutrix, Bertie Breedlove, under the age of fourteen years, in 1906. The indictment was returned in August, 1909, and trial had at the September term of the Wright Circuit Court, in 1910. Punishment was assessed at seven years in the penitentiary.
The evidence for the State shows that the prosecutrix was born in January, 1894. A few years later the defendant made his home in the house of her parents, coming there as a hired hand. He was treated as a member of the family, and trusted by the parents of the prosecutrix so fully that they frequently left him in charge of the children. The prosecutrix was called to the stand, and told her story. She testified that before she was eleven years of age the defendant was in the habit of holding her on his lap and taking liberties with her person. As she puts it, “He taught it to me that *456way.” She further testified that the defendant had intercourse with her when she was eleven years old; that then, and for some time thereafter, she did not know it was wrong; that this relation continued at various intervals until the last act of intercourse, which occurred July 25,1908, at which time she became pregnant, and gave birth to a child the following April. The prosecutrix, in this testimony, does not undertake to give the details as to the exact time and place of any particular act of intercourse, except that she fixes the date of the last act as above stated. She also testified that she told no one of the situation until after the birth of the child, when for the first time she stated that the defendant was the guilty party. It appears in evidence that about a week after the birth of this child, .and after the prosecutrix had mentioned the defendant, he left the country for parts unknown. The indictment was returned against him, as above stated, and he was subsequently arrested in Oklahoma in 1910, and brought back to Wright county for trial.
Defendant denied all acts of intercourse testified to by the prosecutrix, and testified further that he fled the country because his father and others had advised him to do so, stating to him that, although he was innocent, yet “if she swore the child onto me it would be just the same as if I had had something to do with her. ’ ’
Before any evidence was taken, counsel for the defendant moved the court to require the State to elect upon which act of intercourse it would go to the jury; basing this motion on the statement that the prosecuting attorney, in his opening address to the jury, had stated that he would prove several separate and distinct acts of intercourse. The record, however, does not preserve the address of the prosecuting attorney, and we cannot know what statements were made in this regard.
*457When the prosecuting witness finished her evidence there was no cross-examination by the defendant, but a motion was then made to compel the State to elect, which motion wa,s overruled. Other witnesses were then introduced in behalf of the State, including the girl’s parents, but none of this testimony bore upon any particular act of intercourse. After several witnesses had been examined, the court announced that it had decided that the State should be required to elect upon which act it would rely for a conviction, whereupon counsel for defendant made a formal motion that the State be required to elect; and the State did elect to stand upon an act of intercourse in the year 1906, the prosecuting attorney stating that such act oc- . curred in the summer or fall of that year. The prosecutrix was recalled to the stand, and gave evidence in detail as to the time, place and manner of an act of intercourse which she said occurred in the spring of 1906. She was cross-examined at great length by defendant’s counsel concerning this alleged act. Her father was recalled to the stand, and gave evidence corroborating the statements of the prosecutrix regarding certain circumstances which she relied upon to fix the time and place.
At the close of the State’s case the court orally stated to the jury that they should disregard evidence of all acts subsequent to that last testified to by the prosecutrix as having occurred in 1906, and at the close of the case an instruction to the same effect was given to the jury in writing.
In his motion for new trial the defendant complains that the indictment is defective in that it fails to specify any certain and specific date when any crime was committed; that the court erred in refusing to compel the State to elect at the conclusion of the prosecuting attorney’s opening statement; erred in refusing to compel the State to elect at the close of the testimony of the prosecutrix, and erred in admitting testi*458mony on the part of the State of alleged acts of intercourse subsequent to the one upon which the State elected to stand.
I. It is claimed that the indictment is defective because there is no date fixed therein for the commission of the offense. The indictment charges that the act occurred “on or about the-day of September, 1907.” There is no merit in this claim. The time is not material. There is no Statute of Limitations against this prosecution; and if there were any error in this regard it is cured after verdict by the provisions of section 5115, Revised Statutes 1909.
II. Defendant claims that it appeared from the opening’statement of the prosecuting attorney that he knew that he expected to prove several separate and distinct acts of intercourse, and that therefore he should have been compelled at that time to elect. This claim is made in reliance upon State v. Palmberg, 199 Mo. 233, which intimates that the election should be made so soon as the State is able to make an election intelligently. This assignment cannot be considered because of the fact that the record does not contain the opening statement referred to.
III. It is next contended that the State should have been compelled to elect at the close of the testimony given by the prosecutrix when she was first upon the stand. In view of the fact, however, that an election was made by the State, and before its testimony was closed, and that thereafter the prosecutrix was recalled to testify concerning the act upon which the State had elected to stand, and ample opportunity was given defendant to cross-examine her thereon, the failure of the court to order an election at the close of her testimony in chief is immaterial, even if the defendant had a right to an election at that time. Especially is this true in view of the further fact that, when first *459upon the stand, the prosecutrix did not undertake to testify in detail as to the various acts of intercourse.
IV. The main insistence of the defendant is that error was committed in permitting any testimony to go to the jury of acts which occurred subsequent to the act in 1906', upon which the State elected to go to the jury; and reliance is placed upon the case of State v. Palmberg, supra. That case, however, holds that there is no hard-and-fast rule as to the time when the State shall elect, and that each ca,se must be determined upon its merits. It holds in effect that the prosecuting attorney cannot be required to make an election until he can do so intelligently, and that ordinarily the proper time is at the close of the State’s case. We think the court committed no error in its ruling on this question, and that in this case the election ploperly was made after the testimony of the prosecutrix was taken. That being true, the testimony now objected to had been given before the election was made, and properly so. After the election the court could do nothing more than it did do; that is, seek to withdraw this testimony of subsequent acts from the jury. Whether such withdrawal was necessary we need not now decide. Whether necessary or not, it was all that could be done. It is obvious that it is impossible to state what acts are prior and what acts are subsequent until after the election is made, and it must follow that if an election is not required until all of the acts have been testified to it is then too late to object to the admission of evidence of subsequent acts. It may be, as defendant claims, that the attempt to withdraw such testimony from the jury accomplishes very little so far as preventing its consideration by them; but we are not very kindly disposed toward a claim that a case should be reversed, not because the State has proved too little, but because it has proved too much.
This is a ease of the most flagrant character. The *460defendant took advantage of the confidence reposed in him by the parents of this child to debauch her while she was still too young to understand the moral nature of the act. He kept up the relation of intimacy until pregnancy occurred, and after the birth of the child fled the country to avoid prosecution. He admits that he fled to avoid prosecution, although he claims at the same time that he is innocent. It is apparent from the testimony that the defendant designed to continue the illicit relation which he had established with this child, and did so by a long series of acts, each one criminal in character. He denies his identity. The girl testifies that the same man who had intercourse with her when she was eleven years old was the father of her child, born in 1909. We are not prepared to say, under the rule laid down by us in the case of State v. Hyde, 234 Mo. 200, concerning the admission of evidence of other offenses, that the evidence of all these acts testified to by the prosecutrix was not competent as bearing upon the questions of design and identity, but, as stated above, we do not regard that question as being squarely raised by this record, and therefore do not decide it.
YI. The minimum punishment provided by statute for this offense is five years. Notwithstanding the flagitious character of the offense the jury gave the defendant only seven years. We think this fact demonstrates that the verdict was not the result of passion and prejudice, and that therefore in no event was the defendant injured by the admission of the testimony complained of.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment therefore is affirmed.
Kenmsh and Brown, JJ., concur.