1. Sufficiencyof indictment. indictment accused the defendant of having committed the crime against nature, in that he had carnal copulation with a boy, naming him, “ in ah opening of the body other than the sexual parts.” , This is, in substance, the language of our statute definding sodomy. Chapter 148, page 107, Acts Twenty-ninth General Assembly. Appellant insists the allegation is insufficient, in that the particular opening is not designated. We think it individualized the offense to such an extent as to have advised the accused of the particular crime charged. See State v. Porter, 105 Iowa, 677. The rule with respect to the description of offenses exacted at the common law was greatly relaxed in cases like this, where a sense of common decency was held to excuse the prosecutor from setting out the details. To charge generally the commission of the abominable crime against nature or of sodomy, merely naming it, with a designated person, was sufficient, for what was meant is said to have been' “ too well understood and too disgusting to be defined farther than by merely naming it.” Davis v. State, 3 Har. & J. (Md.) 154 (20 Enc. P. & P. 275); State v. Williams, 34 La. Ann. 87. See, contra, State v. Campbell, 29 Tex. 44 (94 Am. Dec. 251). Sir William Blackstone, after referring to the necessity of full proof, adds: “ I will not act so disagreeable part to my readers as well as myself as to dwell longer upon a subject, the very mention of which is a disgrace to human nature. It will be more eligible to imitate in this respect the delicacy of our English law, which treats it, in its very in
Tbe definition of the statute is broader than that of sodomy as understood at common law. Prindle v. State, 31 Tex. Cr. R. 551 (21 S. W. Rep. 360, 37 Am. St. Rep. 833). But it is quite as detestable and no less a disgrace to human nature, and precisely the same reasons for not entering into detail, in describing it, still exist. The indictment informed the defendant that he was accused of a crime against the order of nature, and named the person with whom he was charged with having committed it. This was enough to enable him to prepare his defense, and the judgment when entered may be pleaded in bar to another prosecution. In Commonwealth v. Dill, 160 Mass. 536 (36 N. E. Rep. 472), the court held that to allege that the accused “ did unlawfully and feloniously commit a certain unnatural and lascivious act ” with a named person, in following language of the statute, was sufficient, even though any mode of unnatural copulation, not coming within the definition of sodomy as usually defined, was intended by the Legislature. In Honselman v. People, 168 Ill. 172 (48 N. E. Rep. 304), the statute, denouncing a penalty against “ every person convicted of sodomy or other crime against nature,” was held to include any act which might be condemned under the statute of this State, and an indictment charging that defendant had committed “ the infamous crime against nature upon and with Lloyd Kesler, a man then and there being,” was upheld as against precisely the same criticism urged in the instant case. Tn the course of the opinion the court said.
The statute gives no definition of the crime, which the law, with due regard to the sentiments of humanity, -has always treated as one nbt fit to be named. It was never the practice to describe the particular manner or details of the commission of the act, but the offense was treated in the indictment as the abominable crime not fit to be named among Christians. The existence of such an offense is a disgrace
These views were subsequently approved by the same court in Kelly v. People, 109 Ill. 119 (61 N. E. Rep. 425, 85 Am. St. Rep. 323). There is no reason for thinking courts of the present day less sensitive than their Anglo-Saxon predecessors. The same grounds still exist for excluding the details of the detestable crime, in so far as possible, from the public records, and we think that i^ is described with sufficient definiteness to answer every purpose when charged in the language of the statute.
2. Sodomy sufficiency of proof. II. Complaint is made that the court, did not define with sufficient particularity the “ carnal copulation ” essential to constitute the crime. The jury was told, in substance, that there must have been some penetration, but of no particular distance, and also' that , , _ _ em&ssio semvms was essential. In the absence of the evidence on tire, subject in the abstract, it cannot be said this was not sufficiently specific, and certainly the defendant has no cause of complaint. The authorities are in conflict as to whether proof of emissio seminis is essential in a case like this. A review of the early English cases by Mr. East will be found in 1 East, P. C. 437, where it is noted that Lord Coke stated in the Institutes that “ there must be penetration — that is, res in re — .but the least penetration maketh it carnal knowledge. Emissio seminis makes it not sodomy, but is an evidence in the case of penetration.” But in his Reports Coke seems to have expressed a different view (12 Rep. 37), though Lord Hale was of the opinion that there was a mistake therein, and that the statement in the Institutes expressed Coke’s real opinion. In Puffin’s Case
Tbe unsoundness of tlie contrary opinion is emphasized by the enactment of statutes both in England and in many of the States, including this, eliminating the necessity of such proof in cases of rape. There is even less ground for exacting it in establishing the crime against nature, for “ the enormity of the offense,” as was observed in State v. Vicknair, 52 La. Ann. 1921 (28 South. Rep. 273) “ consists solely in its utter bestiality.” In that case the manner of the offense was as in this, and the court held that emissio seminis was not an essential element of the crime. The same conclusion was reached in White v. Com., 24 Ky. 2349 (73 S. W. Rep. 1120). See 1 McClain’s Crim. Law, 450. See, contra, People v. Hodgkin, 94 Mich. 27 (53 N. W. Rep. 794, 34 Am. St. Rep. 321). That there may be “ camal copulation ” without consummation of all that' intended seems too evident for argument, and we are content with holding, without farther elaboration, that proof of res in re, without more, is sufficient to justify conviction.
3. Mental weakness: extent of impairment; evidence. III. Pat McGruder, the father of the defendant, after giving a history of his life, and detailing many circumstances tending so to indicate, testified that from birth up to September 27, 1903, the day the offense is alleged to have been committed, he was of unsound mind. He was then asked whether in his judgment he e . . L was capable of knowing or appreciating the dif-1 ference between right and wrong. An objection as incompe-1 tent, and calling for his opinion on the issue to be decided by I the jury, was sustained. This was error. The mind may I have been unsound, but not to such an extent as to deprive the I accused of moral responsibility. The question merely called I for the degree of mental soundness, a fact or a condition of the! mind recognized generally as a test by which to determine re-1 sponsibility for crime when mental weakness or imbecility is j interposed as a defense. State v. Felter, 25 Iowa, 67. Inf
Of course, a witness may not be asked whether in his opinion the accused is responsible for the act committed, or whether such was the result of an insane delusion. People v. Thurston, 2 Parker, Cr. R. 49, 134; Patterson v. State, 86 Ga. 70, 12 S. E. Rep. 175. The mere fact that the jury will necessarily pass upon an issue does not necessarily render the inquiry of a witness improper; otherwise, experts on handwriting might not express their opinions of the genuineness of a controverted signature, nor would nonexperts familiar with a party’s handwriting be allowed to testify whether that in issue is genuine. In .'contests over the execution of wills experts are not permitted to answer questions
4. Evidence teacher’s record. IV. The mother of the accused, among other things, testified that he had attended school, and that she knew from anexámination of the-report cards from the teachers that he was always backward in his studies; that he had been -put back several times; that there was a marked difference between, him and her other children.' To meet this the State called Clara Duns-moor, his teacher for nearly two years, beginning in 1896, who testified that he had done good woi*k, and that she, as a part óf her .duties as a teacher, had kept a correct record showing- -his standing in his various studies on a passing standard o'f 80 per cent. Over defendant’s objection, such .-record, .-was read- to the- jury, and also a similiar record kept by ‘her concerning his brother John’s standing. The correctness of. these- rulings in. receiving the records in evidence is vindicated by State v. Brady, 100 Iowa, 191. It is not to
5. imbecility: acquittal. V. The instruction with reference to hypothetical questions and answers based thereon was erroneous, for the reasons pointed out in Stutsman v. Sharpless, 125 Iowa, 335, and Bold v. Rankin, 87 Iowa, 261; Kirsher v. Kirsher, 120 Iowa, 337. The instruction on intoxication might well have been more explicit as to the showing of fraud essential to constitute the drunkenness involuntary, and, if there was any evidence that the act was the result of an irresistible insane impulse, it was not necessary, as was said in the seventh instruction, for the jury to find, in addition thereto, that the accused was of such imbecility or weakness of mind as to be unable to comprehend the nature and consequences of the act. Proof of either condition would entitle him to an acquittal. The alleged misconduct of counsel for the State will not be likely to occur on another trial. Reversed and remanded.