That the prisoner upon the facts set out in the statement of the case, committed an assault is not an open question. State v. Davis, 1 Ired. 125; State v. Rawls, 65 N. C. Rep. 334; State v. Vannoy, Ibid 532.
A majority of tire court are of the opinion that there was evidence to be left to the jury as to the intent cbai’ged. For my own part I think the evidence plenary, and had I been on the jury would not have hesitated one moment.
I see a chicken cock drop his wings and take after a hen ; my experience and observation assure mo that his purpose is sexual intercourse, no other evidence is needed.
Whether the cock supposes that the hen is running by female instinct to increase the estimate of her favor and excite, passion, or whether the cock intends to carry Iris purpose by force and against her will, is a question about which there may be some doubt, as for instance if she is a setting hen and.
Again; I see a dog in hot pursuit of a rabbit; my experience and observation assure me the intent of the dog is to ’kill the rabbit; no doubt about it, and yet according to the ■argument of the prisoners counsel, there is no evidence of the Intent.
In our case, when the woman leaves the railroad and starts ■for her home and is unaccompanied, to pass through woodland for one-fourth of a mile, aV\.egro man calls to her stop ; he is at the distance of seventy-five yards ; she with female instinct, from the tone of his voice, looks, &c., sees his purpose and runs as fast as she can through the woodland and makes the head of the lane, in sight of the house before he is able to -catch her; he pursues to the head of the lane, and then flees ■and attempts to escape in the woods.
It is said in the ingenious argument of the counsel of the prisoner, his intent may have been to kill the woman, or to rob her of her shawl or of her money, and if the jury cannot «decide for which of these intents he pursued her, they ought to find a verdict for the defendant. The fallacy of this argument is, I conceive, in this : it excludes all of the knowledge •which we acquire from experience and observation'as to the nature of man. This is the corner stone on which the institution of trial by jury rests. To say that a jury are not at liberty to refer to their observation and experience, when a
Our case particularly called for the observation and experience of the jurors as practical men. The prisoner had some intent when he pursued the woman. There is no evidence tending to show that his intent was to kill her or to rob her, so the intent must have been to -have sexual intercourse., and the jury considering that he was a negro, and considering the hasty flight of the woman, and the prisoner stopping and running into the woods when he got in sight of the house, and the instinct of nature as between male and female, and the repugnance of a white Avoinan to the embraces of a negro,, had some evidence to find that the intent was to commit a rape.