132 Va. 500 | Va. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
The indictment in this case charged that on the 26th day of June, 1921, in Halifax county, “W. W. Atkins, being a married man, * * * did then and there unlawfully and feloniously seduce and have illicit connection with one K. L. Yates, * * * an unmarried female of previous chaste character.”
The case was tried twice. At the first trial the jury found the defendant guilty and fixed his punishment at two years in the penitentiary. This verdict, on motion of the defendant, was set aside. At the second trial he was again found guilty, and his punishment was fixed by the jury at five years in the penitentiary. The court refused
There are three assignments of error set out in the petition. We shall take them up in their inverse order.
1. It is contended that the court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict on the ground that it was contrary to the law and the evidence.
Upon the vital and determinative questions of fact, there is the conflict of testimony between the prosecutrix and the accused so commonly encountered in cases of this character. It is not necessary to set out the evidence in full. The following statement is sufficient for a proper disposition of the case:
The defendant was a married man, having a wife and children living at South Boston. He was employed by the Coca-Cola Company as a traveling salesman, and as such seems to have had his headquarters first at South Boston and later at Leaksville, N. C. The prosecutrix was an unmarried woman, twenty years old, who, with the assistance of a younger sister, conducted a store owned by her invalid father. This store was in the territory in which the defendant sold and delivered Coca-Cola so long as he had his headquarters at South Boston. She testified that for six or seven months before the alleged seduction she saw him at the store two or three times a week; that he told her he was unmarried; that five months after she first met him he proposed marriage; that she declined the first proposal, but that on being asked the second time she agreed to marry him; that two months in advance they agreed on June 26, 1920, as the date for the marriage; that on June 26, 1920, after having written her that week two letters (which she says she destroyed) saying he was coming after her on that date, he came for her at night; that they walked to Clover, a railroad station about four miles from the store; that on the way to Clover he said they would take the train there
We may concede, however, that if the corroborating evidence went no further than hereinbefore appears, we would have to hold, as we did in Riddleberger v. Commonwealth, supra, that it is “as consistent with the conclusion that there was no promise of marriage as with the conclusion that there was such a promise.” But there was the additional testimony of Sam Boyd, which though contradicted by the defendant, may properly and reasonably have been believed by the jury, and which was wholly inconsistent with any other theory than that the defendant was holding himself out as the sweetheart and finance of the prosecutrix. Boyd testified as follows:
• “I know Katie L. Yates. Have known her about eleven years. In going down the street in South Boston sometime*507 in the spring of last year W. W. Atkins jumped on the running board of my automobile, and asked me if I had been down the country, and if I saw his girl, Miss Katie Yates. He said she was the best looking girl in the county, and he intended to take her away from there. My son married Katie Yates’ sister some two years ago.”
If this incident took place—and whether it did or not was a question for the jury—it can only be reasonably explained upon the theory that the defendant was assuming to Boyd the role of an unmarried man, a suitor of a sister-in-law of Boyd’s son, and, further, that he was pretending that he intended to make her his wife. In no other guise could he have decently referred to her as “his girl,” or have lawfully “intended to take her away from there.” This statement to Boyd, especially in view of the relationship of Boyd’s son to the prosecutrix, cannot be said to be as consistent with the conclusion that there was no promise of marriage as with the conclusion that there was such a promise. We think this testimony, taken with the other facts and circumstances above adverted to, constituted independent evidence which fairly tended to corroborate the prosecutrix upon the essential elements of the crime. This being true, the credibility of the story as told by her was a question for the jury. Their finding established the truthfulness of her narrative, and it follows that the court did not err in refusing a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence. If her story was true, the defendant was plainly and indefensibly guilty.
“The court instructs the jury that while they cannot convict the accused on the uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix, Katy L. Yates, yet if the admissions of the*508 accused and other surrounding circumstances substantiate her testimony so as to satisfy their minds of the truth of her statements, then this is sufficient.”
It is urged that this instruction improperly singled out a part only of the evidence, to-wit, the admissions of the defendant; that it improperly commented upon the weight and sufficiency of the evidence; and that it referred to the “surrounding circumstances” in such a broad and unlimited manner as to make the instruction erroneous. These objections are without merit. If it be conceded that either or all of them are well founded when the instruction is regarded by itself, they become of no importance when it is read, as it must be, with the instruction given by the court on its own motion as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that the accused cannot be convicted upon the testimony of the female seduced unsupported by other testimony. Without undertaking to indicate the precise amount of corroborating testimony, which in this case would be sufficient, the court tells the jury that it must be evidence which does not emanate from the mouth of the seduced female, that it must not rest wholly upon her credibility, but must be such evidence as adds to, strenghtens, confirms and corroborates her.”
The two instructions are not, as is claimed on behalf of the defendant, in conflict with each other, and when read together correctly inform the jury as to the character of proof necessary for conviction.
3 The third and last assignment of error questions the ruling of the trial court in admitting certain testimony given by the witnesses, N. G. Terry and Donald Lacks.
(a) Terry, after having testified that he was chief of police in South Boston and saw the prosecutrix there about one o’clock on June 27, 1920, was permitted over the objection of the prisoner to say that she then and there told him “that she had no people in South Boston, and was on her way to some place in North Carolina; that she had a kinsman up there and had started to North Carolina to get work.”
(b) Lacks after having testified that he saw the prosecutrix at his home in Randolph, early one morning in June, 1920, was permitted, over the objection of the prisoner, to say that she told him “she was going to South Boston and then that evening she was going to Leakesville, N. C.”
It is insisted that the court erred in allowing the above recited testimony to go to the jury, and that the judgment of conviction ought for that reason to be reversed. The ground upon which the objection to this evidence was based was that “the statements, not having been made in the presence and hearing of the accused, were hearsay and inadmissible as evidence against him.”
At first view, there appears to be more difficulty with reference to the testimony of the witness Lacks. The statement made to him by Miss Yates, without indicating why •she was going, did show that she was on the way to Leakesville, N. C., and that is where she had testified they were going for the purpose of being married. It would be possible, therefore, to look upon this evidence as corroborative of her story in court. We do not think, however that the jury would have accorded it any such effect. To have done so, they would have had to believe that at the time she made the statement to Lacks she still thought she was going to Leakesville to be married. She could not have had any such belief at that time, because she also told Lacks, in the same conversation, that she was going to stop at South Boston. No stop at that place had been contemplated by her until after the defendant had told her for the first time that he
We are of opinion that there was no reversible error in the admission of the testimony in question.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment complained of must be affirmed.
Affirmed.