126 Va. 733 | Va. | 1919
after making :the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court.
The assignments of error raise the questions which will be disposed of in their order as stated below:.
1st. Is the indictment insufficient in that it does not specifically charge that the assault was made “with the intent” to ravish and carnally know the prosecutrix against her will and by force ?
This precise question seems not to have been expressly decided in Virginia. It is, however, in principle^ free- from difficulty, and, as we shall see, the question has been ruled in the negative by analogous and also by direct authority elsewhere.
“Every person who attempts to commit an offense and in such attempt does some act towards its commission, shall * * *,” etc.
The indictment under consideration follows the statute in its use of the term “attempt,” without further expansion. It charges, however, an assault, and that the “attempt” was “to ravish and carnally know” (the prosecu-trix) “against her will and by force.” This was an act in its nature evil and an act, therefore, “prima fade evil also in intent; so this intent need not be alleged,” since the statute under which the indictment was found has not made the intent “affirmatively or descriptively an element of the offense.” 1 Bishop on Cr. Procedure, p. 327.
In Johnson v. State, 14 Ga. 55, 59-60, in holding the indictment involved in that case sufficient, the court said: “The grand jurors, in this-court, chargé the prisoner with an assault with intent to commit a rape. And in the body of the count it is alleged, that with force and arms he made
“Is there any difference between an assault with attempt to ravish, and an assault with intent to ravish ? We do not deny that there is a distinction between an intent and an attempt to do anything. . The former implies the purpose only; the latter an actual effort to carry that purpose into execution. But the question is, whether in crimes, which require force as an element in their commission, there is any substantial difference between an assault with intent and an assault with attempt to perpetrate the offense? We think not.
“What is an assault? It is an attempt to commit a violent injury. Consequently, an assault with intent to commit a rape, is an attempt, by violence, to commit a rape. The verdict under this count was in conformity with the indictment. And we are the better satisfied with this conelusion as the Code declares that every indictment shall be sufficient which charges the offense so plainly that it may be easily understood by the jury. Under the first count, the jury must have understood that the defendant was charged with the offense of rapé. And under the second, with an attempt, by violence, to commit the crime.”
In State v. Hager, 50 W. Va. 370, 40 S. E. 393, the indictment was for an attempt to commit murder, and in holding the indictment sufficient without any express allegation that the acts done in the attempt to kill were done with the “intent” to murder, the court said: “* * * we grant, as claimed'by counsel for the defendant, that to constitute an attempt there must be an intent to commit the act, and some act done towards its consummation of such a nature as to constitute the attempt to commit the offense.
In Atkinson v. State, 34 Tex. Cr. Rep. 424, 428, 30 S. W. 1064, the indictment charged an assault and an “attempt”
To the same effect, see Scott v. People, 141 Ill. 195, 203-4-5, 30 N. E. 329; State v. Daly, 41 Or. 515-17, 70 Pac. 706; Lewis v. State, 35 Ala. 380.
This question has been expressly decided in the affirmative in Cunningham’s Case, 88 Va. 37, 40, 13 S. E. 309. In that case the indictment, with the exception of the names of the parties and the dates; was, in its- charge of the commission of the offense, in precisely the same language as in the case in judgment. This court, in holding the indictment sufficient, said: “The indictment in this case is for an attempt to commit rape, under section 3888, supra, and the charge is in the words of the statute charg
“The plaintiff in error complains that this indictment did not charge or aver an act done in the attempt to commit the offense, and so that he is surprised when the evidence was offered to show that, in the night-time, while the said Martha Hartsook was in bed and asleep, he, the said plaintiff in error, laid his hands upon her and declared his purpose, and, 'when she called for help, threatened to choke her, and seized her by the shoulders to that end, when, help arriving in response to calls, the said plaintiff in error fled. The indictment distinctly charges the violent and felonious assault and the attempt to rape. If this be true, then an act was done by him in the attempt to commit rape. He made a violent assault, and attempted to commit rape. To charge this is to charge and aver an act done towards the commission of the offense; an assault is an act; no mere words can constitute an assault. The demurrer to the indictment was properly overruled; there was no error in that action of the corporation court of Bristol.” (Italics supplied.)
The material portions of the evidence appear from the statement preceding this opinion. The purpose of the accused to have carnal- intercourse with the prosécutrix appears-from his own testimony. His employment of forcé
The following should also be said of the cases mentioned below which are relied on for the accused upon the question under consideration, namely:
In Hairston’s Case, 97 Va. 754, 32 S. E. 797, there was an entire absence of any proof of the use of force by the accused.
In Christian’s Case, 64 Va. (23 Gratt.) 954, in view of the previous unchastity of the accused, the force used was held to be consistent with the theory that the acts of the accused were but evidence of solicitation.
As said in State v. Miller, 191 Mo. 587, 612, 90 S. W. 767, 775 “* * * the failure of such outcry is simply a fact tending to disprove the good faith of the charge, a circum
And in the instant case the failure to make outcry loses its usual significance in view of the fact that according to the testimony for the Commonwealth, the threat of the prosecutrix to make outcry caused the accused to release her and take his departure so that there was no occasion for her to make an outcry.
And with respect to the failure to sooner make complaint, the prosecutrix in her testimony enters into an explanation of that, as appears from the statement preceding this opinion, which explanation is not in the nature of things incredible, and hence the credibility of all of this was for the jury.
The case before us is widely different from Harvey’s Case, 103 Va. 850, 49 S. E. 481, relied oh for the accused, where the complaint was not made until after the birth of a child and where the testimony of the prosecutrix was uncorroborated and was in many respects incredible.
The judgment under review will, therefore, be
Affirmed.