237 S.W. 288 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1921
Lead Opinion
Appellant was convicted in the district court of Denton county of rape of a female under the age of consent, and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of 5 years.
No error was committed in overruling appellant’s motion for a continuance because of the absence of certain witnesses. Without going into the question at length, it is sufficient to say that the materiality of the alleged absent testimony does not sufficiently appear.
The court below committed no error in overruling appellant’s objection to all evidence as to the age of prosecutrix. Such fact was material and not necessary to be more specifically alleged than that she was under eighteen years of age.
The trial court told the jury that if they found from the evidence that at the time of the alleged rape, prosecutrix was not of previous chaste character they should acquit. The court then proceeded to give to the jury a definition of what is meant by “previous chaste character,’-’ which is as follows:
“By the term ‘previous chaste character’ referring to the prosecutrix in this case, is meant, that character of a woman who possesses actual virtue, and you are instructed that a woman possesses actual virtue until she has had sexual intercourse by her own consent with a man not her husband, and in this ease if you find and believe from the evidence that Euleta Oroft had had sexual intercourse by her own consent with any other man or men previous to the time she had sexual intercourse with the defendant, you will acquit the defendant and say by your verdict not guilty.”
By bill of exceptions duly approved by the court it is shown that appellant excepted to such definition and its application as improper under the facts of this case, in that it appeared from the evidence that at a prior time and place to that submitted in the charge to the jury appellant and prosecutrix had had intercourse with each other; that appellant asked a special charge defining unchaste character, which required the jury to believe that the female possessed actual virtue at the time of the act with the accused charged herein, which was refused. Referring to the facts in the instant case, it appeared from the testimony of prosecutrix herself that her first act of intercourse with appellant was at his garage in the town of Denton. 'She further testified that on another occasion later they had intercourse in a pasture west of said town. In his charge to the jury the court restricted their consideration of defendant’s guilt to the act in the pasture. Was prosecutrix a chaste woman at the time of this act in said pasture? She was not, if her own evidence be believed. Would her prior act or acts of intercourse with appellant render her unchaste within the meaning of the law now under consideration? This question has not been decided in this state, but in State v. Dacke, 59 Wash. 238, 109 Pac. 1050, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 173, this question was the point at issue, and was decided adversely to the state by the Supreme Court of Washington. Bailey v. State, 57 Neb. 706, 78 N. W. 284, 73 Am. St. Rep. 540, was therein cited as directly in point and many other authorities as analogous. From the opinion in the Dacke Case we quote:
“The term ‘of previously chaste character’ means the same in law as in morals. It describes a condition of sexual purity. It means a female who has never submitted herself to the sexual embrace of man, and who still retains her virginal chastity. It is defined as ‘chaste in fact when seduced,’ in Hussey v. State, 86 Ala. 34, 5 So. 484; as ‘actual personal virtue,’ in State v. Patterson, 88 Mo. 8S, 57 Am. Rep. 374; Lyons v. State, 52 Ind. 426, 1 Am. Crim. Rep. 28; Kenyon v. People, 26 N. Y. 203, 84 Am. Dec. 177. ‘A chaste’ female is one that has never had sexual intercourse, who yet retains her virginity. A virtuous female is one who has not had sexual intercourse unlawfully, out of wedlock, knowingly and voluntarily.’ Marshall v. Territory, 2 Okl. Crim. Rep. 136, 101 Pac. 139. Whatever may be the language which one may choose to define a female- of previously chaste character, it certainly cannot be contended that one who, moved by lewd desire and libidinous impulse, submits herself to the carnal embrace of a man from November to July whenever the time and place are opportune, is a female of such a character on the 30th day of June.
“It is argued by the state that, as to the appellant, the prosecutrix is exempt from this requirement of the law; that, being the author of her undoing, he cannot take advantage of his own wrong and hide himself under the cloak of this statutory requirement, as a shield for his protection. Such an argument is purely a sentimental one, and, although it may be ab*291 horrent to the moral sense to permit a man to protect himself with the shield of his own wrong, we are dealing with a legal question, and not one of sentiment nor morals; and, in order to find a. man guilty of such an offense as the one named in this information, we must first find a female who can in all its essentials measure up to the requirement of the law charged to be violated. The test of virtue in a woman is a personal and physical test, and when, by reason of her voluntary sin, she has lost her virginal purity, it matters not who contributed to that loss; she is no longer chaste. It is not a sound argument to say that the prosecutrix in this case was immune from rape as to all other men, but not from appellant. The statute makes no such distinction; neither can we. As is said in Shirwin v. People, 69 Ill. 55, 1 Am. Crim. Hep. 659: ‘The right of the accused to defend must be as broad as that of the prosecution to criminate.’ Such we believe to be the reasoning of the law. Its authority will be found in similar cases to which we will now refer.
“In People v. Clark, 33 Mich. 112, 1 Am. Crim. Rep. 660, the defendant was charged with seduction on July 28th. The complaining witness testified that the first offense was committed on that day. She then gave evidence of similar offenses committed in the month of August, one of which latter offenses was elected by the prosecution to go to the jury. The court held a conviction upon the latter act could not be sustained, and said: ‘The object of this statute was not to punish illicit cohabitation. Its object was to punish the seducer.’ The court then holds there could be no seduction in August, even though made under a promise of marriage, when the evidence showed prior acts. The complaining witness having already fallen in July, there was in August no virtue to seduce. So in People v. Squires, 49 Mich. 487, 13 N. W. 828, defendant was charged with seduction in September. The proof showed the first act of intercourse between the parties long prior to that. Held, complaining witness was unchaste in September, and could not then be seduced. In Bailey v. State, 57 Neb. 706, 73 Am. St. Rep. 540, 78 N. W. 284, 11 Am. Crim. Rep. 660, the defendant was convicted of rape under a statute very similar to ours. The act charged was on June 13th. The evidence disclosed that the first act of intercourse between defendant and prosecutrix took place in Iowa the previous March. The court held that the conviction could not be sustained, as the prosecuting witness was not previously chaste in June, and said: ‘The'fact that she was first deprived of her virginity by the prisoner does not strengthen the state’s case. * * * To sustain a conviction under it, the evidence must show beyond a reasonable doubt, among other'things, that the female with whom the sexual intercourse was had was, prior to that intercourse, sexually pure — chaste as Diana.’ The court then takes up the argument here made that defendant could not take advantage of his own wrong, and holds that the state in criminal prosecutions cannot invoke the doctrine of estoppel against a defendant; that it is not enough to show a violation of the spirit of the statute; but that its very letter must be offended against. In State v. Patterson, supra, the court says: ‘Evidence of prior specific acts of unchastity with the defendant himself is now universally received, as well in cases of seduction as in cases of rape. What for? To show that in the latter class of cases there was less likelihood of absence of consent, and that in the former, in consequence of a prior act of the defendant, there was no chastity left to seduce. Can it be material by whom the prior act is performed, whether by the defendant or whether by any one else?’ In People v. Nelson, 153 N. Y. 90, 60 Am. St. Rep. 592, 46 N. E. 1040, the defendant was charged with seduction upon a ‘female of previous chaste character.’ Many acts of intercourse between the parties were testified toj occurring prior to the offense charged in the indictment. Held, that the conviction could not be sustained, upon the ground that, having indulged in frequent sexual intercourse with the defendant, the complaining witness was on the day charged not an unmarried female of previously chaste character. In Carpenter v. People, 8 Barb. 603, the act charged was abduction, under a statute describing the female as one ‘of previous chaste character.’ The time fixed was June, 1849. Evidence was given of an act of intercourse in 1846. The court held the female was not of previously chaste character, and said:- ‘The word “previous" in this connection must be understood to mean immediately previous, or to refer to a period terminating immediately previous to the commencement of the guilty conduct of the defendant.’
“So in the case before us the use of those words in the information meant the time just preceding the commission of the crime charged, June 30th. By her own evidence the prosecu-trix was not then a female child of previously chaste character. Neither was she on June 8th, when the law went into effect. She was not then within the description of the statute, and therefore not within its protection; and the motion of the defendant for a directed verdict should have been granted.”
The reasoning of the court in said case seems to us unanswerable.
For the error of the trial court in its definition of previous chaste character and the application thereof and in submitting an erroneous charge upon said question, and also for its refusal of- a special charge substantially presenting the matter correctly and for the other error mentioned, the judgment of the trial court will have to be reversed, and the cause remanded, which is accordingly so ordered.
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Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
The argument advanced that a man who
The last sentence of article 1063, P. C., defining rape, as amended at the Fourth called session of the Thirty-Fifth Legislature (Acts 35th Deg. [1918] c. 50), reads as follows:
“Provided, that if the woman is fifteen years of age or over, the defendant may show in consent cases, she was not of previous chaste character as a defense.”
It seems to us that any other conclusion than heretofore announced would be to read into the law by judicial construction a further proviso “that such defense should not be available to an accused if he was the author of the woman’s unchastity.” 'Sentiment and reverence for virtue has a strong impelling force in that direction, but recognition of our duty to declare the law as written, rather than as we might wish it to be, draws the other way.
The Legislature uses the words “previous chaste character.” When we determine at what time an unmarried woman becomes “unchaste” then the controlling question in this case is settled. The word “chaste” is supposed to have been used by the Legislature in its ordinary meaning. It is not necessary to go to the text-writers and decisions of the courts to determine what the usual and ordinary meaning of “sexual purity” is. But, if we go to the decisions, our own court has settled it in construing the very statute now under consideration. In Norman v. State, 89 Tex. Cr. R. 330, 230 S. W. 991, it is said:
“A chaste woman, within the meaning of the law as applied to an unmarried woman, signifies one who has had no carnal knowledge of men. Cyc. of Law and Proc. vol. 6, p. 978;, Words and Phrases, Second Series, vol. 1, p. 652; State v. Kelley, 90 S. W. Rep. 834, 191 Mo. 680; Kerr v. U. S., 104 S. W. 809; Marshall v. Territory, 101 Pacific, 139.”
Being convinced that our original opinion properly construed the law as we find it written in our Code, the motion for rehearing is overruled.