171 Ga. 782 | Ga. | 1931
Roy Conoway was convicted of the offense of rape, with a recommendation to mercy, and received a sentence of one to three years penal servitude. The evidence for the State was to the effect that the defendant, who was on the bank of a branch and ditch, jumped down into this gully where the complaining female had gone to break a tooth-brush from some bushes. He jerked her past a curve in the gulley, where he beat her over the head with his fists and put his hand over her mouth, telling her he would kill her if she hollered. Having thrown her down, he forcibly had connection with her, and ran a different way from the gorge. The female ran as rapidly as she could to the house where her mother and her father lived, screaming at the top of her voice. The mother ran to her, and the daughter immediately told her mother what had transpired and who was the assailant. The gully was at the bottom of a hill, and was so deep, that, while the roof ,of the house in which the prosecutrix lived could be seen from the point where she went to pick her tooth-brush, it was impossible for any one at the house to see even the banks of the ravine. As soon as her father returned home at night, the girl made complaint to him. He immediately swore out a warrant for the arrest of the defendant, who could not be found. -He had escaped, and was not seen for four or five months. When he was finally arrested he resisted, and was captured only because he became entangled in a wire fence, and thereby the officers were enabled to overtake him.
In addition to the general grounds, the movant insists that the court erred in allowing Mrs. Nancy Smith to testify, over objection that it was hearsay, incompetent, and inadmissible, as follows: “I got out there in the back yard, and she came running to me screaming, and she said he carried her down in the ditch. She said he just catched her jumped off in the ditch. She said he hit her over the head and held his hand over her mouth to keep her from hollering.” We see no error in the admission of this testimony. In the light of all the evidence, it was clearly admissible as a part of the res gestae of the transaction. The statements made are shown by the evidence to have been so very shortly after the alleged transaction that the court could well adjudge them to be free from the suspicion of device or afterthought; and this view is strengthened in the case of a child or others of weak mind. As appears from evidence as to the condition of the prosecuting witness, the very fact that she was subject to periods of lunacy would allow the application of this rule in enabling the jury to determine for themselves whether the statements of the witness to her mother were tinctured or tainted by device and afterthought. No time limit may be fixed within which said statements are admissible and beyond which they are inad
The second special ground of the motion for a new trial complains that there was no corroboration of the female alleged to have been raped. So far as some members of this court, including the writer, are concerned, corroboration of the female alleged to have been raped is unnecessary. The progress of intelligence and civilization, and the recognition of the equality of women with men in this era, forbids that a male witness may in many offenses deprive a fellow citizen of his liberty, and even of his very life, without any legal requirement that he should be corroborated in any respect, and yet a virtuous and unmarried female may be assaulted by a brute in the form of a man inspired by lust, but the assailant can not be punished if, forsooth, the female was compelled by fear of her life to yield to his lustful embraces, for the reason perhaps that she can not comply with the dicta of Lord Hale which were expounded in a remote age when woman was considered but little more than a chattel, and presumed, unless she was corroborated, to have been willing to engage in. sexual intercourse almost upon suggestion. However, in this case there was corroboration.
The sixth ground of the motion urges the point that the verdict is contrary to law and without evidence to support it, because it appears from the evidence that the only person testifying to the alleged crime was insane and is now insane and confined in the State Sanitarium after having been adjudged insane by the court of ordinary of Chattooga County as shown by the record.
A person may have been adjudged insane who has recovered. In such a case, as in all others, the jury could and would determine for themselves whether the witness was of sound mind. The pre
Upon the merits, we must say that the verdict was fully authorized by the evidence. The jury was authorized to find that the female alleged to have been assaulted was sane, and that her testimony was true. If the rules as to corroboration which were observed in ancient days are still to be-strictly applied, the witness was sufficiently corroborated so as to render her credible upon that score. Under the court’s instruction the jury found she was corroborated. There was no error in the instructions of the court,
Judgment affirmed,.