108 Ga. 477 | Ga. | 1899
The accused was convicted of an assualt with indent to rape, and made a motion for a new trial, based on the general grounds and newly discovered evidence. The motion having been overruled, he excepted. Taking the evidence in the record most strongly against the accused, it warranted'a finding of the following facts: Mrs. Vines, a white woman, was walking alone along a public road in the country, leading .from the home of her husband to that of her father-in-law, at a late hour in the afternoon. When she had reached a lonely point on the road, not within view of any dwelling, .the accused, .a negro, suddenly sprang up from behind some bushes at the . side of the road, with a pistol in his hand, and said to Mrs. Vines: “I have got you where I have wanted you for a long time.” He was then some 20 or 25 yards distant from her. She immediately turned and fled, and the accused pursued her for a -distance of 70 to 75 yards. He did not relinquish his pursuit ..until she came within sight of her husband, who was at work •in a field near the roadside. The accused then turned and ran ■off through the woods. He did not get nearer to Mrs. Vines than 10 or 15 yards, nor did he make any attempt to shoot or ■ otherwise injure her with the'pistol.
We do not think that the evidence warranted a conviction of the crime charged in the indictment. To make out a case of assault with intent to rape it is absolutely essential that the evidence should show beyond a reasonable doubt, (1) an assault, (2) an intent to have carnal knowledge of the female, . and (3) a purpose to carry into effect this intent with force and
The fact that the alleged assailant is a negro may, in cases - like the one now under consideration, be properly considered for one purpose, and that is, to rebut any presumption that might otherwise arise in favor of the accused that his intention was to obtain the consent of the female, upon failure of which he would abandon his purpose to have sexual intercourse with her. Under the conditions surrounding the two races in this • State, when in the trial of a person charged with assault with intent to commit a rape the only theory of the defense is that • the accused intended to have sexual intercourse but it was his purpose to desist if he met with opposition, if the assailant is •• a negro and the female is a white woman, such a theory will avail nothing, unless the evidence shows either that the female-was not a virtuous woman, or that she had in some way encouraged the approaches of her assailant. The vital question, however, to be considered is whether, under the circumstances of the particular case, a negro could reasonably be ■ presumed to have thought that a white woman would consent to his lustful embraces; and no such inference will ever arise in his favor, unless the circumstances are such that no other-
We have been able to find but one decision in the United •States where a conviction for assault with intent to commit a rape was upheld under facts similar to those disclosed by the record in the present case. State v. Neely, 74 N. C. 425. That decision was rendered by a bare majority of the court, two of the judges dissenting. Rodman, J., in his dissenting. opinion .admits that under a prior decision of that court there was evidence from which the jury could have convicted the accused of a simple assault; but insists that there was no evidence of intent to commit the offense charged. We quote the following •extract from that opinion as being peculiarly appropriate to our discussion: “But the method of reasoning [of the majority] is misleading and objectionable on principle. It assumes -that the prisoner is a brute, or so like a brute that it is safe to reason from the one to the other; that he is governed by brutish, and, in his case, vicious passions unrestrained by reason or a moral sense. The assumption is unreasonable and unjust. . . Assume, as the opinion of the court does, that the inquiry as to intent is to be conducted upon an analogy from the intents of brutes, you treat him worse than a brute, because what would not be vicious or criminal in a brute is vicious and criminal in him, being a man. When you assume him to be a brute, you assume him to be one of vicious properties. If that be true, what need of court and jury?' 1?he prisoner is not only ferse naturse but caput lupinam whom any one may destroy without legal ceremony. The evidence of the prisoner’s intent is circumstantial; the circumstances being the perauit, and its abandonment when he got in sight of White’s house. It is the admitted rule in such cases' that if there be
Judgment reversed.
The naked question is whether or not,, upon the state of facts set forth at the beginning of the above opinion, the.verdict should be upheld. Beyond doubt the evidence was sufficient to establish the commission by Ihe accused of an assault of some kind. Thomas v. State, 99 Ga. 38, and authorities there cited. In that case, which is in some-respects similar to the one now before us, it was held : “Where one raised a stick in a striking position and ran toward another person fifty yards distant, at the same time threatening to beat that person, and the latter fled, whereupon the pursuer, after getting within about half the above-mentioned distance of the pursued, abandoned the pursuit, it was, under all the circumstances, a question for determination by a jury whether or not there was an intention to strike, and, if so, whether or not it could probably have been accomplished if the pursuit had been continued. If there was such an intention and an apparent ability to carry it into effect, the offense-of an assault was committed, though there may not have been an actual ability to inflict the battery intended. If there was no intention to strike at all, or if there was no real or apparent ability to inflict a battery, there was no assault.” The offense there charged was a simple assault, and the court in effect ruled that the intention to beat was inferable from evidence showing that a threat was made by the accused to the prosecutrix in the following language: “Confound your soul, if you don’t like what I said, I will take this to your head,”— he at the same time using an oath, raising a stick, and starting towards her. See page 41. There was nothing in the present case to indicate an intention on the part of the accused to beat Mrs. Vines. He made no threat or effort to do so, nor was there anything in his conduct tending to show that he had any such purpose. It could not have been an assault with intent to murder; for if this had been the object of the accused, he would unquestionably have used the pistol. It
The case of Ware v. State, 67 Ga. 349, is in many respects similar to that now under consideration, though there the evidence of the lustful intention of the accused was more apparent. Still, there was no positive evidence of an intention to rape. In commenting upon the question of the intent of the accused in that case, Justice Speer said (page 352): “ In seeking the motives of human conduct, the jury need not stop where the proof ceases; inferences and deductions from human conduct are proper to be considered where they flow naturally from the facts proved. And such’conduct as this points with reasonable, if not with unerring, certainty to the lawless intent he had in view.” And see, also, Jackson v. State, 91 Ga. 322, where a conviction of assault.with intent to rape was upheld, although it was in the opinion of this court, after long and anxious consideration, “a case on which the jury might well have doubted whether the accused intended to ravish,” but in which the conclusion was finally reached that there was sufficient evidence to sustain a finding that his purpose was to commit a rape. This was a case, too, in which was distinctly recognized the doctrine that difference in race and social standing might be considered in arriving at the intention of the accused. This court can not, consistently with the purposes of its organization or with the precedents almost without number which it has itself established, set aside verdicts merely because there may be some ground for doubting their correctness. It is possible that Mrs. Vines may have been mistaken as to the identity of her assailant, and in this connection the jury, had they seen proper so to do, might have given more weight to the testimony relating to the defense of alibi, which was set up. Again, they might have had a doubt as to the intention with which the assault was made. They were, however, the exclusive and legally-appointed judges of all the issues and inferences of fact involved in the case, and this court has no authority to usurp their function. Granting the existence of room for doubt on the questions both of identity and intention, we do not think this verdict ought to be disturbed. As a pointed instance among the hundreds which could be cited of the steadfastness