Thе trial court was justified in refusing the first as well as the fourth instruction, because the first sentence of each instruction announced matters of argument merely, and not principles of law. The court may, and should whenever necessary, in all criminal trials, caution the jury against convictions from prejudice or uрon insufficient evidence; but it is not a rule of law that the jury must view the offense of rape as a most heinous one, or one well calculated to crеate strong prejudice against the accused; or that the attention of the jury be specially directed to the difficulty growing out of the usual circumstаnces of the crime in defending against rape; nor is it a rule of law that rape is an accusation easy to make, and hard to be defended by аn accused, though he be never so innocent. In the case of Crump vs. Commonwealth (Va.), 2 Fed. & St. Cr. Rep. 433, S. C.
The third instruction is also erroneous, because it requires a greater degree of resistance upon the part of a woman than the law and common sense demand where the offense is accompanied as in this case, with an exhibition of weapons and threats, calculated to-
The second instruction was also erroneous because it wаs a charge upon the weight of the evidence. By it the jury were told that prosecutrix was at the time of the alleged rape in possession of her natural mental and physical power, and not terrified by threats, or in such a position that resistance would be useless. All these were matters for the jury tо determine from the evidence, and the court by giving the instruction would have taken these questions from the jury and confined the jury to the sole question whether рrosecutrix resisted to the full extent of her ability. Giles vs. State,
The fourth and sixth instructions were properly refused. Both of them, when applied to the facts оf
The fourth instruction stated the law to be that a jury should receive with more than ordinary doubt and suspicion the evidence of the prosecutrix in prosecutions for rape. As without the testimony of the prosecutrix no cоnviction could have been had in this case, and the court charged the jury that they must give defendant the benefit of all reasonable doubts, it is apparent that had the court given this instruction, the whole controversy would have been resolved into this proposition; the defendant is entitled to the benefit of all reasonable doubts, liis guilt is proven only by the prosecutrix; her testimony must be received with extraordinary doubt and suspicion, therefore defendant is entitled to a verdict. If in any case it is proper for the court to instruct the jury that they should scrutinize the testimony of the prosecutrix with caution, no authority can be found to sustain the proposition that such testimony must, as a matter of law, be received with more than ordinary doubt and suspicion. Monroe vs. Statе,
The fifth instruction was fully сovered by the general charge of the court, and was therefore proj>erly refused.
’\Ye are asked to reverse the judgment in this case upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. In Sherman vs. State,
