297 P. 830 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1931
The plaintiffs in error, hereinafter called defendants, were convicted in the district court of Kiowa county on a charge of rape, and defendants Pitts, Tidmore, and McManus were sentenced to serve a term of 25 years in the penitentiary; defendants Brumley and the two Wards were each sentenced to serve a term of 20 years in the penitentiary.
Briefly stated, the testimony for the state is about as follows: Faye Pipkin, who resided with her father near *356 Mountain View, was taken to a church service by one Jester. While there, Brumley told her not to return home with Jester, as some boys were going to beat him up. She then asked Tidmore to take her home. Before they started home, McManus called Tidmore to the rear of the car and had a conversation with him. Tidmore then left with her in his car and a short distance from town, near a gravel pit, he cut off his engine and the car rolled back to the railroad track. Another car was following them with the other defendants and here a difficulty, apparently a sham, ensued between McManus and Tidmore. McManus and Brumley pulled the girl out of the car and advised her to run. She went up the bank some 60 feet from the car, and, the difficulty having ended, Tidmore and McManus took her up the railroad track about 300 feet and informed her of their intentions. There they held her and each defendant had sexual intercourse with her, two of them twice. The entire transaction was continuous and accomplished by force. Tidmore then took prosecutrix home and she immediately notified her father, who attempted to seize Tidmore, but he fled. The father then took prosecutrix to Mountain View and notified the officers, and all the defendants were apprehended that night. The girl was examined by a physician, who testified her condition showed recent excessive intercourse; that her privates were swollen and the blood appeared about to burst out. The defense was alibi for all the defendants, except Tidmore. They denied that they were at the place claimed by prosecutrix or knew anything of the alleged crime. Tidmore admitted taking the girl home, but denied any act of intercourse. We deem it unnecessary to recite any further details.
Among the contentions made is error in overruling the application for a continuance. The application sets *357 out that Claude Lewis would testify that on the morning after the alleged offense he had a conversation with prosecutrix in which she said, in substance, that she told her father of the claimed offense in order to placate him. That he scolded and threatened to beat her. That she did not expect him to have the boys arrested and her statement was not true. A subpoena was issued for this witness November 20. It was returned "not found" November 24. The trial was on December 10. During this interval no diligence to procure the witness was made. The application states that the information concerning the witness was from relatives in Garvin county, his usual place of residence, who expected him to return at any time, but no subpoena to that county was issued. It does not appear that there is any likelihood of his attendance at the next term of the court and no one appeared to know the witness' whereabouts. To entitle a defendant to a continuance on the ground of an absent witness he must have exercised diligence to procure the witness in the first instance. There was no error in overruling the application.
Complaint is made that the court committed fundamental error in his instructions, particularly in Nos. 6, 9, and 10. No. 6 correctly states that all persons concerned in the commission of a crime, whether they directly commit the act or only aid and abet, are principals. Nos. 9 and 10, in substance, tell the jury that, if defendants or any of them, by force and violence overcoming the resistance of the prosecutrix, did rape her or did aid and abet any of the other defendants in the commission of such crime, then the jury should find such defendants committed the crime or, aiding and abetting in its commission, guilty as charged.
The argument is that under the evidence eight different acts of intercourse were proven, and that each is a *358 separate crime both as to the perpetrator and to any other of the defendants who aided and abetted in its commission, and, there having been no election of the particular act on which the state relied, the defendants were tried for more than one offense.
It has been said in substance many times by this court that a defendant may be tried for only one offense at a time, and, where there is evidence tending to prove two or more distinct offenses, more than one of which might support a verdict of guilty, the state is required to elect the particular act upon which it will rely for a conviction. This is necessary for the reason that a defendant has a constitutional right to be put on trial for a single offense and for the further reason that he has a right to a verdict in which all the jurors concur upon the same criminal act or transaction. Gracy v. State,
In cases of statutory rape other acts of sexual intercourse may be proven for the purpose of corroboration and as showing the intimate relations of the parties, but a conviction must be based on one act. Where more than one act is proven occurring at different times and places, it is the duty of the trial court upon motion to require the state to elect upon which of the several acts it intends to rely for a conviction, and, if no motion is made, the court of its own motion should require the state to elect or should treat the act of which the state first introduces evidence which tends to prove the offense as an election. Cooper v. State, supra; Pope v. State,
The particular point here raised appears not to have been considered in any of the cases of first-degree rape in this state. In Sayers v. State,
"The prosecutrix testified to two separate and distinct acts of intercourse, one with the defendant Glenn Timmons, and one with the defendant Thelmar Thompson, and that each of such acts of intercourse took place in the absence of the other defendant, and was accomplished without her consent, by force and violence overcoming her resistance."
There are few cases on the particular point under consideration. Somewhat analogous is the case of People v. Petruzo,
"Defendant complains that he was tried, as shown by the evidence and instructions of the court, for two crimes; i. e. (1) aiding and abetting Byers in the commission of a rape upon the prosecutrix, and (2) the commission of the crime by defendant himself. The argument is that by proceeding this way the defendant was not informed of the nature and the cause of the accusation against him. Upon the other hand, the state contends that only one crime was committed, although there were two separate and distinct rapes upon the prosecutrix — one by Byers, aided by the defendant, and the other by the defendant. Each of these acts constituted a part of this transaction and crime, and it was competent to prove both against defendant as part of the res gestae. This question was before this court in State v. Duffy,
It is earnestly argued on behalf of defendant Brumley that, as he is shown by the evidence to have been under the age of eighteen years, and the prosecutrix is shown to have been above the age of fourteen, he is within the protection of the latter part of section 1835, Comp. Stat. 1921, which is: "* * * Nor can any person be convicted of rape on account of an act of sexual intercourse with a female over the age of fourteen years, with her consent, unless such person was over the age of eighteen years at the time of such act." See, in this connection, Short v. State,
No other point of sufficient importance to require discussion is presented.
The case is affirmed.
DAVENPORT, P. J., and CHAPPELL, J., concur. *363