59 N.Y. 374 | NY | 1874
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It has been held that the two justices of the Sessions are indispensable to constitute a legally organized Court of Sessions, and that neither can be dispensed with, any more than the county judge. (Blend v. The People,
We have seen that a juror may be sworn and give his testimony to the court and to his fellows without breaking up the panel, yet he for the moment may be out of the jury box and performing a double duty, rendering his testimony as a witness, and noting its effect in aiding or abating the force of that which had gone before it. The attitude of a judge standing as a witness is not different in result upon his judicial function. He still retains it and is still in the exercise of it, still has his jurisdiction of the case before him, together with his fellows on the bench. All of the component parts of the court are present together and co-operating, all the requisites of jurisdiction still exist as lively as when the trial began. There was no physical impossibility, as there was in Blend v. The People (supra), in Justice BAKER at any moment on the arising of a question asking a decision from the bench, joining with the other members of the court in arriving at and pronouncing it. Cancemi's Case
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We do not consider whether this question comes properly before us on the papers, preferring to dispose of it as if it did.
The prisoner's counsel took several exceptions on the trial to the rulings of the court on the admission and rejection of testimony. He also took an exception to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict, on the ground that there was no legal evidence of the crime having been committed. It is not necessary to determine whether these exceptions were well taken. There is another exception in the case, which requires an affirmance of the judgment of the General Term. The same question on the admissibility of evidence may not arise again, and we cannot add any thing to what was said by CHURCH, Ch. J., in The People v.Bennet (supra), upon the power and the duty of the court to advise the jury to give a verdict of acquittal, when the evidence is too slight to warrant a conviction.
The counsel for the prisoner, asked the court to charge the jury, that they must be satisfied from the evidence, before finding the prisoner guilty, that the prosecutrix resisted him to the extent of her ability, on the occasion. The court declined to charge the jury in those words, but did charge that the act must have been done by force, and against the will and resistance of the prosecutrix, without saying how forcible and continued, or how feeble and yielding that resistance might be. The counsel excepted to the refusal to charge and to the charge as made. There is no error in the charge as made. The prisoner was indicted under the statute declaring it a felony to forcibly ravish any woman of the age of ten years or upwards. (2 R.S., 663, § 22, sub. 2.) The charge, as made, did in general terms express the facts which make the crime. The act to be a crime (so far at least as this case is concerned), must be done by force, and against the will and resistance of the woman *382 Coupled with the refusal to charge as requested, it failed, however, to express all that it was necessary for the jury to find. The resistance must be up to the point of being overpowered by actual force, or of inability from loss of strength longer to resist, or from the number of persons attacking resistance must be dangerous or absolutely useless, or there must be duress or fear of death. (Reg. v. Hallett, 9 C. P., 748; 1 Hawk. P.C., chap. 41, § 2.) In the case here, there is no evidence of inability from loss of strength longer to resist; there was but one for the prosecutrix to oppose, and he a man in years; there was no duress nor reason to fear death; there were no threats, instead thereof there were promises and words of palliation and persuasion; there was nothing to show that resistance was absolutely useless; she had possession of her faculties of mind and body, and retained her consciousness; she was then capable of resistance up to the point of being overpowered by actual force. In Reg. v. Hallett, the jury was instructed that if they thought from all the circumstances, that although when the prosecutrix was first laid hold of, it was against her will, yet she did not resist afterward, because she in some degree consented to what was afterward done to her, they ought to acquit of the charge of rape; and they were also told that they would have to consider whether the female made every resistance that she could. The text-books speak thus: "It must appear that the offence was committed without the consent of the woman, but it is no excuse that she yielded at last to the violence, if her consent was forced from her by fear of death, or by duress." (Roscoe's Cr. Ev. [6th Lond. and 6th Am. ed.], 806; 1 East P.C., 444, § 7, and citations.) It is an extreme which they put, that shall be no excuse. So in Viner it is laid down, that a woman cannot be ravished by one man without some extraordinary circumstances of force. (18 Viner Ab., 155, Rape, pl. 11.) InThe People v. Abbot (19 Wend., 192), COWEN, J., says: "Any fact tending to the inference that there was not the utmost reluctance and the utmost resistance, is always received." Why *383 if the jury are not to inquire whether there were the utmost reluctance and the utmost resistance? This saying has been cited with approval in more than one instance. (The People v.Morrison, 1 Park. Cr., 625; The People v. Quin, 50 Barb., 128; Reynolds v. The People, 41 How. Pr., 179.)
The request to charge is not beyond the limit of the rule. Certainly, if a female, apprehending the purpose of a man to be that of having carnal knowledge of her person, and remaining conscious, does not use all her own powers of resistance and defence, and all her powers of calling others to her aid, and does yield before being overcome by greater force, or by fear, or being surrounded by hostile numbers, a jury may infer that, at some time in the course of the act, it was not against her will. Of course, the phrase, "the utmost resistance," is a relative one; and the resistance may be more violent and prolonged by one woman than another, or in one set of attending physical circumstances than in another. In one case a woman may be surprised at the onset, and her mouth stopped so that she cannot cry out, or her arms pinioned so that she cannot use them, or her body so pressed about and upon that she cannot struggle. But whatever the circumstances may be, there must be the greatest effort of which she is capable therein, to foil the pursuer and preserve the sanctity of her person. This is the extent of her ability. (And see The People v. Bransby,
The request to charge in this case differs from that in ThePeople v. Monnais (17 Abb. Pr., 345), if that case be conceded to be correctly decided, as to which we need not now express an opinion. There the request was, "that the jury cannot convict, unless they are satisfied from the evidence that utmost reluctance was used." It is the abstract proposition which is presented there, and might be understood to be the utmost reluctance capable on the part of any *384
one in peril of violation. In this case, it is the extent of the ability of this prosecutrix at that time. To quote exactly the language of the request, that she "resisted the defendant to the extent of her ability, on the occasion it is alleged the defendant committed the offence charged against him." The words "her ability," and "on the occasion," make measurement of the ability to the extent of which she must be found to have gone. It was the extent of her ability, and not only that, but the extent of her ability on that occasion, that is, amid the circumstances in which she then was placed, to which the request to charge asked that the attention of the jury be directed. Is it not the law of this crime, in this State, that the woman must have resisted to the extent of her ability on the occasion on which she alleges that this grievous wrong was done her? Is not the law of her conduct in the transaction included in the form of words which the counsel for the prisoner offered to the court? Would it have been error to have so instructed the jury? To our thinking, these first two queries can have but one answer, in the affirmative; and that given, the last query must be replied to in the negative. Can the mind conceive of a woman, in the possession of her faculties and powers, revoltingly unwilling that this deed should be done upon her, who would not resist so hard and so long as she was able? And if a woman, aware that it will be done unless she does resist, does not resist to the extent of her ability on the occasion, must it not be that she is not entirely reluctant? If consent, though not express, enters into her conduct, there is no rape. The yielding to overpowering force is submission, but not consent; if the force be short of that, there may be consent, or the act may not be against her will. We are aware that the view which some other courts have taken of this question does not seem to agree herewith. We have already namedThe People v. Monnais (supra), which, however, is somewhat distinguishable from our case. The learned Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in The Commonwealth v. McDonald
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It is our judgment however, as by the law of this State, there can be the crime of rape of a female over ten years of age, only where the act is against her will, that if she is conscious of what is attempted, and has the possession of natural mental and physical powers in usual degree, is not overawed by the number of assailants, nor terrified by threats of death or the like; nor in such place and position as that resistance is less; she must resist until exhausted or overpowered, for a jury to find that it is against her will.
In this case the prosecutrix may or may not have done all that she could do. But it was for the jury, before they convicted, to be satisfied that she had.
For this reason the order of the General Term should be affirmed.
All concur.
Order affirmed. *387