delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff in error was indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for the crime of rape. He was found guilty and the punishment fixed at thirty years in the penitentiary. Motion for new trial was overruled and he was sentenced accordingly. This writ of error was then sued out.
The prosecuting witness was a young girl who at the time of the alleged assault was eleven years of age. She then resided with her step-father and her mother on West Ohio street, in Chicago. She testified that on the evening of February n, 1911, she left her home about six o’clock and purchased a. newspaper at a near-by news stand, and when returning along Osborne street she was. caught by the plaintiff in error and dragged by him through a passageway to a small house standing upon the rear of a lot and up some steps to a room, in which there was a bed; that despite her screams and struggling he- threw her on the bed, put his hand over her mouth, and then took a big knife from a table and told her if she did not keep still he would kill her; that he then committed an act of .assault; that when he let her go he told her he would kill her if she told anyone; that she then went home and told her mother. Her step-father was working a short distance away as a night watchman. The testimony shows that the mother called a young man who worked at the same factory with the step-father, who went with the little girl to- get him; that the step-father started with her on the street car for the police station, but seeing a policeman they got off the car and told him, and the three went together to the house where plaintiff in error lived and found him there. Plaintiff in error’s brother was also at the house at that time. The little girl pointed'out the plaintiff in error as the man who had assaulted her. He was then arrested by the policeman and taken to the station. At the time of his arrest, 'shortly after seven o’clock,-the policeman asked him where he was at six o’clock, and he first, according to the officer’s testimony, said he was home about that time, but afterward changed this and said he was not there at the time.
The property where plaintiff in error was stopping belonged to his father. Plaintiff in error and his brother were robming in a little cottage on the rear of the lot, which had a high basement, in which was stored junk of some sort. On the front of the lot was another cottage, in which a Mrs. Anderson was living at the time. Plaintiff in error testified that on the evening' of the supposed attack he got home about 7135; that he heard some noise in the yard and went to see what it was, and he heard the girl’s father say, “Is that the man?” and the girl answered “Yes,” whereupon someone struck him; that that was the first time he had ever seen the girl; that earlier he had taken some zinc to a junk dealer on the north side and was not at home at the time the alleged assault took place. Plaintiff in error’s father testified he saw his son at the corner of Michigan and Wells streets, about two and a half miles from Osborne street, about a quarter past six or a quarter to seven on the evening in question. Mrs. Anderson testified that plaintiff in error' was there during the day, carrying snow from the lot, and that about a quarter to five she went down to get some coal and wood and saw him going away; that she spoke to him and that she did not see him come back.
Dr. L. F. Sutton, ambulance physician for the city, examined the prosecuting witness at the police station shortly after plaintiff in error was arrested and found no Mood 01-stains on her clothing or tearing of her private parts. He testified that she had never had a hymen; that there was a slight redness or irritation around her private organs; that this redness was probably due to some external manipulation but was not severe enough to cause a hemorrhage or bleeding; that he at that time found no swollen parts; that the redness around the private organs could have been caused by coming in. contact with the penis of a man. Dr. Earnest A. Eoewinger testified that he examined the complaining witness three days after the alleged assault and found her genital organs inflamed and h discharge; that her hymen was ruptured or absent and all of the genital organs tender.
This is substantially all the proper material evidence in the case. There was some other evidence improperly admitted, which we shall refer to later. The evidence as to the guilt of plaintiff in error was sharply conflicting on the vital points of the case. It was therefore important that the rulings of the court as to the law should be correct.
The indictment originally consisted of five counts. The second, fourth and fifth counts were dismissed. The first count charged rape, with force, by the plaintiff in error, of the age of seventeen years and upwards, upon the com-' plaining witness, under the age of sixteen years.- The third count charged that he was a male person of the age of sixteen years and upwards, and that he made an unlawful assault upon the prosecuting witness against her will, but without alleging her age. Counsel for plaintiff in error contends that the'age of the male in a charge of this kind is necessary to be proved under the statute, and that there was no proof in the record as to the age of plaintiff in error. Counsel for the State argue that on this record, under this indictment, the age of the defendant was a matter of defense.
Paragraph 237, division 1, of the Criminal Code reads: “Rape is the carnal knowledge of a female, forcibly and against- her will. Every male person of the age of seventeen j^ears and upwards, who shall have carnal knowledge of any female person under the age of sixteen years and not his wife, either with or without her consent shall be adjudged to be guilty of the crime of rape; provided, that in case the said parties shall be legally married to each other before conviction, any legal proceedings shall abate, and provided, that every male person of the age of sixteen years and upwards who shall have camal knowledge of a female forcibly and against her will shall be guilty of the crime of rape,” etc.
All the evidence for the prosecution shows that if plaintiff in error was guilty of the alleged assault he committed the crime with force, and therefore could properly be convicted under the third count. The question here raised was first considered by this court in Sutton v. People,
It is further contended by counsel that there was no proof of penetration. While “there must be penetratio or res in re in order to constitute carnal knowledge, * * * a very slight penetration is sufficient.” (See 3 Russell on Crimes,—6th ed.—229; 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,— 2d ed.—831; 33 Cyc. 1422.) Penetration may be shown by circumstantial evidence. (1 Wharton on Crim. Law,— 10th ed.—sec. 555.) The evidence on this question justified the submission of the case to the jury.
D:r. Loewinger was permitted to testify, over the objection of plaintiff in error, based largely on his examination of the genital organs of the complaining witness, that “according to the history of the case and according to my findings I think it was a case of rape.” Motion was made to strike this out, and denied on the ground that there was no objection made before the answer was given. On cross-examination he stated that from his examination of her genital organs he thought the inflammation found was due to external violence; that if he had not been told that she had been raped he could not have told what the external violence was. The general rule is that witnesses should testify to facts and not to opinions. To this rule, however, there are exceptions. Opinion evidence is usually held admissible upon subjects that are not within the knowledge of all men of common education and experience, as the best evidence from the necessity of the case. (1 Elliott on Evidence, sec. 675; Lyons v. Chicago City Railway Co.
The further contention is made that the court committed error in permitting plaintiff in error to be examined by counsel as to what work he had been engaged in during the last two years, and in refusing to strike from the record the testimony of the step-father to the effect that when the police were examining plaintiff in error “they asked every question at the police station and then they asked Schultz about his record, and then they would bring up, of course, that he had had his picture taken twice; that is the law, you know.” It is proper to examine a witness as to his occupation, and other matters which will enable the jury to determine what weight ought to be given to his testimony, (People v. White,
It is further insisted that the court erred in the giving and refusing of instructions. The objection most strongly urged is to the refusal of instruction No. 1 offered by the plaintiff in error. It called the jury’s attention to the testimony of the prosecutrix, .enumerating the various things that “should” be taken into consideration in weighing her testimony. While it may be proper to enumerate such elements, an instruction should not tell the jury, as did this one, they “should” consider certain things. The jury must be left free to pass upon the credibility, of witnesses and determine for themselves the weight to be given to the testimony. (Lyons v. Chicago-City Railway Co. supra.) This instruction was rightly refused. The objections raised to other instructions we do not deem it necessary to pass upon in detail. It is sufficient to say that the objections as to some of those given for the State are fully answered by the decisions of this court cited in the brief for the State, and certain refused instructions of plaintiff in error were fully covered by other instructions given. Taking the instructions as a series, we think they fairly covered the law as applied to the facts in the case.
Other questions have been argued in .the briefs, (including the very serious one that the names of some of the jurors signing the verdict were not the same as those who were empaneled and sworn to try the case,) but as they are not likely to be raised again on the next trial we-shall not extend this opinion by discussing them.
For the errors indicated, the judgment of the criminal court of Cook county will be reversed and the cause remanded to that court.
D , , , , Reversed and remanded.
