Defendant was convicted of an assault with intent to rape, and was sentenced to a term of years in the state prison. He appeals from the judgment.
1. The evidence disclosed that the object of the alleged assault was a girl of the age of seven years; that she went voluntarily to the room of defendant, and submitted, without resistance, to his advances. Upon this evidence defendant requested the court to charge the jury that: “ In an assault with intent to commit rape there must not only be an intent to commit a rape, but that intent must be manifested by an assault upon the person intended to be ravished. The law requires both ingredients, and neither can be dispensed with. An assault implies force upon one side, and repulsion
The instruction was refused, and its refusal is assigned as error.
The contention of appellant, in line with the principles announced in his requested instruction, is that there can be no such thing as an assault upon a consenting female, regardless of the fact that she may be under the age when she can legally consent to an act of sexual intercourse; that while one may be convicted of rape, or of an attempt to commit it, upon a female under the statutory age, notwithstanding her actual consent, that he cannot, under like circumstances, be guilty of an assault to commit rape, because the latter offense implies resistance on the part of the one assaulted.
In this view of the law appellant is unquestionably sustained by very excellent authority. It is so held in State v. Pickett,
In the case of People v. Gordon,
It is true that in that case the cases above relied on by appellant do not seem to have been called to the attention of the court, since they are neither cited by counsel nor referred to in the opinion; but we think the doctrine there announced more in accord with the evident purpose and intent of our statute, and that it should be adhered to.
It is the declared policy of our law, as expressed in the statute, that any female under the age there fixed shall be incapable of consenting to the act of sexual intercourse; and that one committing the act with a girl within that age shall be guilty of rape, notwithstanding he obtain her actual consent. The obvious purpose of this is the protection of society by protecting from violation the virtue of young and unsophisticated girls. To hold that one of this class, although incapable of consenting to sexual commerce, could nevertheless give her assent to an assault upon her person, made for the
It is true that an assault implies force by the assailant and resistance by the one assaulted; and that one is not, in legal contemplation, injured by a consensual act. But these principles have no application to a case where under the law there can be no consent. Here the law implies incapacity to give consent, and this implication is conclusive. In such case the female is to be regarded as resisting, no matter what the actual state of her mind may be at the time. The law resists for her.
These principles are in keeping with the construction given to similar statutes in other states. In Hays v. People,
We think the offered instruction was properly refused.
The judgment is affirmed.
Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
