190 Wis. 363 | Wis. | 1926
The following opinion was filed April 6, 1926:
The defendant was twenty-five years of age, weighed 170 pounds, married, and lived with his father in Milwaukee. The prosecuting witness was twenty-four years of age, weighed 125 pounds, and was lame from birth. The act as alleged took place in an automobile. The principal error alleged goes to the claim that the evidence did not show that the prosecuting witness resisted ravishment to the utmost, within the rules laid down by this court. As said in Brown v. State, 127 Wis. 193, 199, 106 N. W. 536:
“Not only must there be entire absence of mental consent or assent, but there must be the most vehement exercise of every physical means or faculty within the woman’s power to resist the penetration of her person, and this must be shown to persist until the offense is consummated. We*365 need not mention the exception where the power of resistance is overcome by unconsciousness, threats, or exhaustion, for, in this case, there is no proof of any of those things. Further, it is settled in this state that no mere general statements of the prosecutrix, involving her conclusions, that she did her utmost and the like, will suffice to establish this essential fact, but she must relate the very acts done, in order that the jury and the court may judge whether any were omitted.”
The court here uses strong language to indicate that consent must be negatived on the part of the female by the utmost resistance of which she is capable. Courts are moved to express the rule in such vigorous terms by reason of the fact that the crime is usually committed where there are no witnesses save the parties to the offense, and conviction may often rest upon the testimony of the female alone. The exception to the rule indicated in the above quotation is well stated in Bohlmann v. State, 98 Wis. 617, 74 N. W. 343, where it is said:
“The power of resistance need not necessarily be overcome b.y superior physical force; if overcome by fraud or fear of serious personal injury, or if physical resistance becomes so useless as to warrant it ceasing upon that ground, there being no consent or submission in the sense of mental operation, the essential of the accomplishment of the act by force and against the will of the outraged party is fully satisfied. The law as thus laid down is too well understood and has been too frequently applied in this court to require discussion or call for any citation of authority.”
The circumstance of the offense in this case is strange and unusual. Dorothy Bohl was a stenographer, living with her father and sister in the city of Milwaukee. On the 2d of January, 1925, Helen Cickanowski, a friend of Dorothy, asked Dorothy to go out and meet a party of her male friends for an evening’s entertainment. Dorothy consented if her niece, Pearl Barlow, sixteen years of age, should be invited to go along. Helen arranged the party
The struggle in the back seat went on for quite a period of time, some of the witnesses putting it as long as three quarters of an hour. When the struggle was over, Gennero started to drive toward home. He let the defendant out of the car, and defendant, instead of going to his home where his wife and father lived, went to the home of an aunt, a short distance away, and remained there over night and the next night. Gennero drove to a filling station, where there was a policeman. Dorothy in the meantime had moved
The police tried to find the defendant that night and the next day, but he was not at home nor at his usual haunts. However, he gave himself up the following day, and he was informed against and his trial followed.
The foregoing is a very brief summary of the principal facts. Much of the details is purposely omitted for obvious reasons. The defendant was a strong, powerful man. Pie was brutal in his language and in his attitude towards Dorothy when he became aroused. He threatened to assault her if she made outcry. Evidently he had Gennero in his employ, and Gennero refused to interfere. Pearl had been threatened with assault if she did not remain quiet. Helen had arranged the date, and was absolutely passive with reference to the assault. She may have been an accomplice. They were in a lonely part- of the city, with apparently no help in sight. The testimony of the prosecutrix and of Pearl was to the effect that she struggled to her very utmost until she was physically overcome, and that she never did consent to intercourse.
But defendant, on the trial, denied the intercourse entirely. He said that he solicited intercourse but that Dorothy told him that she was a decent girl and refused, and he believed her. He admits that Dorothy screamed and that he threatened her in order to keep her quiet; also that he held her down in the back seat, but he denies absolutely the intercourse or attempt at intercourse.
In the argument of this case counsel, advisedly we think, did not deny the fact of intercourse, but relied upon the rule of utmost resistance on the part of the female, and
Defendant had been convicted of the offense of lewd and lascivious behavior and had served a sentence in the house of correction therefor; also, he had been convicted of the offense of pointing and aiming a revolver, and the records of these convictions were admitted in evidence as bearing on defendant’s credibility.
Defendant claims error for the reason that the court did not instruct the jury that such evidence was admitted solely as bearing on the credibility of the defendant. No request for such instruction was made, and it has been held that, in the absence of such request, error cannot be assigned for failure to so instruct. Cupps v. State, 120 Wis. 504, 97 N. W. 210, 98 N. W. 546.
And it is not apparent from an examination of the whole record that any substantial right of the defendant has been adversely affected. Sec. 3072» (now sec. 274.37), Stats.
There is some criticism made of the charge of the court to the jury. We have given the matter careful attention, and are satisfied that the charge on the whole was fair and comprehensive and contained no prejudicial error.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, without costs, on June 21, 1926.