200 Ky. 534 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
The appellant, Thomas Sebree, Jr., a young man about 24 years of age, was indicted, tried and convicted in the Kenton circuit -court of the felony charge denounced in section 1155 of the statutes, the female victim being Zelma Clemons, who was between 14 and 15 years of age. At the time of the alleged commission of the offense the prescribed punishment was confinement in the penitentiary for not less than ten nor more than twenty years, but by chapter 17, Acts 1922, page 65, the legislature amended the section so as to grade the punishment according to the age of the female. By subsection 2 of the amendment it was enacted that where -she was between •twelve and sixteen years of age the punishment should be -confinement in the penitentiary not less than five nor
In his motion for a new trial defendant relied on numerous grounds, but the court overruled it and he has appealed. His counsel urge five reasons why in his opinion the judgment should be reversed, which are: (1), that the indictment is duplicitous, and the court erred in overruling the demurrer filed to it; (2), that there was a failure of proof on the venue of the offense; (3), incompetent evidence introduced by the Commonwealth over defendant’s objection; (4), error of the court in failing to instruct the jury under the amendment to the section of the statute under which he was indicted, and (5), improper argument of the Commonwealth’s attorney, each of which we will discuss and dispose of as briefly as possible in the order named.
1. The accusatory part of the indictment properly names the offense in the language of the statute. Hi the descriptive part the averments are: “The said Thomas Sebree, Junior, in the county and state aforesaid, and before the finding of this indictment, he being a male person, did unlawfully and feloniously make an assault in and upon one Zelma Clemons, a female infant under the age of sixteen years, and did then and there unlawfully and feloniously carnally know and have sexual intercourse with the said Zelma Clemons.” It is insisted that the language charges the two offenses of unlawfully and feloniously assaulting the female victim, and the one denounced by the section of the statutes; but, we are unable to agree with this contention. At common law a necessary element of the crime of rape was and is that the forbidden act should be done forcibly and against the will or consent of the female, but if she was under ten years of age there was a conclusive presumption that the act was done with force and against her will or consent. In other words, she was considered incapable of giving consent when below that age and that the act was, therefore,' forcibly done. The statute only raises the common law
In the Frierson case, supra, the indictment was drawn under the same section of the statute under which defendant was indicted, except the female victim in that prosecution was an idiot, and the exact reverse objection was made there that is made here, i. e., it was complained by defendant’s counsel that the indictment failed to contain the language which is objected to in this case, and in disposing of it the opinion said: “The indictment, in the instant case, charges that character of rape which at the common law was accomplished by the nominal consent of the female and without violence or actual force by the perpetrator, and which, from the facts, the law conclusively presumes force on the part of the ravisher an absence of consent of the victim. Hence, it would be idle in such an indictment to charge that the offense was committed.forcibly and without the consent of the infant, as both averments would be only surplusage.” That opinion disposes of objection (1), but, if not so, we are confident that defendant was not misled by the averment complained of and that from its language he was enabled to know what was intended by the pleader, which was sufficient to conform the indictment to the requirements of subsection 2 of section 122 of the Criminal -Code.
2. For a proper understanding and disposition of this ground it becomes necessary to make a brief -statement of the facts. Defendant was the teacher of the public school at Braeht schoolhouse near Braeht station in Kenton county, Ky., in the latter of which Zelma Clemons lived with her parents and her brothers and sisters, some younger and some older than -she. During the school year of 1920-192-1 and up to April 8, 1922, and during the school year of 1921-1922, she attended the public school taught by defendant. Some time about the latter end of 1921 defendant began to associate with her
While it is necessary to prove the venue of the offense as laid in the indictment, yet, since it does not affect the issue of guilt or innocence; this court and others have said that ‘ ‘ slight evidence will be sufficient to sustain the venue, and slight circumstances from which the jury might infer the place where the crime was committed, are held to be sufficient.” Stubblefield v. Comth., 197 Ky. Ky. 218, and other Kentucky.cases cited therein. See also 16 Corpus Juris, 767-70; 24 Cyc. 494; Sandefur v. Comth., 143 Ky. 655; Newton v. Comth., 158 Ky. 4, and the Frierson case, supra. The latter case and the Sandefur case involved the exact question now under consideration in a trial of an indictment found under the same section of the statute. In each of them there was a proven confession of the sexual act, but it did not include the necessary venue, and we held that, under the proven facts (such as opportunities for the commission of the offense within the county with but little, if any, opportunities for its commission elsewhere), the jury had the right to infer that the act for which the conviction was had occurred within the county. In this case, as we have seen, by far the greater number of oeoassions furnishing opportunities for the violation of the statute were at places within Kenton county with but few, if any, opportunities for its commission (within four months prior to the abortion) at a place without the boundaries of that county, and they, as we have seen, were mostly when some other person or persons were present. Under the instructions of the court the jury had to believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense was committed in Kenton county. They found that it was, and we are convinced that the evidence and the inferences to be drawn therefrom were sufficient to authorize that finding-, it not being necessary that all doubts upon the question should be removed.
Moreover, section 1146 of the statutes says: ‘ ‘ When it is a matter of doubt, in the opinion of the court, in which of two or more counties the offense was committed, the court of either in which the indictment is found shall have jurisdiction of the offense.” The legislature in enacting that section intended to accomplish some purpose, and, unless it was intended to apply to a case like
3. In support of this ground it is earnestly insisted that proof of the confessions mad© by defendant to the sheriff of the county and to his deputy were incompetent because in violation of our statute known as the “Anti-sweating Act.” (Section 1649b-1 of Ky. Statutes). We have held, however, in construing that act that unless the confession was obtained in the manner forbidden therein, it will be competent evidence against the defendant. Comth. v. Harris, 177 Ky. 607; Coats v. Comth., 191 Ky. 521; Dials v. Comth., 192 Ky. 444, and numerous other cases referred to therein. We will not attempt to interpret the meaning and application of the statute in this opinion, but will refer only to the cited cases wherein it *is done. It is sufficient to say that in this case the proven confessions were not obtained in any of the interdicted manners and were, therefore, competent, which renders this objection without merit.
4. Under this ground counsel for both sides engage in lengthy discussions' concerning the meaning and applicability of section 465 of our statutes relating to amendments of the criminal laws after offenses committed under them, and to the applicable punishment when it is mitigated by the amendment. Howsoever interesting and instructive the discussion might be, we are convinced it has no application to the faetsi of this case. The 1922 amendment to section 1155, as we have seen, reduced the minimum punishment for the offense denounced, but the one returned by the jury in this case was between the minimum and maximum punishments of both the statute and the amendment and above the minimum of either, and that being true the error of the court, if one, in failing to instruct the jury according to the modifications contained in the amendment did not prejudice the substantial rights of the defendant, in which case, under the provisions of section 340, Criminal Code, we are not au
5. Finally it is urged under this ground that the Commonwealth’s attorney committed reversible error in his closing argument to the jury by commenting on the failure of the defendant to testify, which is prohibited by the provisions of section 1645 of the present statutes, saying: “But his (defendant) failure to do so (testify) shall not be commented upon.” As appears from the bill of exceptions, the attorney, after rehearsing and discussing the proof introduced by the Commonwealth, then said to the jury: “You have the evidence of the Commonwealth, and no evidence has been introduced by the defense at all,” to which statement the defendant objected, •and the court thereupon said to the jury: “The jury will not consider the statement by the Commonwealth, that * There is no evidence introduced by the defense in this case at all.’ ” The defendant then moved to discharge the jury and continue the case, which the court overruled.
The effect of remarks of the Commonwealth’s attorney, which were claimed to violate the inhibiting language of the statute by indirectly commenting on the failure of the defendant to testify, has frequently been before this court, and, so far as our investigation shows, the determinative facts in each case were (a), whether they could be construed as a comment >on the failure of the defendant to testify, and (b), if so, whether under all the facts and circumstances of the case they were so prejudicial as to authorize a reversal of the judgment, since under the section of the Criminal Code, swpm, no error
Perhaps in none of the cases referred to did this court expressly hold that the error would not authorize a reversal, if not prejudicial, if the comments were clearly and indisputably within the inhibitions of the statute, but all the cited opinions inferentially and necessarily so held, and in the absence of imperative provisions in the statute to the contrary, we see no reason why this error should not be given the same effect in practice, and be governed by the same Code provision, supra, as any ether one. Were the rule otherwise there would be many cases where the guilt of the defendant was admitted or overwhelmingly proven, of which this one is an illustration, and yet we would be compelled to reverse the judgment when the error complained of did not prejudice the defendant in the least for the reason that the comment of counsel contained no statement which the jury, as sensible men, did not already know. In the case of Sutton v. Comth., 23 Ky. L. R. 307, the attorney in his opening statement to the jury said: “That the defendant had a right to testify in his own behalf; that if he did so, it was then the priviledge of the Commonwealth to impeach and contradict him by showing that he was unworthy of credit.” This court, in denying reversible effect to the statement, said: “We cannot believe, however, that every digression of a Commonwealth attorney from the strict line of professional and official requirement, though occurring in the presence of the jury, can be treated as necessarily prejudicial to the rights of the accused. We must assume that a jury is composed of that class of men described in the statute as being Citizens of fair char
In this case the defendant’s guilt was* proven -by his uncontradicted confessions, supplemented by more or less-convincing circumstances. The jury just a short While* prior to the complained of remarks had seen him decline to testify, and it seems to us that it would be but trifling with justice and making a mockery of criminal trials to hold, without the invasion of some constitutional right, that the particular remarks complained of, under all the circumstances of the case, were -sufficient after the admonishment by the court to the jury to authorize a new trial, and entertaining that view, supported as we are by the cases, supra, we decline to do so.
We are aware that this court has rendered opinions reversing judgments of conviction for improper remarks ¡by the Commonwealth’s attorney with reference to the -same -subject matter under consideration, but the cases in which it was- done presented an entirely different state of facts from those appearing in this record, and under them the court held that the reference made by the attorney was prejudicial to the substantial rights of the -defendant, but this case, because of its essentially different facts, is not to be governed by those opinions. Nor would we be understood, by what we have said, as approving such references by the attorney as were made in this case, since it is always the better practice to abstraía from encroachments upon the prescribed course for the conduct of trials. To do so not only assures fairness but eliminates possible errors that might necessitate -a reversal of whatever judgment was obtained, and attorneys should studiously guard their conduct and remain within the limits of their license and privileges.
Finding no error authorizing a reversal of the judgment, it is accordingly affirmed. Whole court sitting. -