150 Ark. 265 | Ark. | 1921
The appellant was convicted under an indictment, which is as follows:
“The grand jury of Sebastian County, Greenwood District thereof, in the name and by the authority of the State of Arkansas, accuse the defendant, C. Y. Smith, of the crime of sodomy, committed as follows, to-wit: The said defendant, in the county, district and State aforesaid, on the 13th day of March, 1921, unlawfully, feloniously and diabolically and by force, disregarding the laws of nature, in and upon one Dixie Smith, a female person, did make an assault upon and did then and there unlawfully, feloniously and diabolically carnally know and abuse her, the said Dixie Smith, against the peace and dignity of the State of Arkansas.” Was the indictment sufficient?
Section 2746 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest provides : “Every person convicted of sodomy, or buggery, shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a period' not less than five nor more than twenty-one years.”
In the absence of a more specific statutory definition as to the ingredients of the offense, we must look to the common law for such particulars.
Mr. Bishop says: “Not alone to protect the public morals, but for other reasons also, sodomy — called sometimes buggery, sometimes the offense against nature, and sometimes the horrible crime not fit to be named among Christians, being a carnal copulation by human beings with each other against nature, or with.a beast — is, though committed in secret, highly criminal.” 1 Bishop’s Criminal Law, page 308, § 503; also 2 Bishop’s Criminal Law, § 1191.
And in 8 R. C. L., § 364, page 333, it is said: “The crime of sodomy, broadly and comprehensively speaking, consists of unnaiural sexual relations between persons of the same sex, or with beasts, or between persons of different sex, bui in an unnatural manner.” (Citing cases.)
The Supreme Court of New York, in Lamberts on v. People, 5 Parker’s Criminal Reports^ page 200, held valid an indictment precisely similar, in essential averments, to the one now under review. The court said: “The words usual in indictments for the offense of which the defendant was. convicted and.. which , were omitted in this case are not words of this character. The indictment contains all the words -of art required. * * * jiQr ap ^haf; the pleader should have stated in charging the offense is-expressly alleged, Or, by necessary implication, included in what is alleged, in the indictment in question.” . ' ' ' •
“An indictment or information charging sodomy, or the infamous crime against nature, naming it, with a designated person or animal, is sufficient without setting forth in detail the manner in which it was committed. It is unnecessary to lay the carnaliter cognovit in the indictment, in order to specify whether defendant was agent or pathic. A charge substantially in the language of the statute is, as a rule, sufficient, even though the offense is not specifically defined by the statute. An indictment charging an attempt to commit the infamous crime against nature is sufficient without an averment of a particular act constituting the attempt.” 23 Standard Encyclopedia of Procedure, page 962. Oases are cited in a note in support of the text.
We conclude therefore that the indictment is valid.
The only other question presented is whether or not the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict. The evidence is revolting in detail, and it could therefore serve no good purpose to set it forth. The prosecutrix was the wife of the appellant, and, while he stoutly denies the charge and vigorously contradicts her testimony, we nevertheless find that her testimony tends to support the verdict.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.