81 Neb. 426 | Neb. | 1908
Melvin P. Smothers was convicted of the crime of incest in the district court for Boyd county, and prosecuted error to this court. A number of errors are assigned in the admission of evidence, and in the giving and refusing of instructions, but the assignment upon which most stress is laid is that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the conviction. It was charged in the information that the criminal act was committed upon the 18th day of March, 1906, and at divers times between that date and September 24, 1906. Evidence was admitted by the court tending to prove that certain acts of intercourse had occurred at an earlier period than the first mentioned date, and in the county of Keya Paha, and it is asserted that such evidence is inadmissible. It is uniformly held that upon a charge of adultery evidence of like acts occurring both anterior and subsequent to the time the crime is charged to have been committed- may be received as corroborating, proof. It was so held in an early case in this court (State v. Way, 5 Neb. 283) in a case of adultery; and in the case of Woodruf v. State, 72 Neb. 815, the doctrine of iheWay case in this regard is extended to a case of carnal knowledge of a female child under the age of consent. In State v. Markins, 95 Ind. 464, 44 Am. Rep. 733, it is pointed out that such evidence is admissible in prosecutions for adultery, fornication, rape under the age of consent, and incest, and the reasons for the rule are clearly stated. See, also, State v. Wood, 33 Wash.
It is further argued that there was gross error on the part of the trial court in permitting the prosecutrix to testify that the defendant was the father of her child; she being now a married woman, and the child being born after marriage. It appears from the evidence that after the witness had been pregnant about four months her hand was sought in marriage by a young man named Lynn, and that he requested her father’s consent to the marriage, and that at that time the defendant told him that she was in a family way and that one Kline was the cause of her pregnancy. The evidence shows that Lynn married the prosecutrix immediately thereafter, and that the age of the child corroborated the statement of the girl that she had been pregnant about four months at the time of this interview. A like objection was made in Woodruff v. State, supra, to evidence of this kind, but in this connection it was said: “Evidence of this character is proper and admissible. It indisputably established one element necessary to be proved by the state; that is, that sexual intercourse had taken place. It was proof of the corpus of the crime, as it were; that is, that the prosecutrix had sustained unlawful relations with some one was by this evidence placed beyond the pale of doubt.”
It is also objected that, since the child was born in wedlock, the law conclusively presumes that Lynn is the father of the child, and, hence, the evidence was incompetent and inadmissible. While it is true that, although the birth of a child during wedlock raises a presumption that such child is legitimate, yet it was well settled at common law that the issue may be proved illegitimate, although born during wedlock, by showing want of access, immaturity or imbecility of the husband, or any other cause which renders it impossible he should have been the father of the child; but want of access cannot be proved by the wife. Gaffer v. Austin, 8 Vt. 70; Parker v.
It is further earnestly insisted that there was no corroborative evidence, and that the defendant should not have been convicted upon the testimony of the complaining witness alone. It may be said, however, that as to a number of circumstances occurring about the several times at which the witness testified the criminal act took place she has been corroborated, though not as to the particular criminal act, and further evidence corroborative in its nature was introduced showing actions of the defendant about the time that public rumor was connecting him with the offense, and at other times, tending in some degree to indicate a guilty knowledge on his part. His statements as to Kline being the father of the child his daughter was pregnant with, taken with her testimony that he said they would charge Kline with the act, and the fact that Kline was apparently almost a stranger are also corroborative to some extent. It may be said that while there is no direct evidence except that of the prosecutrix, and while this testimony is positively denied by the defendant, there was sufficient testimony to warrant the jury, if they believed her story and disbelieved his, in finding the defendant guilty. There was no corroborative evidence as to the criminal act itself, but this was not necessary to a conviction. Schwartz v. State, 65 Neb. 197; Bridges v. State, 80 Neb. 91, 22 Cyc. 57.
Complaint is also made of the giving and refusing to give certain instructions. We have examined the instructions given and refused. What has been said as to the admissibility of the evidence covers in the main the points raised as to the instructions, and we see no reason for the criticisms made. Upon the whole, the case seems to have been fairly tried and the conviction to be warranted, if the jury believed the prosecutrix and. disbelieved the defendant.
Lastly, it is said that the punishment imposed is excessive, and we are requested to reduce the sentence if
Tbe judgment of tbe district court is
Affirmed.