80 S.E. 970 | N.C. | 1914
This is an indictment charging the defendant with the crime against nature, in that he had carnal knowledge of a male person.
The evidence tends to prove an attempt on the part of the defendant by inserting his private parts in the mouth of the male. There was a special verdict which consists in a recital of the evidence, which the jury finds to be true.
His Honor held that the defendant was not guilty, and the State appealed.
In the early English case of Rex v. Jacobs, Russell and Ryan's Crown Cases, 331, it was held that inserting the private parts in the mouth was not sodomy, and most of the text-writers, relying on that authority, so declare. The courts of California and Texas also follow this statement of the law. People v. Boyd,
The term sodomy is not used in our statute, but the crime denounced by section 3349 of the Revisal is the "crime against nature," which are words of broader import, and are sufficiently comprehensive to include the conduct of the defendant. *229
The question was considered by the Supreme Court of Georgia in Herringv. State,
Also in Hanselman v. The People,
We are therefore of opinion that under our statute having carnal knowledge of another by inserting the private parts in the mouth is indictable.
It appears, however, that there was no evidence of penetration, which is an essential and necessary element of the offense, and therefore the defendant could not be convicted of the principal crime charged; but it also appears that there is evidence of an attempt to commit the crime, and under section 3269 of the Revisal, "upon the trial of any indictment the prisoner may be convicted of the crime charged therein, or of a less degree of the same crime, or of an attempt to commit the crime so charged, or of an attempt to commit a less degree of the same crime." We are therefore of opinion that there is evidence of an attempt to commit the crime charged in the indictment, for which the defendant may be tried.
The special verdict is defective, and will not support a judgment, (250) as it contains merely a recital of the evidence, which is circumstantial in its nature. *230
It was said as early as S. v. Watts,
A new trial is ordered.
New trial.
Cited: S. v. Griffin,