50 S.E.2d 309 | N.C. | 1948
Criminal prosecution tried upon indictment charging the defendant with assault on a female with intent to commit rape.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and from the judgment entered thereon, the defendant appeals, assigning error. The evidence offered in the trial below is sufficient to withstand the motion for judgment as of nonsuit, and the exception to the ruling of the court below, denying such motion, will not be sustained.
The defendant testified that he had been in the home of the prosecuting witness several times during the week in which he is charged with assaulting her with intent to commit rape; that she had encouraged his attentions; that he had kissed her and embraced her on several previous occasions; that while he intended to have sexual intercourse with her on the day in question, when she resisted his advances he quit the minute he found out she did not want any more of his attentions and did not want to go that far; that he apologized and told her he had misunderstood her intentions.
In the light of the above evidence, the defendant excepts and assigns as error the failure of the trial judge to give his prayer for special instructions, tendered in apt time, as follows: "I further charge you *541 that if you find from the evidence in this case, not beyond a reasonable doubt but . . . to your satisfaction that when the defendant discovered that the prosecuting witness did not want to receive any attention from him and resisted him that he desisted and quit his advances toward her, then I charge you that it would be your duty to return a verdict of `not guilty' because the law is that the defendant must have had an intent to gratify his passion on the person of the woman notwithstanding any resistance she might make and if he quit and desisted in his attentions when she resisted, then he would not be guilty."
This Court said in S. v. Massey,
A careful review of the evidence leads us to the conclusion that the defendant's prayer, or the substance thereof, should have been given; therefore the exception upon which this assignment of error is based, will be upheld.
The defendant is entitled to a new trial, and it is so ordered.
New trial.