9 S.E. 552 | N.C. | 1889
The facts appear in the opinion. The defendant is charged in the indictment with the false, wanton and malicious utterance of slanderous words, as therein set out, of and concerning one Emma Harrison, an innocent woman, imputing incontinency and a want of chastity, in violation of the statute (The Code, sec. 1113). *291
The statute declares that if any person shall attempt, in a wanton and malicious manner, to destroy the reputation of an innocent woman, by words, written or spoken, which amount to a charge of incontinency, every person so offending shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and fined or imprisoned at the discretion of the court. Upon his arraignment the defendant entered the plea of not guilty, on the trial of which, before the jury, he was convicted.
There were two exceptions taken during the examination of witnesses to the ruling out of evidence offered, and one to evidence admitted for the State, and errors are assigned in the refusal of the court to give to the jury certain instructions asked, and to the giving of others in their places. These will be considered in their proper order on the record.
1. The defendant proposed, and was not allowed, to show a prevalent report of sexual intimacy between one Christenberry and the feme prosecutrix, the making of which charge is the defamatory matter specified in the indictment, in disproof of their wanton and malicious utterance.
The cases cited in the brief of defendant's counsel and found in our own reports, to wit, Nelson v. Evans, 1 Dev., 9, decided in 1826;McCurry v. McCurry,
When a slanderous charge is made, the law, prima facie, implies malice from the publication, unless in the case of a privileged communication, which appears when the party is acting under a legal or moral duty towards the person to whom it is made, and in such cases malice must be proved.Adcock v. Marsh, 8 Ired., 360. No such duty existed here, for, as the testimony shows, the defendant said, at a public place, in the hearing of eight or ten persons, just after the said Emma left, that "his (the defendant's) daughter had caught Andrew Christenberry and Emma Harrison in the act of adultery, and that the strumpet ought *292 to be drummed out of the county." There is, consequently, no excusable element in the occasion on which the words were spoken, imparting a privileged character to their utterance, and current rumor could have no effect in rebutting the implied malice; and its existence, not its degree, was only an inquiry before the jury, in passing upon the issue of guilt.
2. In the course of the cross-examination of the prosecutrix, (377) she stated that the next morning after the alleged criminal intercourse with Christenberry, and before hearing the report, she wrote a letter to Christenberry, and sent it to him ten miles distant by a messenger; that she heard of the report from her aunt. Whereupon, defendant's counsel asked if her aunt told her from whom she got the report. The question, on objection, was disallowed.
We are unable to see the pertinency of the inquiry, or any proper use that could be made of the answer. It was wholly immaterial how or from whom the information came. There is no suggestion of any way in which it could have been made available to the defense, nor of the purpose for which it was sought. This was at least due to the court, if any complaint is to be made of the refusal to permit the question to be answered.
3. The appellant assigns error in receiving the testimony of a physician who examined the private parts of the prosecutrix, and was allowed to give the results, with the opinion, formed upon the results, that she had never had sexual intercourse with a man. The objection is based upon the witness' previous inexperience as to the effects of such communication upon the sexual organs of the female. The answer to this exception is, that there was evidence from study and practice of his professional knowledge upon the subject of his testimony, and its value is dependent upon the extent of that experience, to be judged by the jury.
In Flynt v. Bodenhamer,
(378) The court determines the preliminary fact that the witness is or is not an expert, and when there is any evidence of it, the finding, like that of the jury, is not reviewable in this Court. S. v.Davis,
4. The remaining assignment of error is in the refusal to give this asked instruction to the jury: "If the prosecutrix had surrendered her *293 person to Christenberry for the purpose of committing fornication with him, she would not be an innocent woman, though the act was not completed, in consequence of the coming upon them of the parties." Instead of so charging, the court told the jury "that the woman was innocent unless she had had sexual intercourse with a man."
There was testimony tending to show that the parties were surprised, while in the very act of copulation, and prevented from consummating it. As we understand, the parties were in each other's embrace, about to commit the act, and were interrupted, so that it did not take place. It is true, the moral degradation from such a surrender of the person is little, if any, less than would have resulted from actual coition; but it is necessary to draw the line somewhere, the overstepping of which destroys the status of innocency, in the sense of the statute, and short of which it is not lost, and the past adjudication in the construction of the statute drew the line between actual sexual intercourse and any approximation, however near to it. It is difficult to define any other. The subject has been recently considered in S. v. Brown,
There is no error, and the judgment is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Grigg,
(379)