59 S.E. 344 | N.C. | 1907
From judgment of conviction defendant appealed. The defendant was indicted and convicted of seduction under promise of marriage (Revisal, sec. 3354), and appealed. *343
He assigns four errors, as follows:
1. The court erred in permitting the prosecutrix to answer the question asked by the solicitor, towit: "Why did you yield to the defendant and have intercourse with him that night?" The witness had previously stated that they had sexual intercourse at the time mentioned. She answered: "I could not help it; he kept right on at me; I told him he was trying to fool me into it; he said he was not; that he was going to marry me." The answer was also objected to. The court overruled the objections and admitted the evidence. We do not see why it was not competent and relevant. It tended to prove directly the very fact in issue. As an admission, it was clearly competent. S. v. Lawhorn,
2. That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, as (474) requested by the defendant, that there is no evidence in the case supporting the testimony of Eddie Jones, the prosecutrix, as to the promise of marriage, and the jury should acquit. There was evidence, we think, sufficient to support the witness in her statement that the defendant had seduced her under a promise of marriage. Her mother, Catherine Jones, testified that the defendant had admitted, in her presence and hearing, that he had made the promise, and thereby accomplished the ruin of her daughter. This admission was made to the prosecutrix in the hearing of her mother, when she was reproving him for his vile conduct and his faithlessness. She was then pleading with him to save her from the consequent disgrace. There was other testimony which was competent to be considered by the jury in this connection. The defendant admitted the seduction.
3. The court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, as requested by the defendant, that the supporting testimony required by the statute is something more than corroborative evidence; it must be such independent facts and circumstances as tend to establish the credibility of the prosecutrix [and the statements of the latter to her mother after the alleged seduction, that the defendant had promised to marry her, are competent only to corroborate her as a witness, and are not such supporting testimony as is required by the statute]. The instruction was given, except the part inclosed in brackets. If there was not evidence in this case that the prosecutrix had told her mother, in the presence of the defendant, of the seduction under promise of marriage, and he did not deny it, but, in fact, admitted it, the objection of the defendant would have to be sustained, under S. v. Ferguson, *344
4. The court erred in charging the jury as follows: "If you find that she (the prosecutrix) was induced to yield and submit her person to the defendant by reason of his promise of marriage, so made at the time or before that time, the defendant would be guilty, there being other supporting evidence required by the statute." This instruction was proper, under S. v. Ring,
No error.
Cited: S. v. Malonee,