— The defendant was convicted of the crime of rape, alleged to have been perpetrated upon the person of one Emma Anderson, an adopted daughter of the defendant, and who, at the time of the alleged crime, was some thirteen years and nine months of age. The only evidence of the commission of the offense is the testimony of the prosecuting witness, which is, in substance, as follows: “1 do not understand the nature of an oath. I do not know what the clerk has just said to me. I understand he told me to tell the truth.I do not know what day of the week the 25th day of June was. I know clerk Nichols. I knew when he was up before the court.I was at home on that day.The day before that I was at home in Bellevue. Mr. Anderson was at home. I was at home on the evening of that day. So was Mr. Anderson. I went to bed that night between 9 and 10 o’clock. Mr. Anderson went to bed at the same time. His bed and mine are in the same room upstairs. We have slept in that room since last winter. Q. Did you see Mr. Anderson after you went to bed ? A. No, sir. Q. I am speaking about the day before clerk Nichols’ trial. Did you see him after you went to bed that night ? A. I saw bim after he went to bed. Q. Well, what did he do? A. He didn’t do anything. I was awakened during the night after that, by Mr. Anderson. He was in my bed. I first found out
Were this an indictment at common law, or under the statute as it stood before the amendment raising the age of consent, it could not be contended, we apprehend, that the evidence is sufficient to warrant a conviction. Of course, it can be inferred from the statements of the prosecutrix that the defendant had sexual intercourse with her; but she does not say so, and we think that something more than inferences should be required to convict a man of seventy-seven years of age of a crime that will end his days in the penitentiary. The defendant is seventy-seven years of age. His physician, who has attended upon him for some fifteen or sixteen years, testifies that he is afflicted with a rupture, and is also suffering from an affliction of the spine, caused by an injury received in 1888, while building a house; and said physician further testifies that from his knowledge of the defendant’s physical condition it is his opinion that he is not, and was not at the time of the alleged offense, capable of having sexual intercourse. The impression seems to have obtained with
Exception is taken to an instruction of the court to the jury which is as follows: “You are hereby instructed that you should not convict the defendant on the uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix alone, but such corroboration may be by facts and circumstances connected with or surrounding the case; in other words, corroboration is not necessarily the testimony of other witnesses.” The giving of this instruction, under the evidence in this case, was prejudicial. It. was virtually saying to the jury that the prosecutrix might be corroborated by her own statements. She made no complaint until a long time after the alleged offense. Her person presented no evidence to support her charge; on the contrary, the physician called by the prosecution testified that she had the appearance of having been “frequently penetrated,” and the record shows that she was in the habit of having intimate relations with, and being caught in compromising positions with, divers boys of about her own age. We think the instruction, except the first paragraph, was error, under the proofs in the ease. Undoubtedly the rule is that a