OPINION OP THE COURT
Thе appellant was convicted of assault upon a female under the age of 10 years, with intent to rape her, and, from thе sentence imposed upon him therefor, has perfected this appeal.
The indictment recited that it was returned by the grand jurors selected, impaneled, and sworn at the March term, 1920, and charged the crime as having been committed on August 25, 1920, some four months after the jury could have investigated it. The indictment was filed in open court, as it shows by endorsements upon it, on March 24, 1921, and the aрpellant contends that it is fatally defective for the reason that the grand jury of the 1920 March term had become extinct in Marсh, 1921, because of the lapse of terms.
It is apparent that the indictment contains a clerical error. Where two dates appear in an indictment, one of which is impossible and apparently a clerical error, the indictment will not be held bаd. 14 R. C. L. 180. We have heretofore adopted a similar rule in these cases holding that clerical errors which are explainеd or corrected by necessary intendment from other parts of the indictment are not fatal. Territory v. Montoya, 17 N. M. 122, 128,
Appellant contends that impotency is a good defense to the charge of assault with intent to rape and that the court erred in refusing to permit him to show that fac,t. Objection was sustained to a question addressed to appellant’s wife to ascertain how long it has been since they had engaged in the sexual relation. Counsel for appellant advised the court that the evidence was to prove intent, and that the court could by instruction limit it to that extent. Counsel for appellant then offered to prove by the witness that for 6% years the appellant had been impotent and without sexual desire of any kind.
Whether impotency is or is not a complete defense to a charge of assault with intent to rape is a queston respecting which there is little authority аnd much uncertainty.
In Foster v. Commonwealth,
In State v. Bartlett,
“While impotency may be a sufficient defense tо an indictment for the consummated offense of rape, it will not excuse an assault with intent” — citing Wharton and Bishop.
The question therе arose because of appellant’s contention that the court should have instructed the jury without request that if they found defendant to be impotent he should be acquitted.
In Territory v. Keyes,
In Nugent v. State,
In State v. Swails,
In People v. Coston,
In Com. v. Green, 2 Pick. (Mass.) 380, wherein defendant was under 14 years of age, the cоurt said that “an intention to do an act does not necessarily imply an ability to do it, as a man who is emasculated may use forсe with intent to ravish, though possibly * * * he could not be convicted of a rape” because incapable of emission.
In Hunt v. State,
Practically all of the foregoing cases will be found in the note to the last case reported in Ann. Cas. 1916D, 533. From those cases it may be stated as a rule that impotency or lack of physical powers of the defendant may be shown but not as a complete defense to a chairge of assault with intent to rape.
Any evidence relative to the question of intent with which an act is done is admissible. 8 R. C. L. p. 182. It devolved upon the state to prove that the assault by appellаnt was with intent to rape. Evidence of appellant’s physical condition was relevant to such intent, and the court erred in rеjecting the proffered testimony and sustaining the objection to the question referred to.
It is contended that the sentence is excessive, but section 1485, Code 1915, which creates the offense, governs the punishment, and not section 1480, Code 1915.
It is also contendеd that an instruction in simple assault should have been given, and that the defendant having offered proof of his insanity, the state was obligеd to meet that evidence and could not thereafter stand upon the presumption of sanity.
These propositions arе without merit as they arise in this case and need not be discussed. For the reasons stated, the judgment will be reversed, and a new trial granted, and it is so ordered.
