10 Wash. 277 | Wash. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Appellant was convicted of an attempt to commit a rape upon the person of a girl under the age of twelve years.
The first ground of the appeal is the alleged insufficiency of the evidence; but we find upon investigation that the only doubt which could be made to depend upon anything in the case, aside from certain conflicting testimony, arises out of the improbability that an attempt of this kind would have been made by a person of theretofore good character, and under circumstances which rendered it certain that two persons not concerned in the transaction were sure to know of it. One of the most profound mysteries connected with the history of crimes is that they are so often committed by persons whose reputations have been good, and under circumstances which make it foolish to expect an escape from detection. The direct evidence was abundantly sufficient, if believed, to warrant the conviction, and we cannot disturb it on the ground of its insufficiency.
It is next urged that there is no such an offense known to our law as that charged in the information, because § 22 of the Penal Code makes an assault with intent to commit rape a specific offense, and under its common law significance the term rape implies violence, which is the chief constituent of an assault. An attempt to commit rape would, therefore, generally, include the idea of an assault, which is not here charged.
The defect in this argument is that our statute, Penal Code, § 28, punishes carnal knowledge and abuse of any female under the age of consent, without regard to the question of violence, and Penal Code, § 303, punishes an unsuccessful attempt to commit any crime. So that sexual intercourse with a female under the prescribed age is punishable, although it be accompanied only by the mildest acts of blandishment and persuasion.
Complaint is made of the severity of the sentence — ten years. Considering the case with a view to the actual injury done it must strike any one as a severe punishment; but looking at it as an exhibition of abandoned and wicked lust which would not hesitate to ruin the life of innocent children, we are not prepared to say that the sentence imposed was legally excessive. If there be anything in the theory that society has a right to relieve itself of the presence of dangerous criminals to protect itself from their further depredations, there is no place that it can make a better beginning than with those reckless libertines who would corrupt and debauch its womankind before they are old enough to think of protecting themselves.
Judgment affirmed.
Dunbar, C. J., and Scott and Hoyt, JJ., concur.