24 Kan. 186 | Kan. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendants in this case were tried, convicted and sentenced on a charge of committing an assault with intent to commit a rape on Anna M. Boyland, the wife of the defendant Henry H. Boyland, one of the defendants, in Dickinson county. They now appeal to this court. The misconduct of a juror, the improbability of the testimony to sustain the charge, and the admission of illegal evidence, are alleged as grounds against the conviction and in support of a reversal of the judgment. After an examination of the whole record, we deem it only necessary to notice the objection to certain evidence.
The prosecuting witness testified on the trial that the assault was made about the 15th day of July, 1879; that her
Neither can we say the evidence tended to corroborate the witness in reference to her prior statements, or to sustain the charge against the defendants. It was the narration by the witness of subsequent acts and conversations of defendants of a revolting and offensive nature, and proving, if true, the shameful conduct of defendants, and a willingness on the part of the husband that his wife might be debauched by the other defendant, yet not adding anything to the evidence of the commission of the crime of July 15th prior, or furnishing the words of others in attestation of the testimony of the wife. The evidence objected to must have poisoned and inflamed the minds of the jurors and greatly prejudiced the defendants. The admission of this evidence was therefore material error.
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded. The defendants will be returned from the penitentiary and delivered over to the jailer of Dickinson county, to abide the order of the district court of that county.