59 Wash. 238 | Wash. | 1910
Appellant was convicted of the crime of rape, and appeals from the judgment entered. A number of errors are assigned, but we will refer to only one, which, in our opinion, is decisive of the appeal. The criminal code- of 1909 amended the law relating to rape, among other changes making it a crime to carnally know a female child between the ages of fifteen and eighteen years and of previous chaste character. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2436. Appellant was informed against under this new section, the charge being laid in Kittitas county, and the time as June 30, 1909. The state’s evidence discloses that prosecutrix, who was then seventeen years old, and the appellant first became acquainted in Snohomish county, some time in October, 1908; that in the following November they began having sexual relations, with the full consent of prosecutrix, and that these relations were indulged in whenever opportunity afforded, until the following March, when prosecutrix with her family moved to Kittitas county. In May appellant went to Kittitas county and renewed his acquaintance with prosecutrix, and they again assumed their sexual relations until July 8, when appellant was arrested and charged with an offense occurring on June 30. At the close of the state’s case, the prosecutrix having testified to these facts, concerning her relations with appellant, his counsel moved for a directed verdict of acquittal, which being denied, he excepted, and now alleges error in the court so ruling.
In construing the statute involved in this information, every requirement must be given effect as constituting an essential element in the offense created. The requirement that the female against whom the offense is committed shall be of “previously chaste character” was unknown to the common law, nor was it an ingredient of any statute of this state defining rape, until the act of 1909. When, therefore, that
“A chaste female is one that has never had sexual intercourse — who yet retains her virginity. A virtuous female is one who has not had sexual intercourse unlawfully — out of wedlock, knowingly and voluntarily.” Marshall v. Territory, 2 Okl. Cr. 136, 101 Pac. 189.
Whatever may be the language which one may choose to define a female of previously chaste character, it certainly cannot be contended that one who, moved by lewd desire and
It is argued by the state that, as to the appellant, the prosecutrix is exempt from this requirement of the law; that being the author of her undoing, he cannot take advantage of his own wrong and hide himself under the cloak of this statutory requirement, as a shield for his protection. Such an argument is purely a sentimental one, and although it may be abhorrent to the moral sense to permit a man to protect himself with the shield of his own wrong, we are dealing with a legal question, and not one of sentiment nor morals; and in order to find a man guilty of such an offense as the one named in this information, we must first find a female who can in all its essentials measure up to the requirement of the law charged to be violated. The test of virtue in a woman is a personal and physical test, and when by reason of her voluntary sin she has lost her virginal purity, it matters not who contributed to that loss; she is no longer chaste. It is not a sound argument to say that the prosecutrix in this case was immune from rápe as to all other men, but not from appellant. The statute makes no such distinction; neither can we. As is said in Shirwin v. People, 69 Ill. 55: “The right of the accused to defend must be as broad as that of the prosecution to criminate.” Such we believe to be the reasoning of the law. Its authority will be found in similar cases to which we will now refer.
In People v. Clark, 33 Mich. 112, the defendant was charged with seduction on July 28. The complaining witness testified that the first offense was committed on that day. She then gave evidence of similar offenses committed in the month of August, one of which latter offenses was elected by the prosecution to go to the jury. The court held a conviction upon the latter act could not be sustained, and said: “The object of this statute was not to punish illicit cohabita
“The fact that she was first deprived of her virginity by the prisoner does not strengthen the state’s case. ... To sustain a conviction under it the evidence must show beyond' a reasonable doubt, among other things, that the female with whom the sexual intercourse was, had was, prior to that intercourse, sexually pure, — chaste as Diana.”
The court then takes up the argument here made, that defendant could not take advantage of his own wrong, and*' holds that the state in criminal prosecutions cannot invoke-the doctrine of estoppel against a defendant; that it is not enough to show a violation of the spirit of the statute, but' that its very letter must be offended against. In State v. Patterson, supra, at page 96, the court says:
“Evidence of prior specific acts of unchastity with the defendant himself is now universally received, as well in cases-of seduction as in cases of rape. What for? To show that in the latter class of cases there was less likelihood of absence-of consent; and that in the former, in consequence of a prior-act of the defendant, there was no chastity left to seduce. Can it be material by whom the prior act is performed,, whether by the defendant, or whether by any one else?”
“The word ‘previous’ in this connection, must be understood to mean immediately previous, or to refer to a period’ terminating immediately previous, to the commencement of' the guilty conduct of the defendant.”
So, in the case before us, the use of those words in the information meant the time just preceding the commission of' the crime charged, June 30. By her own evidence the prosecutrix was not then a female child of previously chaste character. Neither was she on June 8, when the law went into, effect. She was not then within the description of the statute, and therefore not within its protection; and the motion-of the defendant for a directed verdict should have been granted.
We do not wish to be understood as holding that a single-act, or a number of acts of sexual intercourse, will forever deprive a woman of the protection of a statute requiring previous chastity. It has been often held that a woman may reform in law as well as in morals, and for the second time-become the victim of the seducer’s lust. But we have no such*, case here. There was no evidence of any reformation prior-to June 30, nor of any assault then upon virtue’s barrier.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to discharge the defendant.
Rudkin, C. J., Parker, and Gose, JJ., concur.