199 Mo. 142 | Mo. | 1906
On the 14th of April, 1904, the prosecuting attorney of St. Francois county began this prosecution by filing an information, duly verified, in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of said county, wherein he charged the defendant with rape on Emily Cowan, in said county, on the 6th day of December, 1903.
The defendant was arrested and arraigned, and pleaded not guilty. On the 10-th of August, 1904, he was put upon his trial and convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary. After unsuccessful motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, he appealed to this court.
The information is in proper form and we discover no error in the formal proceedings. The errors assigned relate to the alleged improper admission of testimony and to the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict.
It is the settled law of this State that declarations of a co-conspirator, made after the common criminal enterprise has been accomplished and merely narrative of past occurrences, are inadmissible against another conspirator. To be competent they must be either acts in themselves or accompany and explain acts done in pursuance of the concerted criminal purpose, during the pendency of the common criminal enterprise. [State v. Melrose, 98 Mo. 594; State v. Hilderbrand, 105 Mo. 318; State v. Minton, 116 Mo. l. c. 615; State v. Brennan, 164 Mo. l. c. 509.]
But it is insisted by counsel for the State that the evidence Of the witness Rose was admissible for the reasons, first, that the alleged statements of Willis, the co-conspirator, were made when defendant was present ; and, secondly, in impeachment of Willis, who was a witness for defendant.
We have carefully noted all the testimony of the witness Rose on this point. He testified that about 11 o’clock that night defendant and Willis came to the saloon and while there Willis alluded to Ms having had intercourse with some old woman. It is perfectly plain that if any reliance whatever is to be placed upon the testimony of Mrs. Cowan and her children, the occasion to which Rose alludes was several hours after the alleged rape and when the common enterprise had ended. The statement of Willis on the theory that he was an accomplice was clearly inadmissible. The mere fact that defendant was in the saloon when Willis made the
Defendant was not called upon to make any statement himself, nor can he he held responsible for what Willis said at that time. While it was entirely competent to impeach Willis, the statements made by Rose were not contradictory of the evidence given by Willis or of any fact or statement to which his attention was called. That these statements alleged to have been made by Willis, placed before the jury with the sanction of the court, were highly prejudicial, is perfectly obvious.
II. As to the other contention of counsel for defendant, that the testimony was not sufficient to sustain the verdict of guilty, it is always a delicate duty for this court to pass upon the sufficiency of testimony, but it is our duty to see that no citizen is deprived of his life, liberty or property without a fair and impartial trial. The offense charged in this case is one of the most heinous, but if the story of the old lady is true it was a most unnatural one. That a young man of twenty would forcibly outrage an old woman of seventy-five years of age, under the circumstances related by her, calls for unlimited credulity, but conceding that an assault was made, the testimony of the. old lady herself was so contradictory that the verdict can not be allowed to stand. According to her own statements there was no penetration, and hence no rape. But if it be said that by other statements of Mrs. Cowan the jury could have found there was a penetration, as she was the only witness on this point no man should be incarcerated in the penitentiary upon such contradictory evidence from the same witness. We think no good purpose will be subserved by spreading the evidence of Mrs. Cowan on the records of this court. We have read it, and that of her daughters, and this testimony is so hopelessly conflicting and contradictory that it is diffi
For the error noted and with the admonition that unless more trustworthy testimony can.be obtained this prosecution should be discontinued, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.