139 Iowa 401 | Iowa | 1908
It is said that the facts set out in the indictment do not constitute a crime under the laws of Iowa, because “ the term ‘ carnal copulation ’ has a well-defined and established meaning, and means the act of coition between the sexes. Carnal copulation is impossible between persons of the same sex.” The appellants have not given us an extended argument on the proposition, nor have they cited authority in support thereof. There seems to be no uncertain meaning in the statute, however. It defines the crime of sodomy in concise language, and as it has almost universally been defined by courts, law-writers, and lexicographers from time immemorial. Blackstone and other early writers on the law referred to the crime as the “ crime against nature committed either with man or beast.” In 1 Bishop on Criminal Law it is defined as “ being a carnal copulation by human beings with each other against nature, or with a beast.” See, also, 25 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 1144; Century Dictionary; 2 Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, 647; Honselman v. State, 168 Ill. 172 (48 N. E. 304). In Cleveland v. Detweiler, 18 Iowa, 299, the action was for slander; the plaintiff charging that the defendant had accused her of having sexual intercourse
Instruction 5 given by the court was in line with the foregoing, and it was a correct statement of the law. The instruction on circumstantial evidence is not open to the criticism that it is vague and misleading. It is concise, and it could not well have been misunderstood by the jury. The request embodied in instruction 4 asked by the defendants was substantially given in the court’s own charge.
We have twice read the entire record in this case with the care its importance demands, and we are abidingly convinced that the verdict has such support in the evidence that it should not be disturbed; nor do we find any error which would justify a reversal. The case seems to have been tried with great care, and every right of the defendants fully protected.— Affirmed.