150 Iowa 210 | Iowa | 1911
V. In the fourth instruction the court defined a house of ill fame as one “visited or frequented by persons of both sexes for the purpose of having sexual intercourse or some other lewd purpose,” and it is said that there is no showing that any female other than May Gill had frequented the place. As pointed out in State v. Young, supra, it was not essential that any female other than May Gill frequent the house, and, in view of the evidence, this instruction may be construed as having reference to frequenting it by her and her male callers. But if this were not so, Ruth Edson visited it three times in two days, and, though ostensibly to dispose of perfumery, her story, concerning their visits is quite susceptible of another explanation, which the jury might have adopted. The criticism of the fifth instruction is without foundation.
There was no error, and the judgment is affirmed.