82 Iowa 609 | Iowa | 1891
I. The indictment charges that the defendant “did * * * seduce, debauch and carnally
It is true that, comprehensively considered, the term “female” is generic, and includes a variety of species, while the word “woman” has a more limited signification, being of the human race. The two words, therefore, may have the same signification, depending on the subject considered and their relation thereto. “Seduction,” in its criminal sense, relates to persons. \ It has no other known application. The term£ £ £ female, ’ ’ ¡in an indictment charging the crime of seduction as (having been committed against her, would unmistakably indicate a woman. That would be its common
II. The burden of the complaints in the case is directed in different ways to questions of law and fact
The appellant urges that after his evidence was' introduced it changed the presumption of law so that, the burden shifted to the state to furnish evidence to' counteract or overcome its force. But we know of no' rule by which the burden, in the progress of a trial, is thus changed, except, perhaps, in cases of fraud and the like, in civil proceedings, and we think, in this case, it was, after the evidence was introduced, a question of. fact for the jury whether the presumption of the law in favor of the prosecutrix was overcome by the acts proved. The law'does not definitely determine the facts or attributes essential to a chaste character within the meaning of the statute. Just the extent of profanity or obscenity in the use of language that would so fix the condition of mind and heart in a woman that the law would withdraw from her its protecting arms as against the seducer can be with better results, in the administration of the law, left as a question of fact for the jury than to an arbitrary measurement under legal rule by the court. It is said in State v. Andre, 5 Iowa, 389, that the jury are the sole judges, in each case, who coiné within the description, having said that the statute is for the protection of the “pure in mind; for the innocent in heart.” It is further said, in the same case, that “no particular amount or degree of such manners or conversation can be set down as conclusive evidence of an unchaste" character.” To hold that because of a failure on the part of the state to introduce evidence to rebut that of the defendant on the question of chastity
III. The defendant asked several instructions bearing on the question of the chaste character of the
Upon the issue of chastity the burden was with the -defendant to show a want of i t. The appellant introduced evidence which, he says, established certain facts without dispute. Why should he complain that his facts were not questioned by evidence ? He certainly had the full benefit of them if undisputed. The state had the right on that issue, with the burden on the defendant, to submit on the defendant’s own evidence. Unless by law some consequences should or might follow the neglect to introduce evidence as to general reputation, it had no place in the court’s instructions. The instruction asked fixes no consequences as a result of the neglect, and, had it been given, the jury would kave been without a rule as to how the fact should affect its action. To our minds the effect of the instruction would have been to confuse or mislead the jury, and was properly refused. The instruction has no support in State v. Prizer, 49 Iowa. 534. The court’s instructions so clearly "cover the points presented in the other instructions asked and refused on this branch of the case that there was no error in their refusal. i
Another question is presented because of the above instructions given and refused by the court. It is insisted that at least the rule applicable to an alibi should apply to this class of cases, and the rule is said, in case of alibi, to be that, although the burden is on the defendant to establish the alibi, still the defendant is entitled to an instruction that if, upon the whole case there is a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the defendant, he must be acquitted. Without intimating what the rule in that class of cases should be in the particular suggested, we may say that a careful reading of the
YI. The court said to the jury that “ the burden of proof rests upon the state to show- that the defendant
YII. The following instruction was refused, of which the defendant complains: “If you should find
There are no other questions that we deem it important to notice in the opinion, and the judgment is AEEIRMED.