152 Iowa 403 | Iowa | 1911
Lead Opinion
The defendant was charged with the crime of rape committed on November 8, 1908, upon the person of Grace Hopkins, a child eight years of age. The facts and circumstances immediately preceding the , alleged rape are not greatly in dispute. On the date in question the defendant was living at Prairie City. Prior to October 20, 1908, he had lived at Colfax, and was manager of the telephone company. On Sunday, November 8, he rode from Prairie City to klitchellville, and from Mitchellville to Colfax in a single-seated, high-wheeled Holsman automobile. While at Colfax he took four children in succession for short rides in his automobile. The
(20) The defendant claims as a defense • what is known in the law as an alibi; that is, that at the time of the commission of the alleged offense with which he is charged he was at a different place, so that he could not have participated in its commission. The burden of proof is upon the defendant to prove this defense by a preponderance of the evidence; that is, by greater or superior evidence. The defense of alibi to be entitled to consideration must be such as to show that at the very time of the commission of. the crime charged, if one was committed, the accused, was at another place and so far away, and under such circumstances that he could not by any ordinary exertion have been at the place whore the crime is alleged to have been committed so as to have participated in the commission thereof. If he has so established such defense, he is entitled to an acquittal.
(21) While the 'burden of proof is upon the defendant as to the alibi, you are further instructed that if the evidence as to the alibi, with all the evidence in the case, raises in your minds a reasonable doubt as to his guilt, you. should acquit.
(22) You are further instructed in reference to the law as to alibi that it is recognized in the law that the defense of alibi is one easily manufactured, and juries are generally and properly advised by the courts to scan the proofs of an alibi with care and caution. It is a legitimate and perfect defense if established.
Appellant complains of these instructions as having no basis in the record. We think this contention must be sustained. The only evidence pointed out to us by counsel for the state in support of these instructions is the evidence of a witness for the defendant who fixed the time of defendant’s return to Prairie City at five minutes before six. The prosecutrix testified that when she saw Mrs. Marquis it had been fifteen minutes or less since the defendant left her. The exact distance from Colfax to Prairie City does not appear, but it is a nearby town
II. Some other questions are presented for our consideration upon which we are not agreed. They may not arise upon another trial in the form in which they appear in this record.
For the error pointed out, a new trial must be ordered. Upon the record. as a whole, • we are not averse to such result. Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — The conclusion reached by the majority that the lower court erred in giving an instruction as to alibi seems to me to be without justification on the record, and, as the reversal is made to depend entirely on this conclusion, I am compelled to refer somewhat in detail to the record, not only to indicate my dis
Incidentally it may be proper to suggest that the complaint made in appellant’s assignment of error and brief is not that the court gave instructions on the subject of alibi, but that it “erred in giving the twentieth instruction,” which was the first instruction relating to alibi, and that it was “error to characterize the defendant’s defense herein as an alibi.” These are the only references in the brief and argument to the subject, and, as the record presents the evidence in a very. abbreviated form, it is fair to conclude that only so much of the evidence is presented as is necessary to enable the court to pass upon the errors assigned and argued. There is no contention in the assignment or argument that the verdict was not sufficiently supported by the evidence, and "there was no occasion therefore to present the evidence in full, even in a condensed narrative form. The defendant pleaded not guilty, and, of course, under that plea, any evidence tending to show that the crime charged was not committed by any one, or that the defendant was not the person who committed it, was competent, and, as tending to raise a reasonable doubt with reference to defendant’s having committed the crime if one was committed, he was entitled without other pleading to introduce evidence that at the time and place when, -as it appears, the crime, if any, must have been committed he was elsewhere. It is only in a very loose and colloquial sense that such evidence can be spoken of as tending to establish a defense in a criminal case. State v. Reed, 62 Iowa, 40. It goes like any other evidence for the defendant to the question whether the defendant was guilty of the crime charged, and, if it tends to raise a reasonable doubt of guilt, it should be considered by the jury. In the case before us the court told the jury that defendant had entered a plea
In my opinion the very fact testified to by defendant that he was not out of his automobile in the highway during the time when the crime testified to by prosecutrix was committed raised a question of alibi. The distance of the defendant from the place of the commission of the crime at the time it appears to have been committed need not be shown to.have been such as'to render the commission of the crime by defendant impossible, in order that it may be considered as tending to support the so-called defense of alibi. It is sufficient for that purpose if it tends to preclude the possibility of the commission of the crime by ■the defendant and to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether
But this was not the only testimony relating to an alibi, nor is there anything in the record to indicate that the jury could have construed what the court said relating to alibi as applicable to this portion of defendant’s testimony. At least two witnesses who gave material testimony for the prosecution said that on the evening in question they saw prosecutrix in the automobile with defendant on the highway a few minutes before six o’clock, and the evidence completely rebuts any thought that she was in the automobile after the commission of the crime. On the other hand, at least two witnesses for the defendant testified positively and circumstantially that defendant had returned to his home in Prairie Oity from five to fifteen minutes before six. In view of the fact that the prosecutrix herself fixed no specific time in the evening for the commission of the crime other than to say that it was
I am unable, therefore, to agree to the reversal of the case.