69 Iowa 549 | Iowa | 1886
The evidence shows beyond controversy that the prosecutrix, Ohloe Rhodes, while traveling along the highway, in company with her sister and another girl, was approached by the defendant, a stranger to all of them, knd was ashed by him to be allowed to have sexual intercourse with her; that she promptly refused him; and that thereupon he assaulted her, threw her down in the road, and attempted to accomplish his purpose, and desisted only when the other girls approached, and the prosecutrix’s resistance was such as to render it evident that his efforts would be ineffectual.
The defendant relies'upon evidence tending to show that he approached her with his pantaloons torn, and his private parts exposed, and that she talked to him, and did not scream nor run. But the only talk between them, so far as the evidence shows, consisted of his infamous proposition and her prompt refusal. That she neither screamed nor ran is no evidence against her. She had to protect herself and her young companions, and this she might well have thought that she could do best by maintaining her ground, and not by separating herself, and expending her strength in flight. If the defendant took encouragement from such fact, he must have been utterly destitute of any proper conception of female virtue.
We ought, perhaps, in this connection, to say that the defendant’s counsel insist in argument that it was very material whether the girl met Allen or not. The point which they make is that Allen was an old neighbor, and the prosecutrix did not disclose to him tbe fact that she bad just before been assaulted. But tbe defendant has the full advantage of that fact. It is undisputed that the girls saw Allen going or returning, and it it equally undisputed that the prosecutrix spoke to him, and learned from him the defendant’s name, but reserved the disclosure of the fact of the assault, as a girl of delicate feelings might be expected to do, until she saw her parents. All this is mixed in the counsel’s argument against the instruction, but it is manifest that there is no logical connection.
It is insisted that the verdict is not supported by the evidence, but we do not see how the jury could properly have reached any other conclusion.
Affirmed.