State v. Montgomery

63 Mo. 296 | Mo. | 1876

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant was indicted for attempting to commit a rape, and was convicted of that offense. The evidence of the prosecutrix showed that defendant met the woman in a public road and made improper proposals to her which she rejected, and that he then caught her by the arm, and tried to pull her into the woods. There was other corroborative evidence, and there were also admissions made by the defendant that, if another woman had not come in sight, he would have accomplished his purpose.

A reversal is asked for because the court improperly refused to grant the defendant a continuance, because there was error in giving and refusing instructions, and because defendant was not arraigned upon the trial and a plea of not guilty entered in his behalf. As the judgment will have to be reversed for the latter ground, it will be unnecessary to notice the action of the court in refusing the continuance. But, as the case must be re-tried, it will be as well to notice the instructions.

The first instruction, given for the State, merely told the jury that they were the judges of the evidence, the credibility of the witnesses, of the act committed by the defendant, and of the intent of the act.

The second instruction was to the effect that the jury were to judge of defendant’s intent by the words used by him, the acts he performed, and all the facts and circumstances shown by the evidence; and the substance of the third instruction was, that if the defendant put his hands on the person of the prosecutrix against her will, with the intent to commit a rape upon her against her will, then the jury should find him guilty.

The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that the word rape as used in the indictment, and as known in law, was the carnal knowledge of a woman by a man by force and against her will, and the crime of rape could only be committed when *298there was on the part of the woman the utmost resistance, and the man overpowered such resistance ; and, unless the jury believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that defendant made an assault with the intent to commit the crime of rape, as above defined, there should be an acquittal.

This instruction the court refused, and in lieu thereof, of its own motion, told the jury that the word rape as used in the indictment, and as known in law, was defined as the carnal knowledge of a woman by a man, by force and against her will, and unless the jury believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that defendant made an assault with intent to commit the crime of rape, they should acquit.

The court gave three instructions at the request of the defendant ; the first told the jury that they were the judges of the credibility of witnesses ; the second, that the essence of the crime charged consisted in the intent to rape, and that it devolved upon the State to prove such intent affirmatively, and if the jury had a reasonable doubt as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, they should acquit; third, that the indictment charged, and the defendant was on trial alone for, an assault with an intent to commit the crime of rape, and that the intent to rape must be proved by the State, and unless it was proved that defendant entertained the specific intent to commit a rape, then the jury should acquit.

' The instructions are unobjectionable and leave the defendant no ground for complaint. The onus is cast upon the State throughout, and it 'requires the establishment of the fact, that the defendant made the assault with the intent to commit the crime.

The court rightfully refused the instruction which told the jury the crime could only be committed when the utmost resistance was used on the part of the woman. It had nothing to do with the case. The indictment did not charge the actual perpetration of a rape, and there was no attempt to prove any such act. It was not a matter in controversy. The court clearly defines the offence charged, and instructed correctly in reference” to the assault. An attempt is a deliberate crime which is begun, but, *299through circumstances independent of the will, the action is left unfinished. It is such an intentional, preliminary, guilty act, as will apparently result, in the usual course of natural events, if not hindered by causes outside of'the .actor’s will, in a deliberate crime. (2 Whart. Crim. Law, 7th ed. § 2686.) If the means are apparently adapted to the end, and there is an apparent physical ability to complete the attempt on the part of the at-tempter, then the case may be fairly made out.

The defendant here was arrested, in his attempt to pull the prosecutrix out of the road into the woods, by the near approach of a lady and her daughter traveling on the highway. He was trying to overcome her resistance, .he was using the means to accomplish his purpose, and it was for the jury to say, under all circumstances, whether he was guilty of an attempt to commit the crime with which he stood charged.

But the record clearly shows that when the accused was put upon his trial, there was no arraignment, and no plea entered for him. No issue was made up. Numerous decisions in this court hold that such an omission is fatal. The record shows that there was an arraignment and plea of not guilty” after the jury wereimpaneled, and the evidence all in, but the attorney for the defense and the defendant himself made their affidavit’ that no arraignment at any time took place, and that defendant never pleaded to the indictment. The difference is immaterial; for if we admit the verity of the record, the case for the State is not placed in any better condition.

The arraignment and the prisoner’s plea must be the first step in the progress of the trial. They must precede the swearing of the jury and the hearing of the evidence, for till they occur there is no issue to try, and where they are neglected at the proper time, the error cannot be cured subsequently by an entry nunc pro tunc. (State vs. Saunders, 53 Mo. 234.)

These negligences on the part of prosecuting officers are becoming a great deal too frequent.

This is the second case which has come to our notice at the present term, where the same point was raised and where the same defect existed. For mere inattention and inadvertence on the *300part of the prosecution, this case must be reversed and the State compelled to pay the costs, when otherwise it was well tried, and the verdict was unquestionably righteous.

The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

All the judges concur.