39 Wash. 548 | Wash. | 1905
On October 11, 1904, tbe appellant was informed against for tbe crime of rape, alleged to have been committed on October 10, 1904, on tbe person of a female child of tbe age of thirteen years. On arraignment be pleaded not guilty, and, in tbe due course of procedure, was put upon bis trial.
Tbe evidence on tbe part of tbe state tended to show that tbe appellant commenced criminal relations with tbe girl some three months prior to tbe time tbe information was filed against him, and that these were continued down
On the trial, when these facts appeared, the appellant moved that the jury be instructed to return a verdict of not guilty, stating as grounds for the motion, “that the evidence in this case shows that, upon the day charged in the information, the defendant did not commit the crime of rape, and that the acts proved there do not constitute attempted rape.” The court declined to direct a verdict as requested, but, on its own motion, directed the prosecution to elect upon which of the several acts the evidence tended to prove, he would rely for a conviction. The prosecuting attorney thereupon elected to rely upon an act testified to by the girl as occurring on a Sunday, at McGallon’s grove, the week before, or two weeks before, the time laid in the information.
The appellant thereupon put in his defense, and the cause was submitted to the jury, under instructions from the court to find the appellant not guilty, unless the evidence satisfied
The appellant contends that the information charges a rape committed on October 10, 1901, and that, when the state failed to prove a rape committed on that day, it failed in its proofs, and the appellant was entitled to an instruction directing a verdict of not guilty. He argues that, under the statute, as well as under the general principles of criminal law, the information must be direct and certain as to the crime charged, and the particular circumstances of the crime charged, and that, unless the date on which the offense is alleged to have been committed is held to he a material allegation, the information is not direct and certain in these respects, and the result is that the state is left to prove a series of acts, and, after its evidence is all in, select therefrom that one on which it deems its proof the strongest, or the defendant the least prepared to defend against; and he presents some supposed cases as examples where serious miscarriages of justice might result from such a practice.
But aside from the fact that the dangers to innocent defendants, from the practice followed by the court in this instance, are more fanciful than real, inasmuch as it is always in the power of the court to protect the defendant from surprises, or against everything looking towards sharp practice on the part of the officer of the state, we think the statute authorizes the practice. It is expressly provided therein that the precise time at which the crime was committed need not be stated in the indictment or information, but a general allegation that it was committed before the finding of the indictment, or the filing of the informa
This statute and these cases lay down the rule that the allegation of time, in an indictment or information, is immaterial other than it must be shown on the face of the one or the other, as the case may be, that the right to prosecute for the crime charged is not barred by the statute of limitations. Hence it is clear that the information filed in this case was sufficient, in form and substance, to admit proofs of, and sustain a conviction for, a rape committed by the appellant upon the prosecuting witness at any time within three years next preceding its filing. It is clear also that, were there no evidence of rape other than that of the time on which the prosecuting attorney elected to rely, there could be no question as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction.
If, then, the information or the evidence has been rendered insufficient to sustain a conviction, entitling the appellant to an instructed verdict in his favor, it is because other acts of rape, committed by him upon the prosecuting witness within the period of time covered by the information, have
We note the contention of the appellant that the conviction in this case cannot be sustained unless the court overrules the case of State v. Fetterly, 33 Wash. 599, 74 Pac. 810, but this contention is so apparently unfounded as not to merit serious reply.
The judgment is affirmed.