203 Mo. 695 | Mo. | 1907
The prosecution in this ease was commenced by an information filed by the prosecuting attorney of Barry county, duly verified, on August 22, 1905, wherein he charged the defendant with rape on Ada Stotts, a female, seventeen years of age, in Barry county, in the month of June, 1905.
The information is sufficient in form and substance and it is unnecessary to reproduce it.
The defendant was arrested and duly arraigned at the September term, 1905, of the Barry Circuit Court, and on his application the cause was continued to the February term, 1906. At said February term the defendant was put upon trial and convicted and his punishment assessed by the jury at fourteen years in the penitentiary. In accordance with the verdict, the defendant was sentenced to the penitentiary, and from that sentence he has appealed to this court.
The State’s evidence tended ”to prove that Ada Stotts, the prosecuting witness, is deaf and dumb and
The defendant admitted having sexual intercourse with prosecutrix in the hotel at Monett on the night in question, but denied using any force or threats. Defendant introduced some physicians who testified that some deaf and dumb persons are equally as intelligent as persons of the same age, not so afflicted. He proved by Mr. Swartzell that he noticed nothing unusual in the conduct of either the defendant or prosecutrix the night they came to his hotel, and nothing unusual at the table th,e next morning. Mr. Swartzell also testified that he and his wife sat out on the front porch that night till 10:30 and heard no noise in the defendant’s room, which was a front room of the second story. This witness further testified that he observed nothing unusual in this bedroom the next morning; that the sheets were wrinkled about as they ordinarily are. He further stated that, although he saw prosecutrix that night and the next morning, and waited on her at the
The court instructed the jury fully on all the points of law arising under the evidence in the case and as they are such as have often met the approval of this court it is deemed unnecessary to burden this opinion with their reproduction. No brief having been filed in this court on behalf of defendant, we have been compelled to examine the record in the light of the motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment!
1. As already said, the information sufficiently charges the offense of rape. [State v. Dilts, 191 Mo. l. c. 667.]
2. No error was committed by the court in permitting the prosecuting attorney to state to the jury in opening the case that he expected to show to the jury that the knowledge of the prosecutrix is limited, that she compares in information with a girl between ten and eleven years of age, but if there had been, this is not assigned as error in the motion for new trial.
3. It was assigned as a ground for new trial that the court erroneously permitted Prof. McCue of the State Deaf and Dumb Institution at Fulton, to act as interpreter of the prosecutrix. That he was peculiarly fitted to communicate with the prosecutrix by signs and interpret her evidence to the jury is not controverted, but it is said that he was unduly biased in her favor. This was a matter for the determination of the circuit court and we see no-ground for charging that court with any want of proper discretion in the matter.
That the prosecutrix was under our laws a competent witness was settled in State v. Howard, 118 Mo. l. c. 143 and 144; 5 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (1 Ed.), 119, and cases cited; State v. Burns, 78 N. W. 681; Swift v. Applebone, 23 Mich. 252.]
4. As to the other objections to testimony we
5. This record reveals a deplorable picture of human depravity. The ruining and deflowering of the poor deaf and dumb girl under the facts and circumstances detailed in evidence was rape within the meaning of our laws and the jury were fully justified in reaching the verdict they did.
The judgment is affirmed.