275 Mo. 544 | Mo. | 1918
An information was filed in the circuit court of Jasper County, charging defendant with seduction under promise of marriage. Upon a trial, he was convicted and sentenced to two years imprisonment in the penitentiary. From this judgment he appeals.
Soon after defendant became acquainted with the prosecutrix, in December, 1914, he became very attentive to her and so continued until August, 1915, when he proposed marriage, and she accepted. Moved by his promise, she prepared table linen, sheets, pillow cases, and other articles necessary for household use. He continued his attentions until October, 1915, and one day when they were out riding in an automobile, he insistently solicited sexual intercourse with her, urging her that, being engaged, they were married in the sight of God, and that a marriage ceremony was merely a formality, and would make no difference in their relations. She demurred, saying that they were not married in the sight of man. He persisted in his solicitations, declaring if she cared for him, she would consent; that no one would ever know of it. Relying, as she says, upon his promise to marry her, like Donna Julia, “a little still she strove, and much repented, and whisperring that she’d ne’er consent, consented.” Again in November, 1915, moved by like blandishments, protestations, and promises on his part, she lent herself- to his embraces. As a consequence of this intercourse, she became pregnant and gave birth to a child in July, 1916.
Good news is received gladly, but reluctant credence is given to evil tidings. When, therefore the prosecutrix told the defendant of her condition, he refused to believe her. Finally convinced, he procured some
Defendant testifying in his own behalf, denied all of the facts of an inculpatory nature in the foregoing statement. He admits that he arranged for the prosecutrix’s stay at the maternity hospital, and that he paid her expenses while there; but says he did this through fear of blackmail; that he had never shown the prosecu
The record is burdened with other testimony pro and con, much of it entirely irrelevant, to impeach this or that witness, or to show by facts and circumstances, often remote in their connection with the main issue, the relations existing between the principals in this miserable drama. We have set out enough of the testimony to define its general character. What we are concerned in is the proof as to the promise here alleged to have been made, as affecting the commission of the crime charged, and the other errors assigned, as we may be able to glean them from the argument submitted by counsel for defendant under the misleading title, as here employed, of Points and Authorities.
In the case at bar, the prosecutrix testified that she had never had sexual intercourse with any one except the defendant; that he told her if she got into trouble on account of her relations with him, they would marry at once. She bore her parents’ name, and was questioned during the trial as “Miss” or as “this girl,” or
Instruction numbered 3, given at the request of the State, in regard to the evidence necessary to corroborate the prosecutrix as to the promise of marriage, is assigned as error, on the grounds that it is a comment on the evidence, and an assumption of facts not proven, in that the testimony as to her preparations for marriage were' not known to defendant, and, consequently, the jury should not have been instructed that such acts might be taken into consideration, as tending to prove a promise. These preparations were established by other than the prosecutrix’s testimony. While it is not necessary that they should have been corrobrated, as is required of proof of the promise, they are supported by many attending circumstances which attest their truth. Among these may be mentioned the unsullied reputation, or as the books put it, the “good repute” of the prosecutrix; the long term of the parties’ social intimacy; his confidence; her fidelity never questioned until the trial; his effort, when he ascertained her condition, to relieve her from the odium of child birth while out of the protecting aegis of wedlock; his payment of her expenses at the maternity hospital; and his statements to her mother in the presence of her father, when asked if he would marry her, that he “had not said he would not.” This last fact he denies, but the
The instructions, upon the whole, fully and fairly presented the law in this case under the evidence.
The defendant was awarded a fair trial and the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.