49 Iowa 241 | Iowa | 1878
I. The defendant moved to set aside the indictment on the ground that one of the grand jurors was not a
II. The prosecuting witness, at the time of the alleged offense, was a little more than ten years of age. The defendant is a man of more than ordinary size. She testified that he had complete connection with her five or six times. Her language is: “He had his whole instrument in. This occurred five or six times, and each time two or three minutes. ” After the introduction of her testimony, the defendant moved “for an order that she be required to submit to an examination by a committee of competent physicians, to be appointed by the court, for the purpose of ascertaining whether she had been raped. ” The court overruled the motion, and the defendant excepted.
It is contended by the defendant, that if coition had taken place to the extent testified to by the prosecuting witness, the hymen would necessarily have been ruptured (if it had previously existed until that time), and that a ruptured hymen cannot be restored. There was medical evidence to that effect. If the evidence is reliable, and the hymen had been found intact, it would certainly have tended to demonstrate that the defendant was not guilty of the crime with which he was charged. But he was not convicted of that crime. We cannot say that it was important to the defendant to disprove what, according to the finding of the jury, was never proven. It is said, however, that the presence of the hymen, if revealed, would have impaired the credibility of the prosecuting witness
III. The testimony of one Anna Hakes was introduced, which is in these words : “I am the mother of Ida Hakes. On the 4th day of August, 1875, I sent the brother of Ida Hakes to Milton Yinsant’s, to bring Ida home. She came home, and seemed sick. I had her clothes changed, and they were badly soiled.” Ida testified that when she came home she told her mother what had occurred. The defendant offered to show, after the testimony of Ida and her mother was introduced, that, after the mother had learned from Ida of the alleged rape, she stated in the presence of one Emma Thompson, while speaking of the defendant, that “she had the best son-in-law in the world.” This evidence was objected to by the State as immaterial, and the objection was sustained. The defendant contends that the statement of Mrs. Hakes should have been admitted, because it was inconsistent with the fact that she had been told of the alleged rape. But Mrs. Hakes does not say that she believed it. If she did not believe it there is no inconsistency between her alleged statement and anything that either she or Ida testified to.
We think that, under the indictment, the defendant might, if the evidence warranted it, have been convicted of a simple assault. Whoever is charged with rape is charged with all that constitutes it, and one of the elements of rape is an assault. Commonwealth v. Drum, 19 Pick., 480. The instruction given, therefore, appears to be erroneous.
It is urged, however, on the part of the State that, even if this be so, the defendant should not complain, because, under the instruction, the jury should have rendered a verdict of not guilty, if they believed him to be guilty only of a simple assault; and so it is contended that, if the instruction is erroneous, it is too favorable for the defendant.
In one view this may be true; but, still, we believe that the defendant may have been prejudiced. Jurors are-sometimes reluctant to acquit when they believe the defendant guilty of something. In State v. Walters, 45 Iowa, 389, it was held to be prejudicial to the defendant to instruct in substance that the jury must convict of the higher degree of crime, or render a verdict of not guilty.
But it is insisted, on the part of the State, that if the jury believed that there was an assault they must have necessarily believed- there was an attempt to commit rape. In our opinion the evidence cannot properly be so viewed. The substance of the testimony of the prosecuting witness is, that the defendant is her brother-in-law; that upon the night of the alleged offense she was at his house, and slept upon a lounge in the same room where the defendant and her sister, the defendant’s wife, slept; that she was sleeping on her right side, with her back to the wall; that the defendant came to her lounge, and lay down upon his left side so that they were
Beversed.