Daniel Ray Walker was charged by information in three counts with rape and two separate and different acts of sodomy. He was also charged under the habitual criminal act, and upon being found guilty by the jury of the offense charged in each of the three counts, he was sentenced by the court to life imprisonment for each offense, the sentences to be served concurrently. The notice of appeal was filed in this court prior to January 1, 1972, and therefore this court has jurisdiction. Art. V, §§ 3 and 31, Constitution of Missouri, V.A.M.S.
Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdicts as to any of the counts. The evidence authorizes a finding by the jury that on March 6, 1970, he had sexual intercourse by use of force and threats of bodily harm with the prosecuting witness, and that on the same occasion he engaged in *286 two separate and different acts of sodomy against her will.
Appellant’s first point is that the court erred in overruling his request that the State be required to elect on which one of the three counts it would proceed to trial.
At the time of appellant’s trial, June 14, 1971, Supreme Court Rule 24.04, V.A.M.R., then in effect, did not authorize the join-der in one information of the three offenses with which appellant was charged. An amendment to Rule 24.04 became effective on July 1, 1971 which then authorized such joinder and the trial of the three charges at the same time. Appellant does not contend that if his trial had been held subsequent to July 1, 1971, he could not properly, pursuant to the Amended Rule 24.04, have been tried in a single trial for the three offenses.
As a general rule an accused may not, over his objection, be convicted in one trial of two or more distinct felonies, except in those cases specifically authorized by statute or rule. State v. Terry, Mo.,
It must be conceded that the then applicable rule did not authorize the State to try appellant for the three offenses in one trial. But, Rule 24.04 is procedural, and in the event the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded, the State would then be authorized to retry appellant in the precise manner in which the first trial was held.
It has been said that error in a criminal case is presumed to be prejudicial, State v. Allen, Mo.,
During the testimony of the prosecuting witness concerning the force used by appellant in committing the offenses, she stated: “ * * * he sat there with his arm around me and started talking about his family, he told me that he had been up for two rape cases before — .” At this point counsel for appellant objected because “this would be strictly hearsay,” and asked that the court instruct the jury to disregard the statement and also that the witness be instructed not to make “such spontaneous remarks.” A discussion between the court and counsel was held in which the prosecutor advised the court that “I anticipate what she will say Mr. Walker said is that you better not tell anybody about this because I’ve been up on two rape charges before, and I’ve beaten both of them, or words to that effect, and that that is a threat against her reporting this *287 incident to any one.” The court then stated: “I will overrule your objection. I won’t strike it at this time. We’ll wait and see. But as far as the spontaneous remarks are concerned, Mr. Moore, I’ll have to wait and see. I can’t tell what she is going to come up with Mr. Moore. I can’t anticipate that. You’ll have to object when it comes up. At this time I deny your objection.” Counsel for appellant then moved for a mistrial because the State had shown “the possibility or indication that this defendant has committed other rapes, and without the court taking some action to alleviate that from the minds of the jury, the defendant at this time moves for a mistrial.”
The prosecuting witness then testified that “He told me he had been up for rape twice before and that he hadn’t been convicted, that he could always get out of it, and I might as well not tell my folks or the police because it wouldn’t do any good.” Following this testimony appellant made no objection or motion to strike, and did not again ask for a mistrial.
In argument appellant asserts that he had not “put his character in issue and such testimony caused the jury to prejudge defendant on his alleged past conduct.” Under his point he cites State v. Hook, Mo.,
This testimony of the prosecuting witness as to what appellant had told her at the time of the commission of the offense was not to prove the truth of the statement, that is, that appellant had “been up for rape twice before and that he hadn’t been convicted.” Instead it was to prove that appellant made those remarks in the form of a veiled threat. When offered for this purpose the testimony was not hearsay as to the witness. Such statements were relevant and material to explain why the prosecuting witness was frightened, to show the aggressiveness on the part of appellant, and to explain acquiescence on the part of the witness to subsequent demands made of her by appellant. As stated in State v. Harrison,
Although not material to the issue, we note that the report of the pre-sentence investigation shows that appellant previously had been twice charged with rape. In one case the charge of statutory rape was reduced to common assault, and a guilty plea entered. In the other case the complaining witness did not appear and the charge was dismissed.
The State offered in evidence three envelopes containing hair found on the floor of the automobile in which the offenses took place. Appellant’s objection was sustained on the basis that the hair had not been sufficiently identified. Appellant now asserts that the court “erred in not directing the jury to disregard any and all testimony. concerning the hair allegedly found in the complaining witness’s automobile since such hair was not received in evidence.”
No request was made that the jury be so instructed, and there was no motion to strike the testimony. The court granted all the relief requested by appellant when it sustained appellant’s objection. This is not a case where the trial court should have acted without a request, and appellant, having made no request that the jury be directed to disregard the evidence, cannot now complain on appeal. State v. Winslow, Mo.,
Appellant contends that the verdict directing instruction on rape was erroneous in that “it failed to instruct as to the necessity of the prosecuting witness to offer the utmost resistance or any resistance *288 and in that it failed to instruct as to whether there was any element of consent or a passive submission on the part of the prosecuting witness to the sexual intercourse.”
The instruction given, apparently without objection as far as shown by the record, follows the proposed instruction for forcible rape contained in Missouri Pattern Jury Instructions — Criminal. In State v. Beck,
The judgment is affirmed.
PER CURIAM:
The foregoing opinion by STOCKARD, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All of the Judges concur.
