80 Fla. 309 | Fla. | 1920
Tbe plaintiff in .error was informed against in tbe Criminal Court of Record for Dade County upon tbe charge of having carnal intercourse with an unmarried female of previous chaste character who was at tbe time of such intercourse under the age of eighteen years, “contrary to the form of tbe statute in such case made and provided.” Tbe plaintiff in error was convicted and sentenced to bard labor in tbe State prison, and seeks a reversal of tbe judgment on writ of error.
Motions to quash the information and in arrest of judgment were made and denied, and such rulings constitute tbe basis of tbe first and second assignments of error.
It is contended that tbe information which follows tbe language of tbe Acts of 1915, Chapter 6974, amending Section 3521, General Statutes, 1906, instead of tbe language of tbe Act of 1918, Chapter 7732, which repealed the former Acts upon tbe subject, should have been quashed or tbe judgment arrested because tbe offense was alleged to have been committed after tbe passage of tbe Act of 1918.
In the Shields case the judgment was reversed because the indictment was expressly and in terms predicated upon a statute which was enacted after the offense charged was alleged to have been committed.
If the indictment in the Shields case had been based upon Section 3521, General Statutes, a different case would have been presented.
Now the Act of 1915, Chapter 6974, which is deemed to be void because of a defective title, omits the word “unlawful” in denouncing the offense of carnal intercourse with any unmarried female of previous chaste character, while the language of the Act of 1918, Chapter 7732, is as follows: “Any male person who has unlawful carnal intercourse with any unmarried female person of previous chaste character,” etc.
As the crime was alleged to have been committed after the passage of the Act of 1918, the information should have been drawn under that Act. But the question is, does the omission of the words “unlawful” and “person” from the information vitiate it as a pleading under the Act of 1918. We think that such omission of the quoted words does not render the information bad, because the information was not so vague, indistinct and indefinite as to mislead the accused and embarrass him in the preparation of his defense or expose him after conviction or acquittal to substantial danger of a new prosecution for the same offense. Sec. 3962, General Statutes of Florida, 1906, Compiled Laws, 1914.
The omission of the word “person” afte r the word “female” could of course have no possible embarrassing effect upon the defendant in the preparation of his defense, because the language of the information clearly showed that the “female” upon whom the offense was alleged to have been committed was a rational being and not a beast.
The omission of the word unlawful was harmless because any carnal intercourse between unmarried persons, or persons unmarried to each other even with the female’s consent -is unlawful. So the information was cor
The third assignment of error is based upon the order overruling the motion for a new trial. The tenth ground of the motion attacks the ruling of the Court denying to defendant the right to produce witnesses to show “acts of unchastity” on the part of the prosecutrix prior to April 30, 1919, the date upon which the defendant is alleged to have had carnal intercourse with her. This ruling occurred Monday morning when the court convened. Saturday night each party announced that it had no further evidence to introduce. Monday upon the convening of court the defendant moved the court to be permitted to call witnesses to establish the previous unchaste character of the prosecutrix. This- motion was denied upon the ground that the defendant had announced the Saturday night before that he had no further testimony to introduce. This ruling was harmful error. The evidence offered was most material, going to the very gist of the offense. If the testimony offered was of such character that the jury might have believed it, the innocence of the defendant would have been established. The evidence offered was a denial of a most material element of the offense charged and was of such character as to strengthen the evidence previously introduced of a circumstantial nature denying the previous chaste character of the prosecutrix.
To preclude one from introducing evidence so material to his defense and persuasive perhaps of his innocence, mea’eiy because he had said that he had no more testimony to offer, is to enforce a rule of procedure almost to the point of a denial of justice. It is to sacrifice liberty to a mere form of procedure of court room usage the
Even if the case had been technically closed it would have been an abuse of discretion to refuse to open the case and permit the evidence to be introduced upon the proper showing being made as to why it had been previously omitted. See 38 Cyc. 1361.
While the record does not disclose that any showing was made when the motion was submitted, yet the cause had not proceeded so far that the ends of justice would have been defeated or the orderly processes of the court disturbed by an admission of the testimony.
The refusal to allow the evidence to be introduced under the* circumstances was an abuse of discretion which was harmful to the defendant and was therefore error.
For the error pointed out the judgment is hereby reversed.