viсted under an indictment on a charge of seduction, and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of not less than three nor more than five years. Upоn the solicitors resting the case of the state, and before the defendant introduced any testimony, the defendant moved to exclude ail of the evidence introduced by the state because it failed to establish a prima facie case. There was no error committed by the trial court in overruling this motion. MсCray v. Sharpe,
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“We went driving in an automobile on the highway down neаr Flint. He said he loved me, and would marry me, and take care of me. He hugged me, and kissed me, and that was the time I submitted to him. I submitted, because I loved him, and he made me such faithful promises I could not help but submit to him.”
This testimony was before the jury without objection. This brief statement paints a word picture which depicts in vivid colors evеry criminal element enumerated in the statute. There was the “art,” the skillful arrangement of a situation suitable to the attainment of his desires; there was the flattery, thе? ardent caresses and faithful professions of love; there was the temptation, the enticement to turn from the phth of rectitude; and it is not to be disputed that, if the surrender of her virtue and the commission of this social and moral crime was induced by such acts as stated by the prosecutrix, there was also present the element of deceit. To prevent by such wiles the defiling of chaste womanhood, the greatest blow that can be leveled at our social civilization, this statute against seduction was aimed. Wilson v. State, supra; Cooper v. State,
“the lаw recognizes the fact that a woman is weaker than a man; that it is the part of the man to protect; that if a man presumes upon the weakness of "a woman, and seeks to overthrow her virtue through deception, arts, temptation, or promise to marry, and through these means gets her to yield to him, and she doеs yield because of it, and she does yield her chastity, she being a virtuous woman at the time, he cannot be acquitted, but is guilty of seduction.” .
While the jury might have been justified in infеrring, from the youth and inexperience of the prosecutrix and the intelligence and other vantage ground occupied by the defendant, if the evidence tended to show such, that the woman was the weaker of the two, yet this is a question solely for the determination of the jury, depending on the pe
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euliar facts of eácli individual case. Smith v. State,
For the errors pointed out in the oral charge of the court, the case must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.
