11 N.E.2d 959 | Ill. | 1937
The defendant, Fred Claussen, was indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for the crime of statutory rape of a fifteen-year-old girl, Stephanie Froncek, on September 12, 1936. He was tried by the court without a jury, found guilty, and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of five years. He has sued out this writ of error.
The prosecutrix testified that on September 12, 1936, she was just past fifteen years of age. She had known the defendant, a janitor at the Hamilton piano factory in Chicago, for about three years. A few days before July 4, 1936, she was passing the factory when he called her inside and had sexual intercourse with her and gave her a dollar when she left. The prosecutrix testified that in the first week of September she again went to the factory with Martha Eitutis, and had sexual intercourse with the defendant on a bench in a little room that had been partitioned off from the furnace room. This act was committed in the presence of Martha Eitutis. She told Martha about the first occurrence two days after it happened, and told her sister about the second about two weeks later.
Martha Eitutis corroborated the prosecutrix as to the second act. She saw it from outside the open door of the small room. On this occasion the defendant gave both girls a quarter. *432
The defendant denied having had sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix, but admitted that she and Martha Eitutis had visited him at the factory on fifteen or sixteen occasions. He testified that the prosecutrix borrowed a total of $3.50 from him and promised to pay him back when she got a job. Once he loaned her a dollar to buy a pair of stockings, and another time he loaned her a dollar to get something to eat, because her family was on relief. He made loans of smaller amounts at other times. He said that once, when he loaned her a dollar, she kissed him and said, "Thank you."
The defendant's contention that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment against him is based largely on the fact that the prosecutrix made no immediate complaint. In People v.Burns,
The next point involves the proof of the defendant's age. To establish the corpus delicti in rape without force it is necessary that the proof should show, first, that the female was under the age of sixteen; second, that the male was over the age of seventeen, and third, that sexual intercourse occurred between them. (Wistrand v. People,
The defendant contends that the People did not prove that the prosecutrix was not his wife. No one testified directly that she was not his wife, but the evidence is overwhelming that she was not, and this point need not be considered further.
The defendant insists that the court erred in admitting evidence of an act of intercourse wholly independent of that for which he was prosecuted. No objection was made to this testimony, and none could properly be made, because in cases of statutory rape evidence of other acts of sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix are admissible to show the relation and familiarity of the parties. People v. Burns, supra; People v. Cassidy,
The defendant contends that evidence that the prosecutrix had been examined by a physician more than six months after the alleged act of intercourse and found to have a ruptured hymen had no tendency to prove the guilt of the defendant. This is true,(People v. Egan,
The defendant insists there was a failure of proof, because there is no evidence that the offense was committed on September 12, 1936, the date alleged in the indictment. The exact date of the commission of the crime of statutory rape is not material. It is sufficient if the proof showed it was committed within the period of the Statute of Limitations prior to the returning of the indictment. People v. Olroyd,
The defendant urges that his reputation for morality, veracity and chastity stands uncontradicted and is entitled to some weight. While no one testified directly that his reputation was bad in those respects, we must presume that the court, who saw and heard the witnesses, took the testimony *435
as to the defendant's reputation into consideration and gave it the weight to which he thought it was entitled. The determination of the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses is in the province of the jury, or, in the absence of a jury, for the court, and we will not set aside judgment, except to prevent an injustice. People v. Hanisch,
The defendant had a fair trial and the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.