188 Ky. 509 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
The appellant, Earl Thomas, was tried and found guilty of the crime of unlawfully taking and detaining a woman against her will with the intent to have carnal knowledge of her himself, -which is denounced in section 1158, Kentucky Statutes. The sentence imposed upon him was two years’ confinement in the penitentiary. There is no contention, that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict of the jury, or that the pleadings are not sufficient to 'support the judgment. A reversal of the judgment is sought because of alleged errors of the court in denying a continuance or postponement of. the trial, errors, made during the trial, and in overruling the motion for a new trial.
(a) It is claimed that the court abused its discretion to the prejudice of the'accused, in denying him a continuance or the postponement of the trial until another and later day, in the term. The ground upon which the continuance or postponement was sought, was the absence of one of the attorneys for the accused, upon
(b) The appellant insists, that the court, erred to his prejudice in permitting the mother of the young woman whom the defendant is alleged to have unlawfully detained, to remark to the attorney .for defendant, while the young woman was undergoing cross-examination as a witness, that the witness did not understand, what he meant by a question which he propounded to her, and that the remark suggested to the witness to change her statement, and that she did so, upon a question material to the defense. The court of course could not prevent the remark by the mother of the witness, and the record does not show, that it was even heard by the judge. No objection was made to the remark, nor was the court’s attention called to it, nor was there any request to the court to take any action in reference to it. A reading of all the testimony of the witness leads to the conclusion that the remark of the mother to the attorney, had no influence upon the testimony of the witness, and was as harmless to the accused, as his attorneys seemed to treat it at the time.
It is, also, complained that an attorney who was assisting in the prosecution, by a question,-which he propounded to the prosecutrix, caused her to make a change in her testimony. This was a question addressed to her, to know if she understood a question asked her by the
(c) In defense of the charge against him the defendant deposed, that on three different occasions previous to the one, upon which it is claimed, that he committed the crime for which he was convicted, that the prosecutrix had voluntarily submitted to having sexual intercourse with him and that she had informed him, that as the results of the intercourse, she had become enciente, and at her solicitation, he had secured and administered to her a drug for the purpose of producing an abortion. The acts which constitute the crime denounced by section 1158, supra, must of course be done' against the will of the woman, and such á crime may , be committed against a lewd woman, as well as a chaste one, but, it is competent upon the trial of one accused of the crime to show previous sexual intimacy between himself and the woman, or acts on the part of the prosecutrix of a lewd and lascivious character with other men, occurring shortly before the commission oí the crime alleged, where the issue is whether or not the acts constituting the crime were done against the will of the woman, and were or were not done by the accused with her consent, in corroboration of the claim that the acts were done with heir consent. Brown v. Com., 102 Ky. 227; Stewart v. Com., 141 Ky. 522; Gravitt v. Com., 184 Ky. 436. Before the trial was entered upon, the appellant moved the court to cause a physical examination of the young woman to be made by a competent physician to determine whether she had ever been guilty of a fornication, and during her cross-ex-
The judgment is therefore affirmed.