7 Wyo. 74 | Wyo. | 1897
Pour reasons are assigned why the verdict should be set aside in this case and a new trial granted.
1. That the information is insufficient to sustain a conviction.
2. That the court erred in denying the application for a continuance.
3. On account of certain abusive language alleged to have been used against the defendant by the attorneys for the State upon the trial.
4. That the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict.
It is contended by plaintiff in error that the information is insufficient because the word “ravish” is not used in describing the offense. The alleged defect being in the manner in which the offense is charged, the objection should have been made by a motion to quash in the court below. The attention of the district court was not called to it in any way, and the question is not properly before us for consideration. But the information is in the language of the statute, and is sufficient. Bishop says : “There are commonly employed in setting Out some crimes, certain technical words for which it is believed there are no substitutes ; ” and he mentions as one of them “ravish,” in the indictment for rape. He adds : “ So the doctrine is usually stated in the books ; but the reason for it in most cases is, that either the offense is now, or it was in its origin, statutory ; and the statutory term must be employed to identify it, such being the rule for all
It is further urged by plaintiff in error that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction ; and it is contended that a conviction can not lawfully be had upon the unsupported testimony of the prosecuting witness. No such rule of law prevails in this State. Our Constitution provides that no person shall be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act. In perjury, owing to the nature of the offense, the rule is that there must be more than the testimony of one witness as to the falsity of the oath, as otherwise it would simply be “oath against oath.” And in seduction, our' statute provides there shall be no conviction on the unsupported evidence of the female offended against. There is no such rule in cases of rape. Bishop says (2 Crim. Proc., 968), “The jury can even convict on the unsupported testimony of a strumpet; ’ ’ and he significantly adds, “The court, if dissatisfied with the verdict, an set it aside.”
But the jury are not to convict simply because the law permits them to, and there is no principle of law which presumes the unsupported statement of the woman to be true, and the statement of the man to be false. Such a rule would not only be unreasonable, but dangerous and wicked. And in practice, the number of cases where there is nothing to corroborate, or cast suspicion upon the testimony of. the woman is so small that it may be said they do not exist.
In this case, according to the testimony of the prosecu-
The evidence is not clear as to the situation of the rooms with reference to each other; and it is not easy to •determine whether in locking the door she simply excluded him from her own room, or whether her purpose was to imprison the defendant for the night. At all events she locked him into his room, and up to this time he had made no improper advances. To his repeated questions about the lamp she as often replied that she did not want it, perhaps suspecting that his motive was to induce her to come to his room. After making an indecent proposal, and after they had talked about it for perhaps an hour, he asked for the matches. She must have known that this request was a mere pretext for the same purpose to induce her to come to his room or to open the door ; and yet by her own testimony she brought them. Then she says he broke open the door, and dragged her in. Yet there is no evidence whatever to show that the door or the lock was broken or injured in any way. The husband of the prosecutrix was a witness in the case, and testified that he was familiar with the lock, having put it on. But he states only that at the time of the trial it was still on the •door.
She further states that having had intercourse with her by force three times, he permitted her to go to her room to quiet her baby, upon her promise to return. That in .the meantime he went to sleep, and she did not return.
It is urged that the fact that the illicit intercourse is. admitted by the defendant is corroboration of the testimony of the prosecuting witness. We do not think so. Whether it was forcibly and without her consent is the. precise issue and the only issue in the case. A confession ■of intercourse without force, and with her consent, is not. corroboration of the charge that it was forcibly and without her consent.
Where the element of putting in fear is absent (and the. prosecutrix in this case testifies that she was not afraid of the defendant), the authorities are all to the effect that the resistance of the woman must be to the utmost of her power. This is a question of the sufficiency of the evi-
Upon the other hand the surrounding facts as detailed by the prosecutrix are consistent with the claim of the defendant, and tend to corroborate it. It would be a strange reversal of the principle that the State must clearly establish its case, to hold that the unsupported testimony of the prosecutrix must prevail against the testimony of the defendant, which is in some degree corroborated.
The evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. It is unnecessary to consider the other assignments of error. The judgment will be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.