203 S.W. 54 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1918
This trial was under an indictment for rape charging its accomplishment by force, threats and fraud upon the person of Ethel Henley. The punishment was fixed at imprisonment for life.
The injured party was a young girl who had been in the habit of working for something like a year, and did not live with her family, and at the time of the alleged offense was doing housework for the appellant, who was a barber and whose family consisted of his wife and children. After prosecutrix was employed appellant bought her some clothes. The house in which they lived contained about six or seven rooms. The injured party slept in a room adjoining that occupied by appellant and his wife. Her testimony shows that appellant came into her room about 12 o'clock at night. She was awakened by his entering the room and she screamed, and he sat down upon the bed and asked if she was scared. She told him to leave her alone, that she was sleepy, and turned her back on him, and he asked her to turn over and talk to him, that he would not bother her. She did not turn over at that time, but later he took hold of her arm and she did turn over. He laid by her a few minutes and put his arm across her breast. She said: "I tried to get away from him — and he told me if I hollered or made a racket he would kill me, and he got up and went in the other room and came back. His wife came in directly after he came in; he got her to come in there. I was crying after he told me he would kill me and had him call her. She told me I had it all to go through with any way and I might as well go on then. He asked her if she cared and she said no, she didn't care. She sat there on the bed a few minutes and talked and then got up and left. He then pulled off all his clothes and had intercourse with me. He forced me to. I was still crying. I did not consent to it. I asked him to go and leave me alone; that I didn't want to do wrong. I asked him to go away several times. My limbs were together and he taken his hands and forced them open." She complained that it was painful, and after he got through he went into the other room and came back, and she asked him for a drink of water. He said he would go and break some ice, and while he was gone she grabbed her clothes and ran, going to a restaurant, and reported the rape. She said she had a sweetheart, and that she talked to him at the gate on the evening before the incident happened. She said that her sweetheart, Carson, talked to her at the gate, but did not come in the house. Cross-examined, she said that she screamed before she knew who it was in the room; that she did not get out of bed; that she could see who it was by the moonlight; that she did not call anyone at first; later called Mrs. Woods; that she made no effort to get out of bed; that she knew Mrs. Woods and the two children were in the adjoining room; that she did not call Mrs. Woods but had the appellant do so; that before Mrs. Woods came she told appellant she did not want to make any trouble between him and his wife, and he said he would call his wife. "I went to crying and he told me if I cried any more he would kill me." That the reason she wanted him *334 to call Mrs. Woods was she thought maybe she would make him go out. She says she was wearing a nightgown and drawers, and that she unbuttoned the drawers because he threatened her and told her to unbutton them. He told her if she did not do it he would kill her. He was in bed some five or ten minutes before doing anything, just loving her while he lay there. "He just told me if I didn't do what he wanted me to he would kill me, while he was lying there loving me." He went out of the room and came back and she saw something in his pocket that resembled a razor. She did not try to get away while he was gone; was afraid to; "didn't make any effort to leave while he was gone; I was afraid he would try to kill me. We didn't do any tussling or fighting there on the bed before I unbuttoned my drawers, it was after they were unfastened. The only force he used was to pull one of my legs over, and he forced me to do it. He started to lay my leg over and I tried to keep him from opening my leg. I did not try to get out of the bed. I tried to get him out. I took my hands and tried to push him off. My room is right next to the jail building, within a very few feet of it, but I was afraid to holler or say anything. I knew there were men guarding the jail and I knew there was another house on the other side right close to ours with a number of people sleeping in it. I did not try to attract the attention of anybody. I just tried, that is all. When he was taking his clothes off I wasn't doing anything but just laying there. When Mrs. Woods went out of the room I did not try to go out with her or stay with her for I was afraid of him." She said she believed that appellant would carry out his threat.
Appellant's wife testified that appellant came home about 5:30 o'clock in the evening, and went back to work, returning about 9 o'clock, his usual hour; that Ethel ate no supper, but during that meal was in the front room talking to a man whom she said was named Carson, and part of the time talked to him at the gate. Witness claims to have invited both of them to supper, and after appellant left, Ethel and Carson went into Ethel's room; that Ethel did not wash dishes, which was her duty; that she remained in her room with Carson until about 9:30 or 10 o'clock. Witness said while she was attending to her children about the house she noticed Ethel's door closed and tried to open it and found it locked; that she looked in at the window and saw Ethel and Carson on the bed together in the act of intercourse. She further testified that she became angry, and after the man had gone told Ethel she must leave the house the next morning; that Ethel began crying and was crying when appellant came home, and appeared very angry. After appellant came home she began to wash the dishes. Witness claims to have gone to bed with appellant about 10:30 or 11 o'clock; that there were two babies in the room and one of them was sick; that she was not in a good humor and did not go to sleep before the officers came in, and that she knew her husband did not leave the room before that time. That about thirty minutes before that time she heard the gate slam. She claims *335 to have made a statement to the officers the morning after the arrest of appellant in accord with that testified to on the trial.
Several persons testified that they lived nearby and heard no disturbance. The keeper of the restaurant testified that the girl came to the restaurant, first to the window, and called for help. She was crying and without shoes. She could not tell anything. "He tried to kill me," is all she said. An officer was called. She had her dress in her hand, and said the man tried to kill her. "If I didn't do this, he tried to kill me." She said he had a razor. The county physician made an examination of the girl and testified that in his opinion from the appearance of the vagina she had had intercourse with someone; that she was quite nervous; that the hymen was entirely gone; "that if the hymen had been penetrated that night fragment edges of the ruptured hymen would still be showing there, I think it would, undisputably, but I didn't notice anything like that in this girl. The hymen disappears from different sources. The hymen could have entirely disappeared in an entirely virtuous girl. The absence of the hymen is not of itself necessarily an indication of a lack of virtue." That he was unable to tell how long the hymen had been gone.
Appellant made an application for a continuance on account of the absence of Mrs. Harriet Bryan. This witness resided in Tarrant County, and a subpoena was issued for her a few days after the indictment was found. The indictment was filed the 8th of August, and the trial began the 20th of August. The absence of the witness was accounted for by the statement that she was secreting herself to avoid service, but that her absence was temporary, and her testimony could be obtained by a continuance or postponement. By her he expected to prove that she saw the injured party, Ethel Henley, go out into the street, hail a man who was passing and take him into the room she occupied; that the witness did not know the man; that he remained for some time and did not leave until late that night. The State controverted the motion by affidavit of a witness who claimed that she, Mrs. Harriet Bryan, lived near the residence of appellant, and that the affiant had several conversations with her concerning the injured party, Ethel Henley, in one of which Mrs. Bryan had said that she had seen a man standing with the girl at the gate of the house which was occupied by appellant, and later they went in the house together, and the man in a few minutes came out and went away, and some time after that had talked with Mrs. Bryan again and that Mrs. Bryan said she was mistaken about the matter.
This was the first application for a continuance. There was no contest of the diligence. The court qualifying the bill says that the affidavit mentioned above was presented and considered by him along with the application for a continuance, "and the application was thereupon overruled." We understand from the record that the court was influenced to make the order refusing to continue the case by the affidavit mentioned. The effect of the affidavit controverting the motion was to cast doubt upon the truth of the testimony of the absent witness by reason of *336
her having made alleged contradictory statements with reference to the matter. The State was privileged under article 611 to have controverted under oath the diligence set up in the application and the court might have inquired into the question of diligence thus raised. Arts. 612, 613, C.C.P.; Howard v. State, 8 Texas Crim. App., 53; Hardin v. State, 40 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Attaway v. State, 31 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Lane v. State, 28 S.W. Rep., 202. The diligence being sufficient, however, it was not within the province of the court on the hearing on the application for a continuance to pass upon the weight of the evidence which appellant desired from the absent witness. The probable truth of the testimony of the absent witness may be looked into on motion for new trial in connection with the evidence adduced upon the trial. Steel v. State,
If appellant could prove by Mrs. Bryan, as he claims in his motion, that she had seen a man go into the house with Ethel Henley and go into her room, it would have been a material fact. Ethel Henley denied that this occurred, and Mrs. Woods affirmed that it took place, and circumstantially that the man Carson had intercourse with the girl on the night of the alleged offense. The fact shown in the affidavit attached to the motion that Mrs. Bryan had afterwards retracted her statement, or changed it, would have gone to the weight of her evidence and to the credibility. The State used as evidence against appellant the fact that someone had had intercourse with the girl on the night in question, and counsel for appellant earnestly insists that the State's evidence fails to meet the measure of the law in the prosecution for rape by force, threats and fraud, in that there was no fraud practiced, and that the failure to make outcry and the extent of the resistance are not sufficient, citing several cases, as follows: Perez v. State, 50 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Arnett v. State, 40 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Elliott v. State,
Our statute, art. 1064, P.C., defines force, and article 1065, P.C., defines threat, as applicable to this offense. The rule seems to be that where, as in this instance, threats and force are charged in the indictment, and there is evidence of each, it is not necessary that either the force or threats alone measure up to the standard of the statutory definition. The cogency which one contributes to the other may be sufficient to constitute all that is required. That is Mr. Branch's conclusion from the decisions. Branch's Ann. P.C., sec. 1782. It is the rule recognized in some of the authorities mentioned by appellant, notably Perez v. State, 59 Tex.Crim. Rep.. See, also, Cole v. State, 57 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Sharp v. State, 15 Texas Crim. App., 171; Sawyer v. State, 39 Tex.Crim. Rep.. Under the facts and this rule we do not think that the evidence was such as to justify the court in taking it away from the jury.
The appellant's defense, asserting that the injured party had intercourse with another person on the night in question and not with appellant, was, we think, sufficient under the authorities to justify the introduction by the State of evidence supporting the general reputation of the prosecuting witness for chastity. Jacobs v. State, 66 Tex.Crim. Rep., 146 S.W. Rep., 558.
The State undertook to lay a predicate on cross-examination of appellant's wife to show that appellant and his wife were married after the birth of one or more of their children. We think that such impeachment of her would have been on an immaterial issue and one which would have been inadmissible and harmful to appellant, in that it would have tended to burden his case with evidence that he and his wife had lived in adultery before their marriage, a criminal offense in no way connected with that under consideration. This matter as presented in the bill does not make it clear that the impeachment took place.
The assignments of error not discussed have been examined, and, we think, present no reversible error. The evidence adduced and the nature of the case are such that in our opinion the error committed by the trial court in refusing to continue or postpone the case for the purpose of permitting appellant to obtain the testimony of Mrs. Bryan was material and requires a reversal of the judgment, which is ordered.
Reversed and remanded.