189 Ind. 433 | Ind. | 1920
Appellant was charged under \j2250 Burns 1914, Acts 1913 p. 267, with unlawfully having carnal knowledge of a female child under sixteen years of age. A jury returned a verdict of guilty and found his age to be eighteen years.
The questions arise on motion for a new trial: (1) Error in giving and refusing certain instructions; (2) error in excluding certain evidence.
The affidavit fixes the date of the crime as February 11,-1917. To make understandable the discussion of the questions involved, it will be necessary to take cursory view of the evidence in the case. The evidence shows that appellant was seventeen years old on that date, and that prosecuting witness was fifteen years, old. Prosecuting witness became sixteen years old the following May, and appellant eighteen years old the following October. Appellant testified that he was in company with the prosecuting witness three times, and that each time they had sexual intercourse. Prosecuting witness testified that they were in company three times, and that they had sexual in
The evidence shows that the prosecuting witness was perhaps more mature than the average girl of fifteen, and it nowhere appears that she was disinclined to sustain the relations that she did to appellant at the time charged in the affidavit and prior thereto.
Appellant next complains of the court’s instruction No. 3, which is as follows: “If you, and each of you, are satisfied of the guilt of this defendant, as charged in the indictment, that at the time and place and in the manner charged in this affidavit, this defendant had carnal knowledge of-(prosecuting witness) a female child under the age of sixteen years, then you should find the defendant guilty as charged; and it is immaterial, if you find she was under sixteen years of age, whether she consented to said acts or not; whether she made any outcry or resistance. Under the law of this state a female child under the age of sixteen years is incapable of giving her consent to the act of sexual intercourse. This provision of the law is for her protection, because of her age.”
Other instructions of the court told the jury that they had a right to fix the punishment of appellant by assessing the fine and confining him in the county jail for a period to be determined by them, under §2146 Burns 1914, Acts 1905 p. 584, §270.
They base this claim on the case.of State v. Otis (1893), 135 Ind. 267, 269, 34 N. E. 954, 955, 21 L. R. A. 733, where this court said: “In case of seduction under promise of marriage, we think there can be little doubt that the subsequent marriage of the parties is a bar to further prosecution for the crime committed.”
Counsel for appellant complain bitterly of the severity of the punishment to be inflicted in such a case, under the verdict returned by the jury. The errors in this case are the errors of the appellant himself, and counsel’s complaint about the severity of the law is met by the bad faith of the appellant in his conduct after his marriage to the prosecuting witness. Had he shown good faith in his solemn engagements of marriage, he would have been protected from the rigor of the law, not only by a jury, but also by the sound discretion of the prosecuting attorney. We think this protection would have prevailed even against the malice of any individual in the community.
Judgment of the trial court is affirmed.