Alcorn v. State

1940 OK CR 131, 106 P.2d 838, 70 Okla. Crim. 386, 1940 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 23, 1940
DocketNo. A-9759.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1940 OK CR 131 (Alcorn v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alcorn v. State, 1940 OK CR 131, 106 P.2d 838, 70 Okla. Crim. 386, 1940 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 106 (Okla. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

DOYLE, P. J.

Plaintiff in error, Charley Alcorn, herein referred to as defendant, was convicted in the district court of Mayes county of the crime of rape in the second degree. The punishment assessed being imprisonment in. the iState Penitentiary at McAlester for term of one year. Motion for new trial was denied and exception saved.

Judgment was rendered April 26, 1939. The record shows the defendant’s application, as a poor person to be furnished with a transcript of the testimony taken on the trial, was by order of the court granted.

It appears the preliminary trial was had October 28th, and defendant was held to answer to the district court for the crime of rape in the first degree, as defined by section 2515, St. 1931, 3rd sub. 21, Okla. St. Ann, § 1111, subd. 3.

To reverse the judgment, defendant appealed by filing in this court October 18, 1939, petition in error with case-made.

The information as amended, after the jury was impaneled, charges that in said county on or about the 15th of October, 1939, defendant, Charley Alcorn, accomplished an act of sexual intercourse with one Ruby McClain, a *388 (female of the age of 15 years, and not the wife of said defendant.

No- briefs have been filed and no errors have been ■pointed ont except as shown by defendant’s motion for a new trial, and by the petition in error.

This court has repeatedly laid down the rule that when no- counsel appears and no briefs are filed, the court will not diligently search the record to discover errors, but will look to the jurisdiction of the court and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction.

It appears that defendant was 42 years old at the time the crime is alleged to have been committed, was a widower, and father of three boys.

Ruby McClain testified that she had known the defendant over a year and saw him on the night of October 15, 1938, a little way west of Rose; another girl was with her; that he asked them to go- with him to a dance hall some place, and they agreed to ; then they went on to Rose and met two boys, Lloyd Wyatt and Jesse Bates, and talked to them a few minutes and she got in the car with Wyatt and the Bates boy. Arco Jenkins and Della Hanna were in the car and they all decided to meet each other at the Silver Moon at 8 o’clock; that she changed her mind to go with them and. told Lloyd to tell Charley they would meet him west of Rose; they met Charley there and she got out of their car and got in the car with him and went on to Pryor and stopped first at the Silver Moon, south of Pryor; that it is a little “Honky-Tonk” house where they dance and sell drinks. She got out of the car and went in the Silver Moon to see if there was any one there she recognized; she asked a boy by the name of Curley if he had seen Gwendolyn Potts and Margie Cox. Then went back to the car and came up town tó the Sunshine Cafe, on Main street; they went in, he drank a beer, *389 and she drank a coke, went ont to' the car and drove east and passed Gwendolyn Potts and Margie Cox, stopped and talked with them 10 or 15 minutes by the schoolhouse in Pryor, and then went south and stopped at Dugan Smith’s place; there Charley got out of the car and had a conversation with Dugan Smith in front of the filling station; they then went on south to Bed Heart Inn, and fell in company with Opal Wainwright, Bill Thomas, and Pete Garner, and they all danced and drank whisky; that she left the Bed Heart Inn in company with Charley Al-corn, Pete Garner, Bill Thomas, and Opal Wainwright and another boy, in Pete Garner’s car and stopped at a house. One of the men went in and got some more whisky, and they drove back to the Bed Heart Inn, danced some more and stayed there until about 4 o’clock in the morning. She left with Charley in his car, and they went north into Choteau, and turned east until they got to Dugan Smith’s Tourist Camp; there they got out and went in a cabin, removed their clothes, got on the bed and Charley Alcorn had sexual intercourse with her; that she had been back to see that cabin since; that there was no conversation before the act, but after the act she told him she did not come there with him to be treated that way; that they put on their clothes, got' in the car and drove east to Locust Grove and stopped a quarter of a mile from her grandfather, Oscar McClain’s, house; she got out of the car and went up to the house; they got up and her step-grandmother cooked breakfast; after eating breakfast her mother and stepfather came there and she went with them to' Mrs. Boyd’s in Bose; she told her mother what had happened and they went to Dr. Herring-ton’s office in Pryor and the doctor examined her.

On cross-examination she stated that her grandfather and his wife asked her where she had been and she told *390 them, but did not tell them anything about this offense; that she did not tell her grandmother there that Mark Hanna had been making improper advances towards her, and did not discuss a letter written to them by her. That she went with her mother and stepfather and her aunt and uncle to Bates’ Store in Rose; that her stepfather called Charley Alcorn out of his garage and talked to him while she was there with them before they came on to Pryor;.

That she first saw Mr. Wilkerson (special counsel representing the state) on Tuesday following October 15th.

Asked if she didn’t have a conversation with Jesse Bates after she testified on the preliminary examination held here October 28th, and told Mr. Bates “that if your parents had not been present you would have testified differently?” Answered: “No, sir, I did not say it.”

Handed instrument, Defendant’s Exhibit 1, she was asked:

“Q. Is that in your handwriting Miss Ruby? A. Yes, sir. Q. Is that signed by you.? A. Yes, sir. Q. That letter was written by you and addressed to your grandmother? A. Yes, sir. Mr. Brown: The defendant now offers in evidence exhibit 1. Mr. Wilkerson: The state objects. The Court: Sustained.”

Redirect:

“Q. Tell the court and jury whether or not that was the first experience you ever had along sexual lines— sexual intercourse? A. Yes, sir. Mr. Wilkerson: That is all, Miss Ruby.”

Mrs. Mark Hanna testified that Ruby McClain is her daughter; that “on the night of October 15th we hunted her; we first went to Mr. Jenkins, then to Hosey’s and came back to Rose, then we went to Pryor and got trace of *391 her from Gwendolyn Potts; we found her at Grandpa McClain’s, she told ns who she had been out with, we first took her to Mr. Bates’ in Rose, then we came over here to Dr. Herrington’s”; that there was blood on her undergarment.

On redirect she stated that Ruby had been making her home with her, working during the week and coming home on .Saturday night and Sunday.

Lloyd Wyatt testified that he had known Charley Alcorn and Ruby McClain close to' a year. On October 15th Ruby walked up to his car in Rose and got in. Jesse Bates and a girl that worked with Ruby, named Jenkins, were in the car; that he drove about 100 yards out of Rose and stopped. Ruby said she did not want to go on with us down to this girl’s house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1940 OK CR 131, 106 P.2d 838, 70 Okla. Crim. 386, 1940 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alcorn-v-state-oklacrimapp-1940.