Annunciatio v. State

169 S.E. 3, 176 Ga. 787, 1933 Ga. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 18, 1933
DocketNo. 9249
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 169 S.E. 3 (Annunciatio v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Annunciatio v. State, 169 S.E. 3, 176 Ga. 787, 1933 Ga. LEXIS 291 (Ga. 1933).

Opinions

Hill, J.

Fortunatio Annuneiatio was indicted for the offense [788]*788of rape; for that, “on the 8th day of April, 1932, with force and arms,” he “did make an assault upon the person of Eosa Clower, and did strike, beat, and wound her, and did have carnal knowledge of and sexual intercourse with said Eosa Clower, a female, forcibly and against her will;” etc. He was tried and convicted, with a recommendation to mercy. His sentence was fixed at not less than ten years and not more than twenty years. Before arraignment or pleading, he filed two pleas in abatement, which pleas were overruled. He filed a demurrer to the indictment, which also was overruled. After verdict he filed a motion for new trial, which, as amended, was overruled. The defendant excepted to each of these three rulings.

The rulings on the pleas in abatement and on the demurrer to the indictment are not argued or mentioned in the brief filed by counsel for the defendant, and are to be treated as abandoned.

The prosecutrix testified: “During the month of April I was living on Elbridge Drive and going to school at Fulton High, over here at Washington and Fair Street. I met these two men here in Kress’s and McCrory’s on April 3d, I think. I never did really get acquainted with them there. I just watched them play the yo-yo, and heard their names mentioned by some of the girls. Neither one of them talked to me there. I never seen them at any place except there at the store, only the afternoon when I went to their apartment. I went to their apartment only once, that was with Frances Hutcheson. How come me to go there, I was with Frances on Tuesday afternoon, when Ambia Subia walked almost up town with Frances, and told Frances he wanted her to come to the apartment. Frances asked him, ‘You want us to come to the apartment?’ And he says, ‘No, you come to the reception hall.’ Following that invitation, we went up-there the next afternoon, which was Tuesday; and when we got there, the first one who come to the door was Ambia, and he had on an apron and said he was cooking something. And we went to the kitchen, and he says come in there, and Frances says, ‘In your room?’ and he says, ‘Yes,’ and so we went in, and stayed until he come back in there, and he took Frances’ books and laid them down on the dresser; that was Ambia. And Fortunatio was in the next room at that time, reading a paper. And then Fortunatio come to the door and spoke a few words in his own language [789]*789to Ambia, which I didn’t understand. We were in Ambia’s room when Fortunatio was talking to him, and he asked me my name, and then he asked me did I want to see his wife’s picture, and I. told him yes, and he says, 'Come in the next room,’ and 1 went in the next room. No one went in there with me. I rvent in Fortunatio’s room, and Ambia stayed in his room with Frances, and Fortunatio’s door was left open for a few minutes, and after that few minutes Ambia came and said something in his own language I didn’t understand, and Fortunatio closed the door. Then he asked me to sit down and I told him there were no chairs in the room, and he says, ' Sit down on the bed,’ that was Fortunatio, and I sat down on the bed, and he got a pencil and scratch-pad and asked me what grade I was in in school, and I told him. He asked me was I taking Spanish. I told him no, and I asked him to write a few words in Spanish for me, and he did; and then he pulled me back on the bed and kissed me. He didn’t show me anything else, and nothing else happened; and after he threw me on the bed and kissed me, then he felt of my parts, and he put his hand up under my dress. 1 fought him. I saw I could not keep him off. Then he put one leg on me and took out his private parts and put them against my private parts. When he finished I got up; all the time I was fighting, and I started crying. Then I got up, and I discovered I was bleeding. I went home that night, but I didn’t tell my mother or my father anything about it; and my mother was milking ; and I washed out my bloomers so she would not know it, and still she didn’t know anything about it. . . This garment is the bloomers I refer to. When I took them home and washed them, T hung them on the back line. I didn’t tell my mother, because I was afraid she would tell my daddy, and my daddy would beat me. Me and Fortunatio didn’t have any conversation after he did this thing to me. He didn’t speak to me, only to say to come back, and told me not to tell Frances, but he did not give me any reason for not telling her. Q. 'Tell the jury whether you ever consented for him to do this thing to you. A. No sir, I didn’t.’ He never asked me to let him do these things. What I did to try to prevent it, well, I fought, I slapped him once or twice — more than that, I think;” etc.

Dr. W. A. Arnold testified that he examined the girl about a week after the alleged rape, and found her hymen ruptured. He could [790]*790not state how long it had been so. The mother of the prosecutrix testified that she found the bloomers referred to in the girl’s testimony; and that she knew the stains left on them were bloodstains, and were not caused by the girl’s “periods.” Paul Seymour and Harry Ingram testified that they saw Eosa Mae Clower and Frances Hutcheson go into the apartment-house on Washington Street; that they saw Eosa Mae Clower and the defendant in a room before the window, struggling; that they reported the matter to a policeman in the neighborhood, and the next day they reported the matter to the office of the solicitor-general, and a raid was made on the rooms of the defendant, and some girls were found there. Paul Seymour testified: “When this girl and boy was tussling by the window, they were both standing by the window. I don’t know how far they were from the window. I know I seen them in the window. I guess they come right close up to the window when I seen them. I know I seen them. And I swear that was Miss Clower who wrestled by the window, when I was that distance from them across the street, looking up, and saw them at the window. I guess that tussling went on in the room for fifteen minutes.”

The defendant introduced no witness. He made a statement in which he denied the charge against him.

The evidence was sufficient to authorize the verdict.

The motion for new trial assigns error because the court failed anywhere to instruct the jury that they were to disregard any testimony or evidence ruled out by the court. This ground states the rulings by the court on testimony of Frances Hutcheson, as follows: Q. (by the solicitor-general) : “Following the reception of this note here I first exhibited to you, state whether or not you got any invitation from either of these men.” This was objected to as leading, suggesting, and calling for a conclusion of the witness, and the court overruled the objection by permitting her “to state whether she received an invitation.” “ Q. Frances, did you get an invitation to go any place from either of these men; and if so, state who was there ? A. I got an invitation, and Eosa Mae Clower was present, but nobody else. The invitation was given to me. Ambia asked, me to come to his room. There was nobody there at the time but Ambia and Eosa and me.” On objection the court ruled out what happened when this defendant was not there, but failed to instruct the jury what was being ruled out, and that they should eliminate [791]*791such testimony from their consideration. The same witness testified: “I didn’t go anywhere on that invitation, but following that I went to where those two boys were. I went to their room located at 255 Washington Street, Tallulah Apartment-house.

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.E. 3, 176 Ga. 787, 1933 Ga. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/annunciatio-v-state-ga-1933.