Bean v. People

16 N.E. 656, 124 Ill. 576, 1888 Ill. LEXIS 1001
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 16 N.E. 656 (Bean v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bean v. People, 16 N.E. 656, 124 Ill. 576, 1888 Ill. LEXIS 1001 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the October term, 1887, of the Winnebago circuit court, the plaintiff in error was indicted for, tried, and convicted of the crime of rape, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for one year. He brings this writ of error for the reversal of the judgment.

It is insisted that the evidence does not support the verdict. It appears from the testimony, that the alleged offence was committed upon the prosecutrix in her father’s garden, about twelve rods from the house, on the evening of May 19,1887,— a pleasant evening, when it was “middling light,”—at about seventeen minutes past eight o’clock, or just as the 8:17 train pulled out of the station. Her father’s house was on the west side of the river, in Cherry Valley, (a village of some six hundred inhabitants,) on high ground, and the place in the garden where the assault was claimed to have taken place, was in full view of the hotel, mill, and most of the business places of the town. Her father was in the house, in bed, and the front door was open. There was a house just across the alley, where Mr. and Mrs. Kettle lived, and a Swede family lived in another house near by. The accused was the family physician. His weight was about two hundred pounds. The prosecutrix was twenty-two years of age, and weighed about one hundred and twenty-seven pounds. Her story is, that she stood by a four-board fence of the garden, leaning her arms on the fence, watching the train, when, all at once, without her having previously seen him, the defendant grabbed her from the other side of the fence, said he was there for the purpose of getting the best of her, climbed over the fence, pulled her some distance, threw her down upon the ground, and violated her person. She states that she made all the resistance in her power, describing particularly what she did; that she cried out loud all the tim.e,—as loud as she had the strength to cry,—though in describing the particulars in that respect they do not show very satisfactorily that outcry to such extent was made. Her father testifies, that somewhere near half-past eight o’clock that evening, she came to his room, where he was in bed, and made complaint of the assault. Her two brothers, Maurice and George Beid, testify that on the evening in question they met the accused on the west side of the river, in Cherry Valley, some twenty-five or thirty rods from their father’s place, and went directly home; that on going into the house they found their sister crying and sobbing, and in answer to inquiry what was the matter, she told of the occurrence. They say her hair was all down, and the back of her clothes was all dirt. There is no testimony directly contradicting any of these statements. The facts testified to certainly tended to prove the commission of the cime alleged, and if the jury believed the testimony, we could not say that they were not justified from it in finding that the offence charged had been committed. There is somewhat of an air of improbability, that, under all the circumstances disclosed by this record, the crime charged in the indictment should have been committed by this defendant. But the question of the credibility of witnesses is one peculiarly for the jury, and we think their finding in that respect must in this ease he accepted as final. We do not think there is warrant for saying that the verdict is not sustained hy the evidence.

On May 28,1887, a complaint, before a justice of the peace in Winnebago county, was made and sworn to by J ames Beid, the brother of the prosecutrix, charging the defendant with the offence for which he ‘was indicted, and alleging that the offence was committed on the 26th day of May, 1887. This complaint was offered in evidence by the defendant on trial under the indictment, and its exclusion by the court is urged as error. James Beid was not a party. He was not a witness upon the trial, and there is no ground shown to make his statement on another occasion, under oath or otherwise, competent evidence in the case.

Defendant offered to prove by the witness Crompton, that himself and Maurice Beid, and others, were .present at a band meeting in Cherry Valley, on May 23, 1887, and that Maurice Beid then proposed the name of the defendant for leader or director of the band. On objection, this offered evidence was excluded by the court, and exception taken. We do not perceive on what ground this evidence was competent, except for the purpose of impeachment of the witness Maurice Beid, and no proper ground had been laid in his examination, by calling his attention to the matter of such proposal, to render the evidence admissible for the purpose named.

Complaint is made as to the giving of instructions on behalf of the People. The first instruction is complained of, which relates to the meaning of “reasonable doubt.” It is said this instruction might answer for a treatise on the subject of reasonable doubt, and that a law treatise ought not to be given to the jury as an instruction. What is a reasonable doubt is liable to be misconceived by a jury, and in order to their full understanding of its import somewhat of amplification may he excusable. The instruction is rather unusual in length, upon the subject, it consisting of seven specifications of what is, and what is not, a reasonable doubt. It is not claimed that any one of the statements is incorrect, and we believe that they have all received the sanction of this court. We can not hold that the instruction is erroneous.

It is said the third instruction, relating to the law as to penetration, is not based on any evidence in the case. We think otherwise. The witness says- there was sexual intercourse.

The fifth instruction is as follows:

“The court instructs you, that if you believe, from the evidence, that the prosecuting witness told her father of the assault alleged to have been made on her, at the earliest opportunity, then that is a corroborating circumstance tending to sustain the truth of her statements.”

As the witness, in the complaint to her father, as well as in her testimony, had stated that the defendant was the offending party, it is said this instruction informed the jury that telling her father of the assault was a corroborating circumstance tending to sustain the truth of the witness’ statement that the defendant was the person who committed the offence, and ■that the particulars of her complaint are not evidence of the truth of her statements. The complaint made by the witness was proper evidence only of the fact of making complaint, and not of who the person was that committed the offence. On the giving of the evidence of the complaint, no objection was made to the statement of the name of the person involved. The instruction was, strictly, too broad in its use of the term “statements.” The instruction might properly have been more guarded, and have said that the prosecuting witness’ telling her father of the assault was a circumstance tending to sustain the truth of her statement, on. trial, that such an assault was made. In that form the instruction was unobjectionable. This was the substantial meaning of the instruction given, and was probably so accepted. We do not think the instruction erroneous, as is claimed, in singling out a portion of the facts and giving undue prominence thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.E. 656, 124 Ill. 576, 1888 Ill. LEXIS 1001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bean-v-people-ill-1888.