Beason v. State

208 S.W. 164, 84 Tex. Crim. 449, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1919
DocketNo. 4815.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 164 (Beason v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beason v. State, 208 S.W. 164, 84 Tex. Crim. 449, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 17 (Tex. 1919).

Opinions

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

Appellant was. convicted of assault to rape Miss Allie Alexander, a woman, by force.

Appellant contends the evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction. The statement of facts has been read and studied more than once. The evidence was amply sufficient to sustain the conviction. It is unnecessary to recite the whole evidence. Some of the main features of it will be stated.

Miss Alexander, the assaulted girl, was a young woman about twenty-one years of age. The appellant a young man twenty-six or twenty-seven years of age. She was barely acquainted with him. She did not live in the community where the .assault was committed but lived elsewhere with her parents. On July 24th she was on a visit to her married sister, who lived near where the assault occurred. The assault occurred in the dead hours of night, the exact hour not stated, but it must have been late in the night. In the evening appellant sought to make an engagement with her to take her from Shiloh Church that night back to her sister’s, whom she was visiting. She hesitated to make an-engagement with him because she was so slightly acquainted with him. However, others interceded in his behalf, and upon their assurance that he was all right she -made the engagement with him. Her married sister and her husband attended the church that night as well as one of her unmarried sisters. • Her married sister and her husband were in a wagon. Her single sister, whom a young man escorted, and her cousin, a young man, who accompanied another young lady, walked. Appellant took her in his buggy. The married sister and her husband left the church first. It was understood between appellant and her, and her unmarried sister and the other young lady that they would precede them in the buggy but drive rather slow, which they did. The distance from the church to her married sister’s is not given, but must have been a few miles. There were several residences along the road from the church to her married sister’s, close to the road, the last one was Mr. Bozelle’s. The distance between Bozelle’s and her sister’s, along the road, was about 700 yards—-not quite so far by air line. It was about 390 yards from Bozelle’s, along the main road to where a road turned off to go up to her sister’s, and about 315 yards from where this road turned oft to her sister’s. It was about 400 yards from where this road turned out back about the opposite direction of her sister’s to where a Mr. Mullenex lived.

Appellant’s conduct towards Miss Alexander was not improper until *451 they had passed Hi. Bozelle’s house. After he had passed it he announced to her that that was the last residence they would pass until they reached her sister’s, and that he began his improper conduct.

This conduct consisted at first of his placing his arm behind her on the back of the buggy seat. She protested and objected to this and demanded that he should not so act. He persisted. She then took his hand and arm from behind her and pulled it away therefrom. When she did so he would take hold of her hand and attempt to hold it, but she would wrench it away from him. When he got to the point of this cross-roads he announced to her that he would stop there. The night was quite dark. She objected and protested, and repeatedly demanded that he should drive on to her sister’s and not stop there, but he refused. He then turned his buggy down the road toward Mr. Mullenex’s, in the opposite direction from her sister’s. She protested and objected and demanded that he should permit her to get out, which he refused to permit and prevented her from getting out. She said: “I tried to get out, but he wouldn’t let me out. He put his arms around me then and commenced holding me that way. .He just put both of his arms around me this way (witness indicating) and was holding me and I could not get out.” She swore he finally told her that if she would get out, he, too, would get out—“we will get out.” She told him she was not afraid to go on home to her sister’s alone and persisted in her efforts to get out and go. But he in offering to then let her get out said repeatedly: “We will get out here.” She told him she didn’t want him to get out but she wanted him to let her get out. She swore: “I think I got my foot on the stirrup then and would have gotten out but he flew mad and showed me no respect and I was afraid to get out there. I was afraid to get out, I was afraid he would get me out of the buggy and I could not do anything with him—was afraid if he got me out of the buggy I could not do anything with him, I was afraid he would overpower me. As to why I did not get out of the buggy, he was holding me with his arms and hands. He had both of his arms and hands hold of me, and I could not get out. ... I tried to get out all of the time but I couldn’t.” By this time appellant had driven about 215 yards from the crossing of said roads towards Mr. Mullenex’s and he there stopped the buggy. It was from about 200 to 220 yards from where he stopped to Mr. Mullenex’s house. She swore that when “he stopped and I tried to .get out—kept on trying to get out all of the time—but he would not let me out. I tried to get him to let me out when he stopped and told him everything I could, but he wouldn’t let me out and still held me, and I tried to get out anyhow and could not. He was holding me and I was scuffling around trj'ing to get out and my side was against the arm piece of the buggy and my head back this way, and it was hurting my side, this arm piece was; and he just kept on putting his arms around me and squeezing me and I was wrenching about all I could. I was just scared nearly to death and couldn’t hardly get my breath, and he kept on holding me tighter and putting *452 his feet and legs against me and I tried to shove him away with my feet and then he put his leg over me this way (witness showing). He tried then to get his left leg over this way in between my legs, but I tried to keep his leg knocked away with my knees and feet. I would just kick his leg off. He just kept on there that way, I don’t know how long—trying to get his leg in between my legs, but I kept it kicked off, but in some way he got around sorter in front and sat down across my lap. He just got straddle of my lap sitting in the buggy. He was holding both of my hands down this way with both of his hands (witness showing) and I could not get him off. Part of the time he had me around the waist with both arms and part of the time he was holding my hands down in front with both hands. At that time be had gotten straddle of my lap and was sitting down on me in that way. Before he got straddle of my lap he had me around the waist with both hands and it was then that he kept on trying to put his leg in between my legs and I kept it kicked off with my knees and feet and after that he got around in front somehow and sat down straddle of my lap. Of course I was begging him to stop all of the time and when he was trying to put his leg in between my legs and I was kicking it off, he told me to stop, and I told him I would not do it and he said, 'How do you expect me to love you and you doing this way?’ He kissed me more than once, but I was not willing for him to kiss me at all, and I tried to keep him from kissing me. He did not bite me but he tried to. I tried to keep him from kissing me and biting me. He kissed me but he did not bite me. I never consented for him to kiss me and never consented for him to do any of the things he was doing with me.

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Related

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198 S.W.2d 901 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 164, 84 Tex. Crim. 449, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beason-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.