Bigcraft v. People

30 Colo. 298
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1902
DocketNo. 4443
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 30 Colo. 298 (Bigcraft v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigcraft v. People, 30 Colo. 298 (Colo. 1902).

Opinion

Chief Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

,/Phe defendant, who is the father of the prosecuting witness, was convicted of the crime of rape and sentenced accordingly. They were the only witnesses to the material facts and contradicted each other in every important particular. We are loath to disturb the. verdict of a jury, and would not do so in this case were it not so clear that grave errors were committed by the trial court. But to allow the judgment to stand would be to violate principles of law which have been repeatedly enunciated by the highest courts of this country and England. /

The information contained two counts, in the first of which the district attorney avowedly intended to charge the defendant with carnal knowledge of the prosecuting witness, a female under the age of eighteen years, “the age of consent,” under our statute. In the second count defendant was charged with carnal knowledge of the same female forcibly and against her will. In the first count there was no necessity of charging that the crime was committed forcibly or against the will of the prosecuting witness, for she was legally incapable of consenting, while in the second such elements were necessary. The first count contained these superfluous averments. Before the plea of not guilty was entered defendant moved to quash the first count on the ground of duplicity, which was overruled by the court and an exception taken, and the ruling is assigned for error,

1. Since, by the verdict of the jury, defendant was found.guilty under the second count only, this operated as, an acquittal of the first, which, in. subsequent proceedings, must be ignored. The first [301]*301count, therefore, may be omitted from the present discussion, for if all objections directed against it are tenable, the rulings attacked were not prejudicial to defendant.

2. The second assignment of error argued goes to the ruling of the court refusing defendant’s request to compel the prosecution to elect upon which count to rely. As already stated, the attempt of the prosecution was, in the first count, to charge defendant with carnal knowledge of a female under the statutory age of consent, and in the second count with such knowledge forcibly and against her will. The two counts relate to one and the same transaction, and concern the same defendant, and it was entirely within the sound discretion of the trial court to grant or refuse this motion of defendant; for it might well be that it was impossible before the evidence for the prosecution was in with certáinty to ascertain the age of the prosecuting witness at the time of the commission of the alleged crime. The authorities uphold the ruling, of which the following are illustrations: Beason v. State, 72 Ala. 191, 193; State v. Houx, 109 Mo. 654, 661; Thompson v. State, 33 Tex. Crim. Rep. 472.

3. The district court of the second judicial district of Colorado has five divisions, of which the fifth is commonly called the criminal division. At the time of this trial Hon. Frank T. Johnson, one of the regularly elected judges of that court, was sitting in the fifth division. He requested the judge of another judicial district of the state to occupy the bench, and authorized the latter to carry on a court as attached to that division. This authorization is expressly provided for in sections 1038 and 1039 Mills’ Ann. Stats.; but the defendant attacks these provisions and the ruling below upholding them, upon the ground that there is no constitutional authority for them. [302]*302It is argued that the judge so called upon could not hold this court, as the order of Judge Johnson purported to empower him to do, since at the same time the five regularly elected judges of the second judicial district were holding court in their respective divisions; and this would enable a judge at his will to increase the number of judges of any particular judicial district, which may be done only by the general assembly. Section 12 of article 6 of the constitution, among other things, provides that the judges of the district courts may hold court for each other, and shall do so when required by law.' Defendant’s counsel urges that it is not comprehensive enough to authorize a judge of a district court to call any other judge to sit with him at the same time, though in another room and as a distinct court; — the point apparently being that the constitution only authorizes an outside judge to be called in when the judicial incumbent is himself unable to hold court.

The constitutional section is not restricted to such narrow limits, and the sections of the statute above referred to authorizing a judge of the district .court, when the accumulation of judicial business demands it, to request the assistance of the judge of any other district to hold court for the former, in a different room, and providing that the two judges may hold their respective sessions in different rooms at the same time, are not in violation of any constitutional provision to which our attention is called. In the circumstances of this case the judge presiding at the trial had authority to try it.

4. The constitutionality of the so-called indeterminate sentence law (Session Laws 1899, 233) is questioned by the defendant, but we do not think he is in a position at the present time to complain of the law in the particulars assigned, .and for this reason we decline to consider it. . •

[303]*3035. /the information was filed November 26, 1901. ^ By section 1481 Mills’ Ann. Stats., one may not be prosecuted for a rape unless tbe indictment or information for the same shall have been filed within ■three years next after the offense shall have been committed. The information fixes the time when the offense was committed as June 29,1899. Over the objection of defendant, the prosecution was permitted to give evidence of other acts of sexual intercourse between him and the prosecuting witness, some of which were committed, if at all, in some other county, and not within the period of the statute of limitations applicable to the crime charged; and the prosecution selected from among them as that upon which it would rely for a conviction one alleged to have been committed between Christmas day, 1899, and New Year’s day, 1900:

In Mitchell v. The People, 24 Colo. 532, 535, the court in speaking of a ruling admitting evidence of acts of sexual intercourse other than the one charged in the information, said: “The evidence of different acts was not objected to, nor was any motion made requiring the prosecution to elect upon which of them it would rely for a conviction. * * * All the acts proved were within the period of the statute of limitations applicable to the offense charged; and the prosecution had the right to select from among thein that upon which it would rely for a conviction; * # and the evidence of other acts of sexual intercourse between plaintiff in error and the prosecuting'witness was not introduced to prove substantive offenses, upon which a conviction might be had, but in corroboration and explanation of the evidence of the act charged. For this purpose the evidence of the other acts was clearly admissible.”

In the case at bar this evidence was objected to at the time it was offered and a motion .was made re[304]*304//quiring the prosecution to elect upon which , of the :-,acts it would rely, and the prosecution did make its election. It does not appear, however, whether the other acts testified to were introduced to prove substantive offenses or in corroboration and explanation .

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Bluebook (online)
30 Colo. 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigcraft-v-people-colo-1902.