Crowson v. Swan

178 S.E. 898, 164 Va. 82, 1935 Va. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 14, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 178 S.E. 898 (Crowson v. Swan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crowson v. Swan, 178 S.E. 898, 164 Va. 82, 1935 Va. LEXIS 180 (Va. 1935).

Opinion

Campbell, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Ruth G. Crowson, plaintiff in the lower court, filed her notice of motion against the defendant, James A. Swan, Jr., to recover damages for an alleged assault and battery committed by defendant upon her with intent to commit rape.

Upon the plea of not guilty, the action was defended upon the grounds that no assault was committed upon plaintiff either with or without the intent charged; that at the time of the alleged assault defendant was incapable, mentally and [84]*84physically, of making the assault charged with the intent charged; that even if the assault had been committed, defendant has been punished therefor in the manner required by law.

There was a trial before a special jury, and upon a conflict of evidence there was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of five dollars. The plaintiff moved the court to set aside the verdict on the ground of gross inadequacy of damages, for error committed by the court in admitting and rejecting evidence and in giving and refusing instructions.

The court denied the motion of plaintiff and entered judgment in her favor for the sum of five dollars, which, under the provisions of section 3528 of the Code, carried the costs against her in the sum of $329.15.

The case of the plaintiff as displayed by the record is as follows: The plaintiff, a married woman and the mother of four children, was a resident of Chester, South Carolina. In August, 1932, she came to Culpeper county to visit her sister, Mrs. Guy May, who resided at Inlet, Virginia, and while there the alleged assault and battery occurred.

In the yard adjacent to the May residence and in close proximity thereto was a small building known as a pump house. There were three rooms in this building, to-wit: A laundry room, an engine room and a shower bath. The partition wall between the bath room and the engine room was not solid, and there was an open space of approximately fifteen inches at the bottom of the partition. At the upper right-hand corner of the partition wall there was an opening in the plaster which afforded a view of the bathroom to one standing on the pump in the engine room. There was also a window into the bathroom and this window was covered by a curtain.

On the afternoon of the alleged assault and battery, while several children were playing in the yard at the home, the plaintiff and her sister, Mrs. May, repaired to the bathroom to take a shower bath. While they were in the act of bathing, the defendant, in an intoxicated condition, arrived in [85]*85an automobile driven by his employee, a man named McGee. He enquired for Mr. May and when informed that he was not at home, defendant enquired of the children if Mrs. May was at home. Informed that she was, he said, “Mrs. May is the one I want to see anyway.” He then got out of his car, came to the pump house door, which was unlocked, and started in the pump house. One of the children said to defendant, “You cannot go in there. Mrs. May is taking a bath.” He said, “That don’t matter,” pushed open the door and entered. When he arrived on the inside he stooped down and looked through the opening into the bathroom. He then climbed on the engine and looked through the opening at the top. When Mrs. May remonstrated with him he broke open the locked door to the bathroom, violently caught the plaintiff by the arm and attempted to “jerk” her through the doorway. Mrs. May put on her bathrobe and ran out of the back door to the house. When she returned to the pump house a few minutes afterwards she met the defendant coming out the front door and found the plaintiff in an unconscious condition on the floor of the pump house.

The case of the plaintiff was challenged by the defendant upon every material point. In addition to the introduction of evidence that the defendant, at the time of the alleged assault and battery, was in a maudlin state of intoxication, the defendant introduced two witnesses whose account of the occurrence at the May home is in direct conflict with the account of plaintiff and Mrs. May. H. H. McGee stated in substance that defendant, on the day of the alleged occurrence, was so drunk that he required assistance to enable him to walk. In response to the question, “Tell the jury what happened,” the witness replied as follows: “He wanted to give Mr. Bickers a drink and told me to go over to the grocery store and get a ginger ale and some ice. I went over there to get the ginger ale. When I came back with the ice and ginger ale Mr. Swan had gone through the back garage and come through the Knee-High place I suppose; I could not find him, and he called me from the front and I went to. the front and he had gotten in the car. [86]*86He says, ‘Take me to the farm, I am getting too drunk to stay here;’ I got in the ear with him. We drove on down just about the filling station at Inlet. I said, ‘It is too late to go to the farm now. I have to go away tonight at seven o’clock; you stay too long down there.’ That was between the filling station and the forks of the road, and he says, ‘Well, drive in here to Spicer’s barn and see if we can get a drink.’ I drove down to Spicer’s barn and stopped the car, and he says, ‘Get out and find Spicer.’ I got out, went to the barn door, looked all through and did not find anybody. I came back. I said, ‘He has finished milking I guess and gone.’ I got back in the car and drove off and got to Guy’s house; he said, ‘Stop here a minute, I want to see Guy.’ Two or three children were playing in the yard; I do not know whether it was two or three. I know it was two. He asked where Guy was; they first told him down in the garden. He asked them over again. One of them said he was in the orchard and he asked the third time; said down in the field somewhere. We could hear the water running in the pump house. He says, T tell you Guy is in here.’ Went to the door, knocked two or three times before anybody answered. Presently a woman answered, says, T will be out in a minute; I am taking a bath.’ Mr. Swan turned around facing the car, and it was not over a minute before Mrs. May was out at the other door. Whether she came around the house or through that part, I do not know. I had my eyes set on him. She came out and appeared to be fully dressed, that is house dress. She said, ‘It is Jim Swan. I am surprised at you, down here drunk as a lord.’ Says, T will get Guy for you.’ She started in the house. He walked on, got in the car and we drove on back to town.” On cross-examination the witness admitted that defendant went to the window of the bathroom and “probably tried to look in the window.”

Sarah Bennett testified in chief as follows:

“Q. Sarah, what is your name.?
“A. Sarah Bennett.
“Q. How old are you?
[87]*87“A. Eleven.
“Q. Eleven years old?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Where do you go to school?
“A. Culpeper.
“Q. You were summoned here as a witness for the plaintiff, were you not?
“Mr. Miller: We will admit the fact.
“Q. Sarah, were you at the May residence, Saturday evening, in August, when Mr. Swan and another man drove up there in the car and got out?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.E. 898, 164 Va. 82, 1935 Va. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowson-v-swan-va-1935.