Davis v. State

41 S.E.2d 414, 202 Ga. 13, 1947 Ga. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 8, 1947
Docket15664.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 41 S.E.2d 414 (Davis 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
Davis v. State, 41 S.E.2d 414, 202 Ga. 13, 1947 Ga. LEXIS 333 (Ga. 1947).

Opinion

1. The evidence supports the verdict and the general grounds of the motion for new trial are without merit.

2. Where the defendant is on trial for the crime of rape, details and particulars of the complaint made by the prosecutrix should not be admitted in evidence. This rule was not violated where the State's witness simply related that she examined the person of the female alleged to have been raped and observed a bruise on her ankle, there being nothing to indicate that the prosecutrix made any statement with reference to such bruise, or pointed it out to the witness.

3. The trial court properly charged the jury as to the consideration which it might give to the testimony of a witness, admitted without objection, that the defendant had raped her under similar circumstances a few weeks before the occurrence for which the defendant was on trial.

No. 15664. JANUARY 8, 1947. REHEARING DENIED FEBRUARY 7, 1947.
L. Davis was convicted, in the Superior Court of Baldwin County, of rape, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of from one to six years. He filed a motion for new trial on the usual general grounds, which was later amended by the *Page 14 addition of two special grounds, and the exception is to the overruling of his motion as amended.

The prosecutrix was Mrs. J. H. Whittle, and her evidence, in brief, was as follows: Her husband is a wounded veteran of World War II, and in December, 1945, he was in a military hospital at Augusta. He visited his family at Christmas, and on December 27, Mrs. Whittle accompanied him to Augusta because he was unable to make the trip by himself. She decided to stay in Augusta until the 29th, their anniversary, but she could not get a hotel room, and had to spend the night sitting in the bus station. On the next day she visited her husband at the hospital and then came back to the bus station to get a bus, deciding that she must return to her home, since she could not get a room. After buying her ticket she went to get coffee and a sandwich, and they announced the bus for Macon. The loading platform was crowded and she walked back of the bus. The bus driver shook his head, and the defendant then walked out and tapped her on the shoulder and told her that he had a bus going to Macon, and directed her as to how to get on it. The bus which the defendant was driving was mostly loaded with colored people, and she sat in the first seat next to the driver. She slept from Augusta to Sandersville, where some transfer of passengers was made. The defendant awakened a soldier sitting behind her and told him to transfer to the other bus, and since she had heard the soldier say that he was going to Macon, she supposed that she would also have to change buses, and started to collect her things. The defendant asked her if she was going to Macon, and when she replied that she was, he told her that his bus was going to Macon, and she sat back down. At Tennille the colored passengers got off the bus, leaving only her and the defendant remaining on the bus. She had been talking to the defendant, telling him about her husband and two children, and having a general conversation with him. About eight miles from Tennille he told her that he intended to park the bus, and she objected. He stopped the bus and turned out the lights. He then came back where she was, and when she started to get up, he jerked her down, and tried to put his arm around her, and she slapped him. He jerked her out of the seat and pushed and shoved her to the back seat. She resisted this with all the strength she had, but he weighed about 200 pounds, and jerked her up "like I could jerk my *Page 15 baby up." He pushed her down on the long back seat and had intercourse with her forcibly and against her will. Her leg was bruised, her head hit the suitcase rack, and he tore her slip and skirt. This occurred in Washington County. The defendant then went back to his seat. "He was mad. He said I didn't try and I said I did not try. He said, `Well, you will next time.'" She understood by this remark that he planned to have intercourse with her again and she tried to reason with him. She left her seat and went to the front of the bus and sat on the "little hood thing" where she could face the defendant while she was talking to him. They passed through Milledgeville, but did not stop until they reached a described place in Baldwin County. He parked the bus in a road off of the highway, near an empty house. When he stopped the second time, she told him: "I have had hard enough time getting my children here for the man I loved and I am not going to have one for you." The defendant then provided himself with a contraceptive. He was standing in the door at this time, which prevented her getting off of the bus. They had another struggle and he again pushed her to the back of the bus. She fought him all she could but he was stronger, and he again had intercourse with her forcibly and against her consent. When they arrived in Macon she had only fifteen minutes to change buses, and since the defendant had convinced her that the bus company would do nothing about the matter if she reported it, she decided to wait to tell anyone until she reached her home. She arrived in Columbus at 3:20 in the morning. She did not tell her sister about the matter when she first arrived because her sister was not well, and she did not want to discuss it before her sister's children. She told her sister about it the next day about 12 o'clock, and later in the day talked with her sister-in-law. She called the officers of the law, and they told her that she would have to go back to Milledgeville to swear out a warrant. They could not arrange to get a car until Monday, at which time she came to the office of the solicitor-general of Baldwin County to report the matter.

On cross-examination, the prosecutrix was questioned about the conversation with the defendant before he stopped the first time, and she related two things that they had discussed. She said that she told him about a cab driver in Augusta who had made advances toward her, and also about someone breaking in her house in Columbus. *Page 16 She stated that when he stopped the bus she did not call for help, giving as her reason that she was afraid. She said that she did not know how to open the bus door, that she did not try to open the door or window. She stated that she was not sure whether she received the bruise on her ankle in Washington County or Baldwin County, but the bruise on her head was received in Baldwin County. She did not call for help when she passed through Milledgeville, since it was 10:45 at night, cold and raining, and if there was any one on the streets she did not see them.

Mrs. C. A. Belisle, sister-in-law of the prosecutrix, and her husband, C. A. Belisle, both testified that the prosecutrix had reported to them that she had been raped by the defendant. They testified that they saw a bruise on her ankle.

Charlotte Wright, a negro woman, 54 years of age, testified that: On November 17, 1945, she boarded a bus driven by the defendant to go to Milledgeville. She was the only passenger on the bus, and the defendant stopped the bus and had intercourse with her against her consent. She reported the incident to the solicitor-general, but she did not identify the defendant until after he had been arrested on the charge made by the prosecutrix.

The defendant introduced E. W. Jackson, of Sandersville, who testified that: He remembered the bus on which the prosecutrix was riding coming in to Sandersville. Passengers were changed there, and the defendant made the announcement that all passengers going to Macon should transfer to the other bus. One lady stayed on the bus.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.E.2d 414, 202 Ga. 13, 1947 Ga. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-state-ga-1947.