De Rossett v. State

168 S.W. 531, 74 Tex. Crim. 235, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 578
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1914
DocketNo. 3150.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 531 (De Rossett 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
De Rossett v. State, 168 S.W. 531, 74 Tex. Crim. 235, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 578 (Tex. 1914).

Opinions

PRENDERGAST, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted for seducing Miss Weems and his punishment assessed at five years in the penitentiary.

The testimony of Miss Weems, if believed and corroborated, clearly made out the offense against the appellant. There were many facts and circumstances besides some positive testimony corroborating her tending to connect him with the offense.

Seduction by our statute, article 1447, Penal Code, is: “If any person, by promise to marry, shall seduce an unmarried female under the age of twenty-five years, and shall have carnal knowledge of such female, he shall be punished,” etc.

Article 789, Code Criminal Procedure, is: “In prosecutions for seduction . . . the female alleged to have been seduced shall be permitted to testify; but no conviction shall be had upon the testimony of the female, unless the same is corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the offense charged.”

In the case of Nash v. State, 61 Texas Crim. Rep., 259, Judges Ramsey and McCord, then of this court, both delivered very elaborate, able and exhaustive opinions, which were approved by this court and many times, and in many cases since then, have been cited with approval. In discussing said article 1447, Penal Code, Judge Ramsey, in that case, said: “This statute has been construed, and properly so, to apply only to a woman previously chaste. Therefore, in order to establish the crime of seduction, four things must be shown: First, that the person claimed to be seduced is an unmarried female under the age of twenty-five years; second, that she is chaste; third, that she submitted to carnal intercourse with the person charged, and fourth, that this intercourse was obtained by promise to marry upon which the prosecutrix relied. Now, while there are many loose expressions in the books to the effect, in substance, that the prosecutrix must be corroborated, both in respect to the act of intercourse and the promise of marriage, this is not the law, and never was the law. The statute no more requires corroboration in respect to the act of intercourse or to the promise of marriage than it does in respect to the age of prosecutrix, or to her previous chaste character.”

In discussing said article 789, Code Criminal Procedure, he quoted *238 from Williams v. State, 59 Texas Crim. Rep., 347, as follows: “The statute is general that the accomplice must be corroborated by other testimony tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense. The statute does not say in what this corroboration shall consist. If the testimony other than that of the accomplice should make out a complete offense, it would not be necessary to use the accomplice’s testimony. Hence the law wisely provided that the corroboration must tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense, and to require that every constituent element of the offense as sworn to by the accomplice must be corroborated would be requiring of the State an impossibility.” He then cited and quoted from many other authorities, including many decisions of this court, clearly establishing the doctrine announced quoted above.

In the opinion of Judge McCord, which was adopted in that case by this court in an opinion by Judge Harper, Judge McCord also clearly and specifically announces the same principles of Judge Bamsey above, and elaborately discussed many authorities clearly so holding and from all these authorities from this State and the various other States, he correctly announces this rule (p. 282) : “We deduce from the law that the prosecutrix is corroborated whenever there are any facts or, circumstances that tend to show that the defendant committed the offense, and that whenever the court .attempts to enlarge upon this rule by laying down a rule as to what particular issues of the case shall be corroborated, it is in error.”

Again, it is unquestionably the law of this State, uniformly so held in all the decisions passing on the question, as said by Judge Bamsey in the Hash case, supra (267-8): “It can no longer be doubted that it is the law that both the act of intercourse and the promise of marriage can be ' established by circumstantial evidence. Ho lawyer can, as I conceive, give any reason why the law of circumstantial evidence should not apply in cases of seduction as well as in cases of murder or theft.”

Again, as said by this court in Curry v. State, 68 Texas Crim. Rep., 262, 151 S. W. Rep., 319: “The law is that the testimony of the injured party in cases of this character does not have to be corroborated in each and all of the necessary elements of the offense, and that the corroborative evidence may be slight, and that the requirements of the statute are infilled if there be any corroborating evidence which, of itself, tends to connect the accused with the commission of the offense. Such corroboration only is necessary as is sufficient to satisfy a jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, of the truth of the charge, in connection with the testimony of the accomplice. Nourse v. State, 2 Texas Crim. App., 304; Jones v. State, 4 Texas Crim. App., 529; Tooney v. State, 5 Texas Crim. App., 163; Simms v. State, 8 Texas Crim. App., 230; Clanton v. State, 13 Texas Crim. App., 139; Moore v. State, 47 Texas Crim. Rep., 410, 83 S. W. Rep., 1117; Nash v. State, 61 Texas Crim. Rep., 259, 134 S. W. Rep., 709; Williams v. State, 59 Texas Crim. Rep., 347, 128 S. W. Rep., 1120; Bost v. State, 64 Texas Crim. Rep., 464, 144 S. W. Rep., *239 589; Murphy v. State, 65 Texas Crim. Rep., 55, 143 S. W. Rep., 616. . . . This must necessarily be the law and the proper construction of the statute in cases of this character; for acts of intercourse between persons are always as secret and private as can be, and under such circumstances as the parties believe will prevent their detection or even suspicion at the time. Also, engagements of young persons to marry are made in private and in secret between them; and very generally, if not entirely, the fact of engagement, for at least some length of time, is kept as privately and secretly between them as can well be. Therefore proof, in the nature of these things, generally can not be made other than by the testimony of the accomplice, corroborated by such circumstances as to time and place, opportunitjq and the course of dealing or treatment between the parties along about the time, . . . and such like matters.”

The court gave a correct charge that Miss Weems was an accomplice and required her testimony to be corroborated in accordance with the statute. The charge given by the court is a standard one and has all the time been held amply sufficient by the decisions of this court.

Appellant made no specific objection to this charge of the court, except in that he requested, and the court refused to give, the following charge:

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Related

Klepper v. State
223 S.W. 468 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1920)
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174 S.W. 580 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 531, 74 Tex. Crim. 235, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-rossett-v-state-texcrimapp-1914.