Deffenbaugh v. State

257 P. 27, 32 Ariz. 212, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 166
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1927
DocketCriminal No. 660.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 257 P. 27 (Deffenbaugh v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deffenbaugh v. State, 257 P. 27, 32 Ariz. 212, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 166 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

ROSS, C. J.

The appellant appeals from a conviction of rape, alleged to have b$en committed upon his daughter, Madrene Deffenbaugh, a few days after she arrived at the age of consent (18 years) by: (1) Overcoming her resistance by force and violence; and (2) in preventing resistance by threats of immediate and great bodily harm, accompanied by apparent power of execution. He claims that errors were committed in the course of his trial of such a *215 damaging nature as to require the setting aside of the judgment of conviction.

The denial of his motion for an instructed verdict at the close of the State’s case, the motion being upon the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the charge, is the basis of his first assignment. It is contended hereunder that the evidence falls short of establishing that the prosecuting witness ’ resistance was overcome by force or violence, or that she was prevented from resisting by threats of immediate and great bodily harm, accompanied by apparent power of execution, but that on the contrary it establishes a willing consent on her part.

Under the statute, subdivisions 3 and 4, section 231 of the Penal Code, it was essential that the state establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the act charged was accomplished in one of the ways alleged in the information. The prosecuting witness admitted that she consented to acts of sexual intercourse with appellant, but says she did so because of a beating her father gave her shortly before and his threats to beat her again if she did not yield to his wishes. Her testimony was:

“He threatened to whip me with a strap, a piece of leather and rubber, the same one he used on me in March. . . . “When he told me he would whip me with a strap I quit resisting.”

Referring to the March incident she said:

“He whipped me at that time with a big kind of wire strap that was at least a quarter of an inch thick and two inches wide, and rubber over it. He whipped me hard enough to make the blood come, and large welts all over my back.”

Again she said, explaining that when appellant would come to her bed and she would move away from him:

“He would fly into a rage and talk to me and tell me things that he would do to me and just scare me *216 until I just had to give up to him.” “He threatened to whip me all the time, and sometimes when I would fight him like that he would just stand over me and he would be so mad and grit his teeth and just shake and be white, and he would get a strap and he would stand over me and he would tell me to say certain things, and if I didn’t say them he would whip me.”

In McQuirk v. State, 84 Ala. 435, 5 Am. St. Rep. 381, 4 South. 775, the law is stated as follows:

“An acquiescence obtained by duress, or fear of personal violence, will avail nothing, the law regarding such submission as no consent at all. If the mind of the worn an is overpowered by a display of physical force, through threats, expressed or implied, or otherwise, or she ceases resistance through fear of great harm, the consummation of unlawful intercourse by the man would be rape. 1 Wharton’s Crim. Law, § 557; 2 Bishop’s Crim. Law (7th ed.), §1125; 3 G-reenl. Ev. (14th ed.), § 211.”

See, also, 22 R. C. L. 1185, § 16.

We think the kind and degree of resistance that should be exerted must depend upon the surrounding circumstances, and when the female is so overpowered by fear of personal violence that she does not resist, the element of resistance is dispensed with. As is said in State v. Cowing, 99 Minn. 123, 9 Ann. Cas. 566, 108 N. W. 851, “resistance is necessarily relative.” For instance, where the act is induced by fear or through coercion of one whom the female is accustomed to obey, such as a parent, or one standing in loco parentis, it would be unreasonable to require the same high degree of resistance as where that relation did not exist. Hammond v. State, 39 Neb. 252, 58 N. W. 92. As to whether the threats by appellant to whip his child with a wire-rubber strap of the kind described by her, and his power and determination to do so unless she gave in to him, and also his apparent ability to inflict great bodily harm with such strap, were sufficient to frighten prosecutrix *217 into submission, were questions for tbe jury, and if tbe jury were satisfied, as they seemed to have been, that ber submission was tbe result of ber belief that be would execute bis threat, there were present all the circumstances to constitute tbe crime of rape as defined by subdivision 4 of section 231 of tbe Penal Code.

Tbe appellant has excerpted from an instruction this language:

“You are instructed, while it is tbe law that the testimony of tbe prosecuting witness should be carefully scanned, still this does not mean that such evidence is never sufficient to convict, and if you believe tbe prosecuting witness, it is your duty to render a verdict of guilty,”

■ — and contends that it violates tbe rule against singling out tbe testimony of a particular witness, and also that it amounts to a directed verdict of guilty. Tbe complete instruction is as follows:

“You are instructed that tbe charge of rape is in its nature a most heinous one, likely to create a strong prejudice against tbe accused. It is á charge easy to make and bard to disprove. On this account you should bear in mind tbe difficulty of defending against such charge, and consider carefully all tbe evidence and tbe instructions in making your verdict. You are instructed, while it is tbe law that tbe testimony of tbe prosecuting witness should be carefully scanned, still this does not mean that such evidence is never sufficient to convict, and if you believe tbe prosecuting witness, it is your duty to render a verdict of guilty.”

It is obvious that tbe instruction bad a twofold purpose: To warn tbe jury to scan and carefully weigh tbe testimony of the prosecution, and at tbe same time to advise them of the well-settled rule that a conviction of rape may be bad upon tbe uncorroborated testimony of tbe victim alone. Curby v. Territory, 4 Ariz. 371, 42 Pac. 953; Trimble v. *218 Territory, 8 Ariz. 273, 71 Pac. 932; 22 R. C. L. 1222, § 56. In that view, we think the first criticism is without merit. The language assigned as erroneous has been condemned where the charge was that of an assault with intent to commit rape, because the intent with which the assault is made is always a material element of the crime charged, the court, in People v. Johnson, 106 Cal. 289, 39 Pac. 622, saying it was error “to put a state of facts to the jury which would bar them from finding the intent to be other than that charged by the information.”

But, in People v. Liggett, 18 Cal. App. 367, 123 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
257 P. 27, 32 Ariz. 212, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deffenbaugh-v-state-ariz-1927.