Duggins v. Commonwealth

290 S.W. 514, 217 Ky. 688, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 514 (Duggins v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duggins v. Commonwealth, 290 S.W. 514, 217 Ky. 688, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 49 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner—

Affirming.

The appellant, whom we shall refer to as the defendant, is seeking to reverse a judgment imposing upon him a sentence of three years in the penitentiary for the seduction of a female under twenty-one years of age, under a promise of marriage. On July 9, 1923, Miss Hattie Collis began teaching school at Cherry Grove, in Washington county. She boarded with a Mr. Baker. The defendant had been a frequent visitor at the home of Baker for some time, and in the course of the next week or ten days, he made the acquaintance of Miss Collis. They were together frequently. He took her to surrounding towns, also took her to church and to local entertainments. They were together practically every night and usually on Saturday and Sunday. According to Miss Collis, their association soon ripened into a fondness for each other, and in the early part of September, 1923, they became engaged to 'be married, and, according to her, after and because of that promise on his part, she yielded to his request to have sexual intercourse with her in the latter part of September, 1923, which act was frequently thereafter repeated. The defendant admits the acts of intercourse which he says began in the latter part of October, 1923; that when he proposed it she agreed; that they were not engaged to be married at the timé; have never been engaged to be married, and that nothing about marrying was ever said between them, except some light and- jocular talk which had been indulged in at the home of Mr. Baker. The defendant says that this act was frequently repeated, and that nothing was said about marrying until several months after the beginning of this *691 practice, when she asked him if he was going to marry; her, and he told her he was not; that he never gave her •an engagement ring, never introduced her into his home ■or to his family or friends as his betrothed. 'He testified that Miss Collis told him she was twenty-two years old.

Miss Collis testified that she was born on October 25,1902, at Sulphur in Henry county, Kentucky; that her mother died when she was one year old and her father when she was four years old; that she learned her age from having seen it in the family bible, but that this bible was destroyed in a fire in the year 1916; that she started to school in 1909 and made a grade each year, graduating in 1921; she denied telling the defendant that she was twenty-two years old. This appears in her cross-examination:

“Did Mr. Duggins not ask to have intercourse with you and you objected because you were afraid, and that he then told you that if anything came up he would marry you, and was it not because of his assurance that he would marry you in the event that any trouble came up that you submitted to him on the occasion that you say he seduced you, the latter' part of September, 1923?”
To this she answered, “Yes'.”

We shall refer to this hereafter as question A. The defendant then propounded this question, which we shall refer to as question B:

“Is it not true that defendant asked you to have intercourse with him and that you stated to him that you feared you would become pregnant and that defendant stated to you that if you should become pregnant he would marry you?”

The Commonwealth objected to this question and the •court sustained the objection, whereupon the defendant made his avowal that if the witness were permitted to •answer the question, she would truthfully answer “Yes.”

At the conclusion of the evidence for the Commonwealth, the defendant moved the court to instruct the jury to find him not guilty. The court overruled the motion. Thereupon the court, on its own motion, over *692 defendant’s objection, recalled the prosecuting' witness, and asked her the following question:

“Did the promise of defendant to marry you induce you to permit him to have carnal intercourse with you and would you have permitted him to have -carnal knowledge of you except for this promise to marry you?” The witness answered by saying, “I would not have permitted him to have sexual intercourse except for his promise to marry me.”

At the conclusion of all of the evidence the defend.ant renewed his motion for a peremptory instruction. It was again overruled, and that is the first alleged error of which he is complaining. It is his contention that the answer made by Miss Collis to question A was sufficient to warrant the court in instructing the jury to find him not guilty. Section 1214 does not forbid intercourse with, or carnal knowledge of, a female less than 21 years of age under promise of marriage, but forbids the seduction and carnal knowledge of such a female under such circumstances. To constitute the crime, the proof must establish every element of the offense as defined in the statute. The statute is not violated when in exchange for sexual favprs in praesenti the man makes a blunt offer of marriáge in futuro, conditioned upon conception resulting from the coition. Such a transaction looks more like bargain than betrothal, smacks more of barter than betrayal. The statute does not contemplate a seduction de bene esse that can be cancelled by a marriage nunc pro tunc. However, it has been held that where there is shown to have been a previous promise of marriage, and an engagement existing at the time, that the promise of the man made at the time of the woman’s fall, to marry her “if anything happened,” “If she became pregnant,” or similar expressions, was not enough to keep the act from being a violation of the statute. Hoskins v. Com., 188 Ky. 80, 221 S. W. 230; Gillispie v. The State, 73 Tex. Cr. 585, 166 S. W. 135; Cherry v. The State, 112 Ga. 871, 38 S. E. 341; Taylor v. State, 113 Ark. 520, 169 S. W. 341; State v. Teal, 108 S. C. 455, 95 S. E. 69; State v. O’Hare, 36 Wash. 516, 79 P. 39, 68 L. R. A. 107: 104 Am. St. 970; 24 R. C. L. 765, et seq. 15; Ann. Cas. 228; 35 Cyc. 1336. The theory upon which those cases were written is that the woman did not then yield to the man because of her own natural impulses, and his promise to *693 shield her shame, but because of her reliance upon the man’s previous unconditional promise of marriage, made at a time when copulation had not been mentioned, and as an effort on her part to please him, with full intention on her part of consummating the unconditional marriage engagement previously made, regardless of the consequence of the intercourse' then proposed, and as a part of her purpose to induce the man to keep the promise of marriage he had previously given. Question A is almost identical with the evidence of Miss Woodward in the case of Hoskins v. Com., supra. In that case, Miss Woodward had testified to a previous promise of marriage made her by Hoskins, just as Miss Collis testified in this case to a promise of marriage made her. by Duggins in the early part of September, before her fall for him in the latter part of that month, and further in the evidence of Miss Woodward, in the Hoskins case, we find that when she was asked what was- meant by the word “danger” in a certain letter, she made this answer:

“He thought if anything happened.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 514, 217 Ky. 688, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duggins-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1927.