Finney v. Commonwealth

152 S.E. 555, 154 Va. 808, 1930 Va. LEXIS 248
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 20, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 152 S.E. 555 (Finney v. Commonwealth) 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
Finney v. Commonwealth, 152 S.E. 555, 154 Va. 808, 1930 Va. LEXIS 248 (Va. 1930).

Opinion

Epes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Schley Finney was indicted and tried on the charge of having on November 3,, .1928, raped Mrs. Mabel Gordy, a young married woman, in the town of Parksley, in Accomac county, Virginia. The accused plead “not guilty.” The; jury were unable to agree upon a verdict on the afternoon upon which the case was submitted to it, were adjourned over until the following day, and some time during the following day returned the following verdict: 1

“We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of assault with intent to commit rape, and ascertain the term of his imprisonment inthe Penitentiary to bé three years.” The court overruled a motion to set the verdict aside as" contrary to the law and evidence, and entered judgment thereon.

The only assignment of error made is that the accused was prejudiced by a statement made by the trial judge ¡in the presence of the jury while Miss Sallie Causéy, a witness introduced by the accused, was testifying. In order to comprehend the full force' of this single assignment of error, it is necessary to set out inore of the sordid testimony of this case than it is pleasant to do; and even then it cannot be so well portrayed as it is by a reading of the transcript of the testimony of the witnesses, including the interjections from time to time by the trial judge during the examination of witnesses.

The alleged, rape is claimed to have taken place in the bedroom of the apartment on the second floor of the home of Mrs. Margaret Causey, in Parksley, .which was then, and for some three years before had been, occupied by Mrs. Mabel Gordy and her husband. The only other occupants of the house were Mrs. [810]*810Margaret Causey and her daughter, Miss Sallie Causey. The floor plan" of the second floor is shown by the below diagram:

Miss Sallie Causey occupied the large bedroom at the head of the stairs. The remainder of the second floor composed the apartment of Mrs. Gordy.

The alleged rape occurred about 6:30 o’clock on Saturday evening, November 3, 1928. At that time Mrs. Margaret Causey, who is an old lady seventy-eight years old and somewhat deaf, was on the first floor of the house; but Miss Sallie Causey, who runs [811]*811a millinery shop, was not at home, and did not return home from her shop until about ten or eleven o’clock that night.

The accused and the prosecutrix had come to know each other several years prior to the time either of them married, and for a while had gone together. In October, 1924, the accused'married a first cousin of the prosecutrix, and in October, 1925, the prosecutrix married. Both couples lived in Parksley and visited in the homes of each other with intimacy.

Both Mr. and Mrs. Gordy worked. Mrs. Gordy was then and had been for about two years employed by Mr. Jack Hurdle, who runs a garage in Parksley. and usually got home from her work from an hour to an hour and a half before Mr. Gordy got in from his work, which frequently took him out of Parksley. During the spring and summer of 1928, the accused, unaccompanied by any one, visited Mrs. . Gordy a number of times in her apartment when she was there alone, usually between the time she returned home and the return of her husband, staying half an hour at the longest, according to the testimony of the prosecutrix. He came and went without any secrecy and was seen coming and going repeatedly by Mrs. Causey and by Miss Sallie Causey.

On the evening of the alleged rape, Mrs. Gordy got home from work about 6:30 o’clock and went to her apartment, where she was alone. According to the testimony of Mrs. Margaret Causey, which is corroborated by the testimony of both the prosecutrix and the accused, Schley Finney, the accused, came in about ten or fifteen minutes later. Mrs. Causey went into the front hall to turn on the light and when she turned it on Schley Finney was about half way up the steps leading to Mrs. Gordy’s apartment. He said to Mrs. [812]*812Causey: “Good evening. Is Mrs. Gordy, home?” .To which Mrs. Causey replied: “Í think she is,” and he went on up to Mrs. Gordy’s apartment. ;

Mrs.f Gordy testifies unequivocally and w;ith' such detail as- to permit of no misunderstanding of her statements that on .the occasion Schley Finney, with force -and violence, and against. her. will, while she, struggled to. prevent-it, had completed sexual intercourse with her, so complete that she, at the suggestion of a woman friend to whom she had told what had „ • ’ i - ' occurred, felt the necessity of r using and did -use an antiseptic vaginal douche as. a precaution against the possible' consequences .thereof. She , denies that , she. had' ever before had sexual intercourse with the accused' as he testifies., ,

Schley Finney, on The. other hand; unequivocally*, denies that he had sexual intercourse with Mrs. Gordy on.the occasion in question. He, however,-testifies to numerous prior, occasions on which he .had had sexual intercourse - with Mrs. Gordy, both before, and after her marriage, a.number of the occasions being during the summer and .fall of 1928. With, reference .to the occasion of the alleged rape, he testifies to an unsuccessful .solicitation of Mrs. Gordy to permit him to have • sexual intercourse with her, which was accompanied with .and carried on by acts which under circumstances other than those testified to by, him might well constitute an attempt-to rape, but which under the circumstances testified-to ¡by. him constitute solicitation to/ voluntary intercourse. . ,- - \ , /-,. .

The testimony of Mrs. Gordy, the .prosecutrix, -of -' importance in considering the question raised: by the assignment; of error,, makes the follqwing, narrative, which is given.in the first person in order to use as far as narrative- form will permit The. -exact language of [813]*813Mrs. Gordy as is indicated by quotation marks. Where there is no violence done to their meaning the position of statements is transposed to give orderly sequence to the narrative, for instance in her testimony the narrative of the two occasions prior to November 3, 1928, on which the accused had taken liberties with her, follows the narrative of what occurred on November 3, and was in reply to the question whether the accused had on any prior occasion insulted her or been guilty of improprieties towards her.

Mrs. Gordy testifies: Some time in the spring or early summer of 1928, Schley Finney came to my apartment when I was alone, and “grabbed me in the-kitchen and kissed me.. I knew that he had been drinking; and I said: ‘Schley, what in the world do you mean?’ I said: ‘You have been drinking and you are drunk.’ I said: ‘Why don’t you go home. Home is the place for you.’ I did not think very much about it. I did get mad, but I thought maybe it was because Schley was drinking, and I could overlook it.. Finally he went on down—-and after that Schley came when he got ready. Nobody said anything about him coming. He was perfectly welcome.”-

When his wife was working in Cape Charles, a little later in the summer, “he came by my home and if I had any supper I was only too glad to fix him some-supper, and do what I could for him. So, he came up there one night and he grabbed me down the hall and started to expose himself and I told him to get-out from there, I did not want him up there. And I said: ‘I am just going to tell Clarence (her husband) about this when he comes home.

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Related

League v. Commonwealth
385 S.E.2d 232 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1989)
Winfield v. Commonwealth
301 S.E.2d 15 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.E. 555, 154 Va. 808, 1930 Va. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finney-v-commonwealth-va-1930.