Gregory v. State

1927 OK 237, 258 P. 902, 126 Okla. 117, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 2, 1927
Docket17273
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1927 OK 237 (Gregory v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory v. State, 1927 OK 237, 258 P. 902, 126 Okla. 117, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 90 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

A civil action brought in the county court of Washington county, Okla., wherein the state of Oklahoma was plaintiff and O. S. Gregory was defendant. On November 20, 1924, a complaint was filed *118 in said court, charging the defendant, Gregory, with being the father of a bastard child born September 15, 1924, in said county and state, to one Bessie Myers, the complaining witness herein. The defendant was arrested upon a warrant issued out of said court, arraigned, and gave bond for his appearance, and thereafter entered his plea of not guilty. On September 8, 1925, said cause was tried in said court to a jury, which, byi its verdict, found the defendant Gregory guilty as charged in the complaint. The judgment of the court was to the effect that the defendant should pay the sum of $30 per month for the maintenance, cost, and expenses of the nurture, keep and support of the said child, $50 for expenses incident to birth, and the costs of the action, and make bond for performance, from which judgment the cause is lodged here for review.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared below. The defendant’s motion for new trial contains five specific grounds, but the argument in his brief is confined to two propositions: First, it seems to be contended that the evidence is insufficient and so contradictory as to furnish no proper basis for the verdict; and, second, the refusal of the court to admit certain testimony alleged to be competent, and by the exclusion of which the defendant was alleged to have been prejudiced.

In order that we may understand and pass upon these contentions, it is necessary that we should detail some of the facts. Bessie Myers, the complaining witness, a 17 -ear old school girl, living with a widowed mother at Dewey, Okla., met the defendant in July. 1923 The defendant was the owner of an axitomobile, and visited at the Myers home several times from July, 1923, to January, 1924, and took the complaining witness out riding on the roads thereabout, usually at night. Some time about October, sexual intercourse was indulged in between the two on the road out east of the town of Dewey, the exact date not being fixed, and there were two or three other acts about the same place and under the same circumstances before th° beginning of the year 1924. One of the acts was about the 15th or 20th of TVcember. 1923. and probably one in January The complaining witness says that she remembers the time because she had been to church in Dewey, and that she was one of those engaged In the exercise which took place there about 6 to 7:30 o’clock p. m., and that afterwards she went riding with Gregory. She met Gregory after the church service at the Owl Drug Store, and together with a girl friend went to her home in the car and from there she went out driving alone with the consent of her mother. She testifies that she became pregnant and that the defendant is the father of her child. She did not talk with her mother about her condition, but she did speak about it to one Frank Rhodes, an officer. This was in April, 1924. The child was born in September, 1924, and she has taken care of it and maintained it since its birth. She says she was out at the place where the intercourse took place three nights with Gregory; that he would stop his car near the same place and drive out and stop on the side of the road.

Attention of the complaining witness was called by cross-examination to testimony as shown on page 59 of the record', where she says that she had intercourse with the defendant the first time on the 27th of December. She says that she told the county attorney that she first had intercourse with the defendant in October, and further that it is true that the first time was in October, but she says that she was not paying attention to the particular question being asked her. The record shows that the child xvas born September 15, 1924.

Complaining witness on cross-examination testified that she was not with any other men during October, November and December, 1923, or in January, 1924, but that she knew both Verne Taylor and Raymond Davis, both of whom were later called as witnesses for the defendant. Lucy Myers, mother of the .complaining witness, testified that Bessie did not keep any other company during October, November, and December, 1923. The defendant contends that because pros-ecutrix denied being with other men during these months from October to January, it wa's important for him to show that she was with other men during that time, as this period covered the time when she alleges she became pregnant, and for that purpose the defendant introduced Verne Taylor, who testified that he had known prosecutrix “slightly” for about two years. This witness was then asked if he had been with Bessie during the months of November and December, 1923, away from her home. An objection to this question was interposed as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and the coxirt sustained the objection. Raymond Davis and three other witnesses were then called for defendant, and substantially/ the same questions Were asked them, objections to which were likewise sustained. *119 There was considerable testimony on- the part of the state tending to show the association of those parties at the home of the prosecuting witness and of her going driving with the defendant.

Frank Rhodes, a deputy sheriff, was examined, and testified as to having arrested Gregory at some place out of town and talked with the defendant and took him down to the Myers home. The direct examination of Bessie Myers at the preliminary before W. D. Woodroof, justice of the peace, in and for Bartlesville, Washington county, ■Okla., was introduced by the defendant. This sets out in very much greater detail the actual circumstance's attending the acts of sexual intercourse, and she fixes the date of intercourse at December 27th, but later she said that she had had intercourse with him before, the first time in October, and that she had never had intercourse with any other man; that’ she was born in 1907 about 2% miles north of Dewey, Okla. She says she had intercourse with him perhaps six times, but does no-t know the number of times, biit always when she was out riding with him.

O. S. Gregory, defendant, says that he is 26 years old, an electrician, works at the cement plant at Dewey, Okla., and has been working there five years; knows the prosecuting witness; met her in J-uly, 1923; after that was not in her company often, but occasionally ; did not have intercourse with her in October, November, December or January ; was not with her in November, December or January; was never with her except twice, and those times were in July; never took her out on the road east of Joe Knight's Xilace. and never had intercourse with her on that road; that he has been out there but not with her; that he did not have intercourse with her on the 27th of December, 1923; that he was at his home, that is, at Mrs. Phillips, and that he calls that home. He testified that after he learned that he was accused of the parentage of the child, he left the vicinity and stayed away and does not know how long. He says that he tried to have the matter settled after he found that he was charged with bastardy. There is other evidence tending to show that the defendant was not at the Myers home in December. The medical man examined in the case said that it was a perfectly normal pregnancy, and the appearance of the child and mother appeared to indicate that the regular period of gestation should be calculated at about 280 days.

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 237, 258 P. 902, 126 Okla. 117, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-state-okla-1927.