Hankins v. State

146 S.W.2d 195, 140 Tex. Crim. 520, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 694
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 1940
DocketNo. 21155.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 195 (Hankins 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
Hankins v. State, 146 S.W.2d 195, 140 Tex. Crim. 520, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 694 (Tex. 1940).

Opinions

HAWKINS, Presiding Judge.

Conviction is for assault with intent to rape, punishment assessed being two years in the penitentiary.

Mrs. Eleanor Graves was the injured party. She had been married seven or eight years, but was not living with her husband at the time of the incidents related. She lived with her mother, Mrs. Moon. Mrs. Graves worked at the Hilton Hotel Coffee Shop in Lubbock. Miss Britton also worked there. On the night of November 9, 1939 the two girls got off from work about ten o’clock and went to a taxicab station for the purpose of getting a cab to take themr home. At the station the girls met John Laney and appellant. They were in appellant’s car, a coupe. Mrs. Graves was not acquainted with the boys, but was introduced to them by Miss Britton. The boys suggested that they would take the girls home and save them the cab fare. The girls accepted the invitation and got in the coupe. Mrs. Graves sat between Laney and appellant, who was driving, and Miss Britton sat in Laney’s lap. The boys either had a pint bottle of whisky when they met the girls, or which they got soon thereafter. Appellant drove to a place called the Calf Stand. They sat out in front, all of the parties drinking cokes and the whisky. When the whisky was gone the boys secured another pint which was also partly consumed before the party broke up. The evidence would indicate that Laney and Mrs. Graves were drinking more whisky than appellant and Miss Britton. Somewhere in the neighborhood of midnight Miss Britton was taken to her home. She saw none of the parties again that night. After letting Miss Britton out at her home appellant took Laney home. The latter was so drunk that after he got out of the car he sat on the curb and vomited. There is little, if any, conflict in the evidence up to the time appellant and Mrs. Graves were left alone in appellant’s car. We state the substance of her testimony from that time as follows:

After Laney got out of the car prosecutrix told appellant that she lived just around the corner and asked him to take *522 her home. He declined to do this, saying, “Let’s go have some fun.” Prosecutrix insisted on being taken home, telling appellant that she was tired and sleepy. Appellant drove his car to some point on College Avenue and stopped it off the pavement. He then requested sexual favors of prosecutrix, which she refused. He asserted that she was going to yield to his demand. She continued to refuse, and finally told appellant that she was menstruating. He continued his advances after being thus informed, putting his hand up under her clothes and was trying to pull her down into the seat. She resisted with all her strength, and finally appellant hit her on the jaw and rendered her unconscious. When she regained consciousness she was lying by the side of the road in a ditch. She saw some lights down the road and made her way to a tourist camp and had someone call a cab to take her home. She was taken from her home to the hospital. Her jaw was broken in three places and had to be wired together, a rib was fractured, and there was a wound on her leg below the knee, which required one stitch. The doctor who treated prosecutrix at the hospital said the leg wound “had definitely the appearance of her having slid, an abrasion as one would receive from a slide.” As a part of prosecutrix’ evidence we quote as follows: “* * * at the time I got in the car with these two men and at the time I started out with Jack Hankins after John Laney got out of the car and this other girl got out of the car I had on a sanitary belt and kotex. I also had on a pair of step-ins. After this occurrence I did not have such garments on my person. At the time I was out in this car I had a purse, it was a grey suede purse, or I believe it was a brown purse. I also had on a grey snap-brim hat that night. When I got to the tourist camp that night I did not have either the hat or the purse. I have seen the bag since then. The next time I saw it was when Jack Hankins brought it to the hospital. I think it was Jack that brought it to the hospital, while I was there. I don’t know whether or not at that time Jack Hankins had sexual intercourse with me or not. He did not as long as I was conscious. Part of the time I was unconscious and I don’t know what happened. * * *”

The witness who was called to the tourist camp and took Mrs. Graves home testified that she was covered with blood from the top of her head to her dress, her stockings wet and muddy, and her hands were bloody, and she \yas spitting up blood. In response to a question from the witness as to what had happened prosecutrix told him someone had broken her jaw, but that she was not talking. When they arrived at her home *523 prosecutrix was not able to get in the house unassisted, and witness carried her in the house. Her mother, Mrs. Moon, described the condition of prosecutrix when she arrived at home in the following words. “From her appearance and from her •talk she was not normal and conscious of everything. Everything wasn’t just clear to her because she was suffering so. She was holding her jaw and blood was running from her mouth. I had some conversation with her in regard to what happened. She made the complaint to me at that time as to an attack made upon her by Jack Hankins. * * * I asked her if she had been in a car accident and she told me that it was not a car accident but she didn’t go into details. She could hardly talk then on account of her jaw. She said that she had been attacked but she said that she didn’t know the name of the boy but that she knew the boy and she could find out from Elizabeth, who he was. She could hardly talk then. She told me that he had hit her and knocked her unconscious, he had hit her with his fist. She said that he had hit her on the jaw and it knocked her unconscious. She said that she tried to get away front him and to fight off and that the last she knew was when he hit her.. The last that she knew was when he hit her in the jaw and knocked her unconscious. * * *”

It is shown from the record that after the occurrence related appellant’s car ran out of gas and a taxi driven by one Bryant pushed appellant’s car into a service station. Bryant testified in substance that he observed in appellant’s car a lady’s hat and purse, and that appellant requested witness to “destroy” them, giving as his reason that he had some trouble with a woman, and said, “he had hit a woman and that he had raped her.” Appellant in his testimony denied making such statement to Bryant. The next day appellant, Laney and Miss Britton went to the hospital to see prosecutrix and appellant then returned to prosecutrix her purse. So far as the record shows the hat, sanitary belt and step-ins remain unaccounted for except that appellant claimed that prosecutrix thought the hat had blown out of the car window.

Up to this point we have condensed the evidence for the State, it being appellant’s contention that same is insufficient to support the conviction. In determining such question we must look at the evidence in the strongest light for the State, and we entertain no doubt that the State’s evidence, if accepted by the jury as true supports the verdict.

Appellant testified in substance as follows: The reason he *524

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Related

Hunter v. State
161 Tex. Crim. 225 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1954)
Isaac v. State
257 S.W.2d 436 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Greiner v. State
249 S.W.2d 601 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 195, 140 Tex. Crim. 520, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hankins-v-state-texcrimapp-1940.