Hindman v. State

211 S.W.2d 182, 152 Tex. Crim. 75, 1948 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1208
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1948
DocketNo. 23899.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 211 S.W.2d 182 (Hindman 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
Hindman v. State, 211 S.W.2d 182, 152 Tex. Crim. 75, 1948 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1208 (Tex. 1948).

Opinions

GRAVES, Judge.

The conviction is for rape. The punishment is assessed at five years in the penitentiary.

Prosecutrix, fifteen years of age, worked as a waitress in a cafe at Abilene. She had met appellant as a patron of the cafe. On June 1, 1946, she left the cafe at night to go home. On her way, she stopped at a drug store and was eating a sandwich when appellant, accompanied by the witness Spratlin, entered. Appellant asked to take her home. She first declined, then agreed. Appellant, prosecutrix, and Spratlin left the drug store, got into the front seat of appellant’s car, and drove away. Spratlin asked them to take him out to the State Hospital to get his girl friend, who worked there. They drove to the hospital; Spratlin went in, got his friend, returned, and they got into the rear seat of the car.

It should be here stated that at this time Spratlin and his girl friend were not married. However, they married shortly thereafter and testified in the trial of the case. They appeared as witnesses in the trial as W. H. Spratlin and Mrs. W. H. Spratlin. They will be so referred to, hereafter.

*77 According to the testimony of prosecutrix, appellant drove about a half-mile from the hospital and stopped the car on a gravel road. He then told the Spratlins to leave the car and not come back until “* * * I honk.” The Spratlins left the car. Prosecutrix said it was a dark night and she did not know how far they went from the car. As soon as the Spratlins left, appellant began to fondle her person, seeking sexual favors. Prosecutrix resisted, and appellant struck her under the chin and on the face, trying to knock her out. About that time she screamed and the Spratlins returned to the car. Thereupon, appellant ordered them to go away and not return until “I honk my horn like I said the first time.” Prosecutrix said at this time she told Spratlin that appellant was trying to rape her and that Spratlin told appellant to leave her alone. The Spratlins again left the car and it was then that appellant, according to prosecutrix, completed the act of rape upon her, a virgin female. As to how this was accomplished, we quote from the testimony of prosecutrix:

“I was lying on the cushion on the front seat. There was a steering wheel in the front part of the car. That is where my head was. My head was by the steering wheel. He did not get out of the car, go around and get in at the other door. He was already on the other side. I did not get under the steering wheel. I got under there while we were fighting. We were fighting. When he penetrated my private parts he had my hands under my head and was holding one. He had one hand here (indicating) an then he was holding this one (indicating). He was holding my left hand. He put my right hand under the back of my head. My right hand was under my head and he was holding the other one. He did not have both hands holding me. He had this hand drawn up like this (indicating). I don’t exactly know what he was doing with the other hand. My feet were spread out. I imagine his feet were in the car. The door was open. His feet were not in the car. His feet were out of the car. I did not pay any attention to his feet.”

Prosecutrix further testified:

“I foug’ht until everything was just kind of foggy; after we fought so long.”

It is indicated from her testimony that this occurred before the Spratlins returned to the car the first time. Prosecutrix, according to her own testimony, was able to detail appellant’s acts and conduct immediately before and at the time the completed act of rape was accomplished. Prosecutrix said that ap *78 pellant “tore my pants off of me and tore up one of my slips” and that after the act, appellant honked the horn and the Spratlins returned to the car. She admitted that “there was not anything- to prevent me from honking that horn” and that she knew “that was the sound that was agreed to be given when we wanted to go.” Prosecutrix admitted that she did not tell the Spratlins about what had happened when they returned to the car. She said that she did not tell Mrs. Spratlin, after she v/as in the car, that appellant had raped her. Appellant, accompanied by the Spratlins, carried the prosecutrix home. She admitted that she made no report to her mother or father as to what had happened. She said she secreted her torn slip so that they would not find out. Prosecutrix admitted that she told no one about what had happened to her until sometime in December, over six months thereafter, when she went to see a lawyer, who advised her to go and be examined by a doctor. She said that Dr. McFadden did examine her. Neither the lawyer nor Dr. McFadden testified in the case. According to prosecutrix’s testimony, her only reason for not making an outcry to her parents or the officers or a report of the assault on the night it occurred was because appellant had threatened to kill her if she told anyone and because she was afraid that her father would kill appellant and she did not want a killing. As to what prompted her to make the disclosure in December, the record is silent.

Prosecutrix’s father testified that on or about the 1st of June, he noticed some blue spots on her neck and face. He made no effort to describe the nature or extent of the spots or to fix the time as after the alleged offense. They were not of sufficient importance to cause him to inquire of his daughter relative thereto.

The foregoing are the facts upon which the conviction rests.

Mrs. Spratlin, though offered as a witness by the State, became a material witness in behalf of appellant. She testified that on the way out into the country:

“I noticed the attitude of Ann (prosecutrix) towards the defendant here. They were hugging and kissing as we were going out there. She was leaning on him all of the time. They appeared like they were good lovers.”

Mrs. Spratlin said that after the car stopped, she and her husband got out and walked about fifty yards from the car; that it v/as a moonlight — a starlight night. “We could see the *79 car all of the time we-were out there. I did not hear anything unusual except in a playful manner there in the car.” She said that she heard a scream, which was a “playful holler,” and it did not impress her as being serious. She said that at no time did prosecutrix report to her that appellant had raped her or wronged her, and further, “I did not see any bruises on her. I did not see her underclothes there in the car at any time. She did not complain about her clothes being torn off. She didn’t say anything to us. She didn’t say a word about it. I do not remember seeing either one of the front doors open when we got back there. I did not see any of her clothes messed up in any way at all.”

Mr. Spratlin corroborated the testimony of his wife and was equally positive that prosecutrix made no claim to them that appellant had mistreated her. He said that it was a clear moonlight night and that he and his wife could see and observe the car very clearly at all times and that they were never more than fifty yards from the car. He denied that appellant ordered him and his wife to get out of the car when it was first stopped or that appellant honked the horn before they went back to the car.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.2d 182, 152 Tex. Crim. 75, 1948 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hindman-v-state-texcrimapp-1948.