Hutcherson v. State

136 S.W. 53, 62 Tex. Crim. 1, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 182
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 1911
DocketNo. 1046.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 53 (Hutcherson 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
Hutcherson v. State, 136 S.W. 53, 62 Tex. Crim. 1, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 182 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

The appellant was indicted and convicted for rape on a girl under the age of fifteen years.

The evidence, without a shadow of doubt, shows that on the evening of August 25, 1910, the appellant, a man of mature years, in connection with a woman, enticed the little girl, not then fourteen years of age, to go with him and this' woman in a buggy, she (the little girl) protesting that she did not want to- go with them and would not go with them, until by persuasion by both she got into the buggy with them, they assuring her that they would only drive a very short distance to a house that was then in sight, and would return; that after they got her in the buggy they both held her, she trying to get out, and protesting that she did not want to go but wanted to return; that they held her in this way and drove some two miles or more from the city of Greenville to a secluded place. The appellant and this woman, when they reached that place, after hitching the horse, forcibly took the little girl from the buggy and dragged her some distance therefrom into the woods, the appellant, during this time, by threats and persuasion, trying to induce the child to let him have sexual intercourse with her. She protested, halloaed and struggled. They then threw her upon the ground; the man got upon her and she, by fighting and placing her hands, prevented at that time the intercourse. Thereupon he and the woman removed and forcibly held her hands while he accomplished his purpose. The child then got back in the buggy, but they did not return with her. After waiting some time they then took the child, and in the same manner he ravished her a second time. Afterwards they returned with her to the city of Greenville, but did not take her to her aunt’s, where she was staying, but had her to get *3 out some distance before they reached there, and she and this unnatural woman then returned to her aunt’s house.

The child’s evidence was amply corroborated by other witnesses showing that the appellant and this woman were seen to have this child in the buggy with them that evening and drove out the direction where the child testified the outrage occurred and was seen returning late in the evening from that direction with her. The appellant then told one of the witnesses that he had been out with the girl and this unnatural woman, and, in substance, that he had had intercourse with both of them that evening.

The appellant’s attorneys, in their brief and in the record, in effect admit the guilt of the appellant. They contend, however, that the penalty assessed of twenty years confinement in the penitentiary was excessive, and that the case should be reversed in order that he might have a new trial, not to be acquitted, but to see if another jury will not fix a lesser penalty. The contention made by appellant, through his attorneys, is that there was a mob spirit prevailing in the city of Greenville and in Hunt County, which had its effect upon the jury and induced and caused the jury to fix the heavy penalty.

We have examined, and gone over this record time and again with a good deal of care and study, and have failed to find any evidence of the effect of such a spirit, and are entirely satisfied with the verdict. We doubt whether there can be any other case found reported in the books which will show a greater outrage and an offense calling for severer punishment than is shown by this record. In fact, it is remarkable in some respects in that a person who is called a woman could be found that would lend herself to be present and forcibly aid the appellant in ravishing a child under fourteen years of age in satisfying his unnatural lust, in the way this record shows was done. We think that the appellant has been very mildly dealt with by the verdict of the jury in this case.

1. Among other errors assigned is that the court erred in not changing the venue of this case from Hunt County where the offense was committed. The record shows an application addressed to the judge. It is not in the terms of the statute, signed by the appellant and two witnesses, but seems to have been addressed to the discretion of the court requesting the court of his own motion to change the venue. The grounds of this motion are, in substance, that there is considerable excitement in Hunt County after the discovery of the offense, and that there is an indication of mob law and of violence to the appellant. This motion or application for change of venue was contested by the affidavits of the county attorney, the district attorney and the sheriff of the county, which, in effect, show that there is no such feeling in the county as indicates mob violence nor that will prevent appellant from having a fair and impartial trial. It is shown that when the appellant and this woman were first arrested that there was some feeling and excitement, and the sheriff thereupon removed *4 the appellant from the jail in Hunt County to the jail in Dallas County, but that this excitement subsided, and in a few days he returned with the appellant and replaced him in the jail in Hunt County, where he has continuously been and was at the time of the trial. The offense was committed on August 25, 1910; he was indicted by the grand jury of Hunt County on October 5, 1910, and the trial began on October 10, 1910. There was no error in the court’s refusal to change the venue.

2. There are some bills of exception claimed to have been taken to the argument of the county and district attorneys before the jury. These bills were refused by the district judge, and there were then both supporting and controverting affidavits filed attempting to support and to dispute the bills. We deem it unnecessary to take up each of these several bills. We will take the first as a sample and show what the record shows thereabouts. This first bill claims that in the opening address to the jury by Hon. R. F. Spearman, county attorney, he used the following language: “It seems that the defendant, in order to bring about the ruin and destruction of this child, called in the assistance of his paramour, after he had failed in his. purpose to do the same thing by himself on a former occasion at the waterworks.” This bill is supported by the affidavits of several persons with more or less positiveness. The attorneys for the appellant apparently positively; others that the language used was substantially as they remember it as quoted in the bill.

The county attorney made an affidavit in which he says that he did not use the language quoted in the bill, but used substantially the following language: “The defendant being unable to accomplish the ruin and destruction of this child alone and unaided, called to his assistance his paramour, an unnatural woman, whose conduct can only be explained by attributing to her the same enormity of moral degradation that moved the defendant to the accomplishment of his cruel designs and unnatural purposes.” The affidavits of several persons support the affidavit of Mr. Spearman and deny that shown by the bill.

The judge refused this bill because he did not hear the language. In explanation he states that at one time during the argument of the county attorney Mr.

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38 S.W.2d 76 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1931)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 53, 62 Tex. Crim. 1, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutcherson-v-state-texcrimapp-1911.