Jackson v. Commonwealth

70 S.E.2d 322, 193 Va. 664, 1952 Va. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 21, 1952
DocketRecord 3953
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 70 S.E.2d 322 (Jackson 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
Jackson v. Commonwealth, 70 S.E.2d 322, 193 Va. 664, 1952 Va. LEXIS 178 (Va. 1952).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Albert Jackson, Jr., referred to herein as defendant, was indicted for the rape of Lena Houchens, tried by a jury, found guilty and his punishment fixed at death. He was sentenced accordingly and on this appeal he assigns these errors to the judgment: (1) That the evidence did not support the verdict; (2) that the defendant’s confession was improperly admitted into evidence; and (3) that there was improper argument by the Commonwealth’s attorney.

The -assignment on the evidence requires that it be stated at length. The material evidence for the Commonwealth was as follows:

The prosecutrix, a white woman about 40 years old, the mother of three children, testified that at about eleven o’clock on the night of May 5, 1951, as she was going home from her work in a restaurant on Main street, in the city of Charlottesville, and as she reached the intersection of Main and Second streets, “* '* this colored man was standing on the corner and he reached out and grabbed me;” that he had $5 in his hand which he offered her, saying she had to go with him. She said she *666 wasn’t going anywhere, and thereupon he knocked her down; he had her hy the hands; she tried to get loose and yelled for help, but he put his hand over her mouth, dragged her up Second street to the colored Elks’ Home, dragged her on through the alley as she was 11 screaming and hollering; ’ ’ that he raped her; that he had intercourse with her only once that she remembered because he knocked her out.

Main street at the point referred to runs approximately east and west. Second street, running approximately north and south, crosses it at right angles. The Elks ’ Home is on Second, about 125 feet north of Main, about the middle of the block. An alley on the south side .of the Elks’ Home leads off west from Second street and passes between the Home and the next building on the south into a vacant lot behind the Elks ’ Home.

Herbert Wilkins lives on this alley right behind the Elks’ Home. That night at about ten minutes to eleven he saw back of the Elks’ Home a man dragging a woman who was holloing and screaming. He heard her say, “* * You might kill-me, but you ain’t going to do anything.” He listened ten or fifteen minutes but was unable to identify the couple. He saw the man have the woman over the fence choking her and she was struggling to get away. After he went back into the house he could still hear her holloing. The noise continued for about an hour, but disturbances of that kind were frequent in that area and he did not pay much attention to it.

At approximately 1:00 a. m., City Policeman Morris, on his beat, came toward Main street along Preston avenue, the next street west from Second street, and as he got opposite a parking lot beside the A & P store he heard a sound. He flashed his light over there and saw the defendant on top of the prosecutrix. The defendant came toward him saying, ‘ ‘ Get out of my way, ’ ’ but he took him by the arm and the defendant said, “I propositioned this woman here,” and he then heard the prosecutrix say, “Give me my $5.00,” and defendant replied, “I ain’t got any $5.00.”

The prosecutrix did not appear to know' what was going on. She was trying to get.up but was unable to stand. When the officer tried to pick her up she fell out of his hands. Her head was on a pile of ice which had been thrown out by the store. Blood had run down through the ice and there was blood on a wine bottle nearby. She was covered with blood, “I mean solid, her face and her hair and there was some blood on her legs.” Her shoes were off. One was later found at the mouth of the *667 alley and the other in the A & P lot. He asked her what had happened and she said the defendant had pushed her into the hole, pointing in the direction of a hole back in the parking lot. The defendant said he found her in the hole and had.brought her down to where they were.

As the defendant got off the prosecutrix his pants were open in: front and his person was exposed. The front of his pants was covered with a large spot of blood; there were blood stains on his hands and on his arms.

The officer secured a cab and took them both to the police station. The prosecutrix was taken from there to the hospital.

She was seen by Dr. Merritt in the emergency room at the hospital about three o’clock that night. She was then very groggy and her conversation was very incoherent. There were multiple abrasions and lacerations all over the body. She had a three-inch cut on her forehead; there were bruises and lacerations about her eyes, on her face, on her legs, particularly around the knees. She had been previously seen by the surgical and neuro-surgical services; glucose and blood transfusions had been given her. There was bleeding from the vaginal opening, the vagina was filled with blood clots. There was a laceration extending from the left lateral fornix over the posterior surface of the cervix to the right lateral fornix. The entire vaginal mucous was stripped off the posterior surface of the cervix and there was bleeding from the laceration.

The Chief of Police, J. E. Adams, saw defendant at the police station a little after one o ’clock that night. The defendant then told him he was with a Witcher boy at the Elks ’ Home; that the two of them went north on Second, turned left on Market, and when in front of a service station he heard a noise; that he then walked through the parking lot, found the prosecutrix in the hole, helped her out and carried her through the parking lot to where Policeman Morris found them. He admitted he was on top of the prosecutrix when arrested and trying to have intercourse with her. Witcher was brought in and denied being with defendant, whereupon defendant said: “I will tell the truth. He wasn’t with me, let him go. ”

The defendant then agreed to go down to the place and show the officers what happened. He took them to the hole in the parking lot, which was five or six feet deep, in which were some cinder blocks with blood on them. He then showed them the *668 course of their travel to the place of arrest. There were blood spots all along the way.

Next morning Adams asked defendant if he wanted to tell him more about what happened last night. Defendant replied that he had already told Mr. Mayo and Mr. Durham, had given them a written statement. Defendant then told Adams he would tell him what happened. He said he had grabbed the prosecutrix at the mouth of the alley on Second street, offered her $5 first, then dragged her back in the alley. He said he tried to have intercourse with her three times but succeeded only twice. The first time was in the grass back of the Elks’ Home; the next was between the fence and a cinder block wall back of the Elks’ Home. When he got up from that act the prosecutrix tried to get away and fell into the hole; that he helped her out and carried her to the place of arrest because she couldn’t walk. At the places pointed out by the defendant there were knee prints and other impressions showing someone had been on the ground. Prom the end of the hard surface in the alley to the place of the first act there were marks in the dirt indicating that something had been dragged along.

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.E.2d 322, 193 Va. 664, 1952 Va. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-commonwealth-va-1952.