Johnson, Jr. v. State

192 A.2d 506, 232 Md. 199, 1963 Md. LEXIS 678
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1963
Docket[No. 357, September Term, 1962.]
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 192 A.2d 506 (Johnson, Jr. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson, Jr. v. State, 192 A.2d 506, 232 Md. 199, 1963 Md. LEXIS 678 (Md. 1963).

Opinion

Marbury, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Joseph E. Johnson, Jr., was found guilty by a jury of raping a sixteen year old girl and was sentenced to death in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, the case having been removed from Montgomery County. From the judgment and sentence entered on the verdict he has appealed to this Court. It is a companion case to Giles v. State, 229 Md. 370, 183 A. 2d 359, app. dism. 372 U. S. 767, 10 L. Ed. 2d 137, since the two cases arose out of the same incident.

At about 11:30 p.m. on July 20, 1961, Joyce Roberts, a sixteen year old white female, Stewart Foster, her boy friend, and two other young men went to a secluded spot on Batson Road, in Montgomery County, near Rocky Gorge Dam on the Patuxent River, where, according to their testimony, they had gone to swim in the River. When other friends they were expecting did not appear they started to leave and ran out of gas. Two of the boys left to get gasoline, leaving Miss Roberts and Foster alone in the back seat. Appellant, James and John Giles, in company with John Bowie, all young Negro men, had been fishing in the River, and as they departed, it was necessary for three of them to get out of the car in order to guide the driver, *203 Bowie, around the stalled car in which Miss Roberts and Foster were sitting. Bowie drove the car away but the Giles brothers and appellant walked back to the stalled automobile. When Foster and Miss Roberts saw them approaching, they became alarmed and rolled up the windows and locked the doors. The three first demanded cigarettes and money but were told by Foster that he had neither. One of the intruders, using obscene and vulgar language, threatened to drag the man out of the automobile and carnally know the girl. When Foster refused to turn the girl over to them and warned them they would get into trouble, one or more of them threw rocks at the automobile, shattering the windows, and opened the doors. Foster then jumped out to face the men, while Miss Roberts left by the opposite rear door. He was knocked to the ground unconscious as the girl attempted to flee into the woods. She ran about thirty feet into the underbrush, tripped and fell. She was followed and found lying on the ground by John Giles. Eater James Giles and appellant joined them, at which point, as testified to by Miss Roberts, all three had sexual relations with her. She admitted that she made no attempt to resist, but declared that it was because of her fear of bodily harm if she resisted. She also admitted that she removed her shorts and underpants, but only because she believed, if she did not, they would have forcefully removed them.

While this was going on in the woods Foster, whose wallet had been taken by one of the three men, regained consciousness, and after shouting to Miss Roberts, ran to a nearby house and called the police. When the three assailants heard a police cruiser arrive they fled the scene. Two of the witnesses for the State, Foster and Sgt. Duvall, the investigating officer, testified that when they found the girl, she was lying on the ground, clad only in a blouse, sobbing, and in a semi-conscious condition. Her legs were cut and bleeding. The three assailants were apprehended the next morning.

Six questions are presented on this appeal. They will be dealt with in the order set out in appellant’s brief.

I

The appellant contends that the court should have granted *204 his motion for a judgment of acquittal. The claim is without merit.

The defense in this case was based upon the claimed consent of the victim to the sexual relations. It is not disputed that appellant did have relations with Miss Roberts. In support of his claim of consent appellant relies on the following: (1) no acts of violence were visited upon the girl; (2) she did not attempt to push appellant off her; (3) she did not use her arms or elbows to prevent the relations; (4) no threats were made toward her at the time of the relations; (5) though Johnson kissed her by placing his tongue in her mouth, she made no effort to hurt him when he did; (6) she did not manipulate her legs to prevent his entry into her; (7) she opened her legs when he told her to; (8) she herself took her shorts and underpants off; and (9) she made no outcry for help nor did she scream. These facts were all testified to by the victim herself. If these were all the facts before the lower court, the granting of appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal might have been justified. In Giles v. State, supra, where the evidence on this aspect of the episode was the same as in this case and the conviction of rape by the other two participants was sustained, we stated, at page 381:

“But there was also evidence of violent acts and verbal threats on the part of the defendants, which, if believed, would have been the equivalent of such force as was reasonably calculated to create in the mind of the prosecutrix an apprehension of imminent bodily harm that could have impaired or overcome her will to resist.”

The acts alluded to took place at the parked car. The jury had testimony before it that obscene remarks and threats were directed to her and Foster while they were locked in the car, and that rocks were thrown at the windows, breaking them. Miss Roberts testified that one of the three men suggested shooting Foster. The victim may have submitted to sexual relations but that does not necessarily imply consent.

“There is, however, a wide difference between consent and a submission to the act. Consent may involve *205 submission, but submission does not necessarily imply consent. Furthermore, submission to a compelling force, or as a result of being put in fear, is not consent.
“* * * Since resistance is necessarily relative, the presence or absence of it must depend on the facts and circumstances in each case.”

Hazel v. State, 221 Md. 464, 469-470, 157 A. 2d 922. The testimony in this case was such that there was no question that it should have gone to the jury on the presence vel non of consent. It was clearly a question of credibility, to be determined by the trier of facts. Hazel v. State, supra, at page 470. Consequently, there was no error by the court below in overruling appellant’s motion for a judgment of acquittal.

II

The appellant, an indigent accused, claims that the trial court should have provided him with a transcript of the separate trial of his codefendants, James V. and John G. Giles, on December 4, 1961, in preparation for his trial on September 25, 1962. This claim is also without merit.

There is no rule cited to us, nor have we discovered any, which provides that a transcript of the trial of a companion case, if material to the case at bar, must be furnished by the State. Even assuming, without deciding, that the lower court erred in not furnishing the Giles transcript, it was not prejudicial error.

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Bluebook (online)
192 A.2d 506, 232 Md. 199, 1963 Md. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-jr-v-state-md-1963.