Lewis v. State

184 So. 53, 183 Miss. 192, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 233
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1938
DocketNo. 33262.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 184 So. 53 (Lewis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. State, 184 So. 53, 183 Miss. 192, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 233 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a conviction for rape. The female alleged to have been raped was only eight years of age, and while it does not appear that the rape was accomplished hy force or violence or against the will of the child, that fact is immaterial, she being under the age of consent. Section 1122, Code of 1930'. The appellant’s defense was an alibi.

Among the appellant’s complaints are: (1) The court erred in not granting his request for a directed verdict; (2) the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict; and (3) the court erred in admitting certain evidence for the State hereinafter to he set forth.

The first two assignments of error rest on the claim that the testimony of this eight year old child was wholly unworthy of belief, and is based on the fact that her testimony contains some contradictions, and on the further claim that it indicates that she was not testifying to the actual facts hut was simply repeating what she had been told to say hy her father and others on the evidence, which will not he set forth. The court below committed no error in refusing to direct a verdict for the appellant, and it will not he necessary for us to decide whether the evidence of this child is of such an unsatisfactory character as to require the setting aside of the verdict and the submission of the case to another jury, for the reason that a new trial will have to he granted because of the erroneous admission .of evidence.

It will not he necessary for us to decide whether evidence of this character is inadmissible unless the prosecutrix herself testifies, and any error, if such there he, in introducing this evidence before she testified, was cured by the fact that she did thereafter testify.

*202 This child lives with her father aud mother in a rural community, their home being immediately across a public road from the residence of the appellant. On the 29th day of January, 1938, the child’s father and mother left her alone at home for the whole of the day, and according to her testimony, the appellant, sometime during the day, came to her home, suggested that she go with him to some woods near-by in order to play with him. This, she did, and while there he had intercourse with her. Before she testified, her father was introduced and stated that he came home about 4:30 in the afternoon, and shortly thereafter the child reported the rape to him. He was not, however, allowed to disclose the name of the alleged rapist. This evidence was objected to on two grounds: (1) It was prematurely offered, the child not then having testified; and (2) that a preliminary examination of the witness, out of the presence of the jury, disclosed that this statement by the child was not voluntarily made but was coerced by means of a threatened whipping, and in answer to questions propounded to her by the witness.

The competency of this child as a witness was challenged on the ground that she did not possess the necessary qualifications therefor. She was fully examined as to her qualifications, and the court below was justified therefrom in holding that she was a competent witness.

A complaint made by a female after she claims to have been raped is admissible in evidence for two reasons: (1) to corroborate her evidence that she had not consented thereto; and (2) to sustain her against the charge of recent fabrication of her story. There was no reason to admit it here in order to corroborate a denial of consent, for the child was without legal capacity to give her consent. It was admissible, however, for the second reason. Such a complaint must be voluntarily made to be admissible in evidence. In some jurisdictions, a complaint obtained by means of questions propounded to *203 the female is inadmissible, bnt in other jurisdiction, the rule, in which we concur, is that whether the complaint is admissible when obtained by means of questions depends on the relations between the female and the personasldng the questions, the circumstances under which they are asked, and their character. 52 O. J. 1065. This rule, with its limitations, is clearly set forth in the following excerpt from Rex v. Osborne, a case of indecent assault, decided in 1905, and reported in 1 K. B. 551, 2 Arm. Cas. 830: “It appeared that Keziah Parkes, along with a younger sister and another girl named Mary Moule, of a similar age, went to a shop kept by the prisoner for the purpose of buying chips. Two of the girls —namely, Moule and the younger sister — went out of the shop on an errand, and' during their absence the alleged assault was committed by him on Keziah. She then left the shop, and on her way home met Mary Moule with her sister coming back' to the shop. Mary Moule was called at the trial, and was asked when she met Keziah Parkes in the street, ‘Did you speak to her?’ Moule replied ‘Yes; I asked her why she did not stop for me.’ The next question put to the witness was, ‘What did she say?’ Objection was taken for the prisoner that the witness’s answer was not admissible in evidence, but the chairman admitted the evidence. The girl’s answer was as follows: ‘Because she did not like the prisoner and would not go near him again, as he unbuttoned her drawers. That was all she said. ’ The prisoner was convicted, and the point raised for our decision is whether this ruling was right. It was contended for the prisoner that the evidence was inadmissible — first, because the answer made by the girl was not a complaint, but a statement or conversation, having been made in answer to a question; and, secondly, because Keziah Parkes was under the age of thirteen, her consent was not material to the charge. As to the first point, the case of Reg. v. Merry, 19 Cox C. C. 442, was quoted. In that case a question had been put to a girl of nine years old by her moth *204 er in a case of indecent assault, and the learned judge ruled that, as the proposed evidence was a statement made in answer to a question, it was a conversation and not a complaint, and he declined to allow it to he given in evidence. It does not appear, however, from the report what the question was that was put to the girl. It appears to us that the mere fact that the statement is made in answer to a question in such cases is not of itself sufficient to make it inadmissible as a complaint. Questions of a suggestive or leading character will, indeed, have that effect, and will render it inadmissible; but a question such as this, put by the mother or other person, ‘What is the matter?’ or ‘Why are you crying?’ will not do so. These are natural questions which a person in charge will be likely to put; on the other hand, if she were asked, ‘Did So-and-so’ (naming the prisoner) ‘assault you?’ ‘Did he do this and that to you?’ then the result would be different, and the statement ought to 1)6 rejected.”

In State v. Ellison, 19 N. M. 428, 144 P. 10, a child that had been raped in a room of a hotel immediately thereafter ran to a room occupied by herself and a sister and locked the door. In response to a question from her sister as to why she locked the door, she told her what had occurred. The evidence of this complaint was held admissible.

What occurred when the child told her father of the alleged rape was this: After her father returned home on the day of the alleged rape, he asked the child if anyone had been there that day, to which she replied: “Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 53, 183 Miss. 192, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-state-miss-1938.