Martinez v. State

360 P.2d 836, 77 Nev. 184, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 102
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1961
Docket4347
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 360 P.2d 836 (Martinez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinez v. State, 360 P.2d 836, 77 Nev. 184, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 102 (Neb. 1961).

Opinion

*185 OPINION

By the Court,

Pike, J.:

Appellant was charged in an information filed at Ely, White Pine County, Nevada, with having on or about the 18th day of March 1959 committed the crime of rape. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, upon which verdict the court entered its judgment. Appellant’s notice of appeal is from the judgment “and the whole thereof” entered by the district court on March 25, 1960. There is no notice of appeal from the order of the court denying appellant’s motion for new trial, appellant’s counsel contending that the notice of appeal above referred to should be viewed as including an appeal from the order denying the motion for new trial entered March 25, 1960, prior to the entry of the judgment on the same date.

Points urged on appeal by appellant are (1) the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence; (2) error by the trial court in giving instruction No. 25 and in refusing to give appellant’s proposed Instruction No. 1; (3) *186 error by the trial court in refusing to grant a new trial based on the affidavit of Juan Rivera.

The girl referred to in the information was 17 years of age and an eighth grade student at the time of the alleged offense. She testified that a few days prior to March 18, 1959 appellant who was sitting alone in his car near a local drug store told her that he wanted a date with her, and she told him that she couldn’t go out with him unless she asked her mother. She further testified that, although on two or three occasions on subsequent days he honked the horn of his automobile outside her house, she did not go out of the house to see him; that on March 18 when he parked in front of the house and asked her to go for a ride with him, she accepted his invitation after her mother had given her permission to do so. Her further testimony was that it was about seven o’clock in the evening and getting dark when the appellant, after taking her for a ride outside of town, turned around and drove past the girl’s house, but refused to stop when she told him to, and grabbed her arm and prevented her from getting out of the car while he continued about a mile and a half out of town where he stopped the car. The girl testified that appellant then committed an act of sexual intercourse with her in his automobile. He thereafter returned her directly to her home, where she hurried into the house and did not tell her mother what had happened. Likewise, there is no evidence that she told anyone until the following September 9th that appellant had intercourse with her. On the latter date appellant, upon the insistence of the girl’s father, came to the girl’s home where, in the presence of her parents, she identified appellant as the man responsible for her pregnancy. She testified that, although he at that time denied that he was the father of her unborn child, he pleaded with her not to report him to the police and promised that he would give her “everything he had” if she would not do so. The following day, September 10, 1959, the girl verified a criminal complaint charging the defendant with having committed the offense of rape on or about “the 30th day of April 1959.” On December 28, 1959 the district attorney filed the information here under consideration, *187 charging the offense to have been committed on or about the “18th day of March, 1959.” The documents bearing inconsistent dates were read to the jury.

The girl and her mother testified that, after the March 18 occurrence appellant drove around the girl’s house at night, but there was no evidence that they ever talked or spent any time together again until the above mentioned meeting of September 9. The girl’s mother testified concerning appellant’s taking the girl with him in his car on the evening of March 18, and returning the girl home. She also testified to appellant’s riding in the vicinity of the girl’s home on occasions both before and after March 18. Both parents and a 16-year-old sister corroborated portions of the girl’s testimony relating to appellant’s conduct and statements made at the girl’s home on September 9.

A younger sister testified concerning the occasion when appellant sought to have her go with him in his automobile. Other girls residing in the community, as well as certain adults, told of appellant’s language and conduct in their presence and of his efforts to have them accompany him on automobile rides. Both the mother and a younger brother testified concerning the requests made by appellant that two girl members of another family accompany him and another man on a fishing trip.

Other testimony showed similar activities on the part of appellant in seeking to have schoolgirls accompany him in his car.

Appellant denied that he had committed the offense, and attacked the credibility of the girl and that of other witnesses who testified for the prosecution. He testified that the only time he was alone with the girl in his car was one evening in May 1959, and that his purpose in having her accompany him on roads outside of town was to talk to her and discourage any inclination she may have had to marry appellant’s brother. Appellant further testified that, after heated arguments in the course of which the girl admitted to him she had had sex relations with other men, she reluctantly promised appellant she would not marry appellant’s brother.

Appellant’s brother testified that he and a group of young people, including the girl, were occupants of an *188 automobile which stopped at night in January of 1959 outside of Ely and that he remained immediately outside the car and that other members of the group remained in the near vicinity of the car while the girl and a male member of the group had sex relations within the automobile. The testimony of this witness, had the jury accepted it as true, would not only have contradicted certain of the girl’s testimony but, by reason of her participation in sex relations, would have tended to support appellant’s contention that the child born to her had been conceived at a date prior to March 18. A doctor of medicine, called as a witness by the prosecution, testified that in his opinion the child born on September 24, 1959 could have been conceived on March 18,1959. Appellant’s counsel conducted an extensive cross examination of such medical witness, in the course of which reference was made to statements appearing in a text on the subject of obstetrics written some 20 years previously by a recognized authority in that field. Appellant sought to show that the medical text writer considered that the chances of survival of a child delivered before the 30th week of gestation were less than the medical witness considered them to be. The acceptance by the jury of the text writer’s opinions would not have been inconsistent with the jury returning a verdict of guilty. While appellant argues that, under the evidence referred to, as the child was born only six months and eight days after the alleged act of intercourse between the appellant and the girl, no credence could be given the girl’s testimony. No such conclusion could properly be drawn from the evidence, and the jury was entitled to decide the credibility of, and the weight to be accorded to, her testimony.

(1) Appellant urges as his first point on appeal that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
360 P.2d 836, 77 Nev. 184, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-state-nev-1961.