McKenzie v. State

33 So. 2d 484, 33 Ala. App. 7, 1946 Ala. App. LEXIS 412
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 1946
Docket6 Div. 272.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 33 So. 2d 484 (McKenzie v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKenzie v. State, 33 So. 2d 484, 33 Ala. App. 7, 1946 Ala. App. LEXIS 412 (Ala. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*9 CARR, Judge.

Appellant was tried and convicted on an indictment which charged assault with intent to ravish. The alleged assaulted person is Lois Eddins, who at the time was about fifteen years of age.

The prosecutrix testified that the defendant approached her on the streets of Birmingham and invited her to go with him for an automobile ride. She reluctantly accepted, but did get in his car. Finally the appellant stopped the car on a by-road several miles out. There the defendant told her that he had previously lost a bracelet. After some casual search for the article which he claimed he lost, the accused began to make improper advances to her, accompanied with threats to do her bodily harm unless she acceded to his demands to have sexual intercourse. After much dissuasion on her part, the defendant abandoned his asserted aim and carried her back to the city. The time of this occurrence was June 13th. The defendant was not promptly apprehended.

The evidence for the State discloses that on August 4th following the defendant was driving a car along the streets of Birmingham and observed a Mrs. Outlaw standing on a street corner. The latter accepted the former’s promise to carry her to Ensley in his car. When it became apparent that the route was'not being followed toward Ensley, Mrs. Outlaw began to make inquiry and appellant told her that he had lost a bracelet at a place some distance out and wanted to go in search of it. It appears that the automobile was stopped at the same place at which appellant had carried Miss Eddins, as indicated above. According to the testimony of Mrs. Outlaw the appellant made improper approaches to her and also threatened to do her bodily harm if she did not desist from screaming. At one time, she said, the defendant forcibly brought her back to the car when she was in the act of running away. She further testified that the avowed wishes of the appellant were abandoned when she showed him an operation scar evidencing the sincerity of her claim that she was not physically able to engage in the act of sexual intercourse. She also gave him her rings and telephone number as tokens indicating her willingness to see him at a later time. The lady claimed in her evidence that these methods were used only for a design to divert the defendant from his persistent purpose to have sexual intercourse with her.

The appellant was apprehended on August 9th, five days later. While he was in custody, Miss Eddins identified him as being the same person who allegedly assaulted her.

At this time the officers secured two voluntary statements from the accused, one" relating to each occurrence outlined above. In each of these statements the appellant admitted practically all of the details of the two incidents as they were narrated by the two ladies during the trials. He did, however, deny the more serious accusations tending to show that he entertained an intent to forcibly ravish the ladies.

*10 When the State had introduced the testimony of Miss Eddins, a physician, the officers, and the statement made to the lattér by the defendant relating to the first occurrence, it was made known to the court that the facts in reference to the Mrs. Outlaw incident would be tendered as a part of the evidence in chief. The trial judge inquired whether or not there was any dispute as to the identity of the person charged. Appellant’s attorney gave assurance to the judge that the identity of the accused was admitted.

The lower court evidenced his intention to admit the evidence, but before admitting it made the following statement to the jury:

“Ordinarily, gentlemen, when a person is charged with one crime you cannot prove that he committed some other crime because you could not argue from the fact that he had committed some other crime that that is evidence that he committed this crime, but if there is any evidence in the case that would throw light on the issue in the case it is admissible in the case whether it discloses another crime or not. In this case, the state contends that the defendant made an assault with intent to ravish Lois Eddins, that is the case he is being tried on. Of course, there are a number of issues involved. First of all, did he commit an assault and battery or an assault, and if he did what was his intent? Did he intend to ravish her? I am letting this testimony go to you on the question of his intent. As I understand it, the state is going to offer evidence of this young lady to the effect in the following August, after this Eddins case is supposed to have been committed in June, the defendant carried this young lady out to the same place and attacked her with intent to ravish her. That is what the state contends. I am not intimating what the evidence will show, or any opinion on my part, but I am merely stating the contention of the state; and the state is offering evidence as to the alleged assault to ravish this young lady in this case for the purpose of throwing light on the intent of the defendant at the time the state contends he assaulted Miss Eddins. Now, I am letting it in solely on the question of intent, and you are not to consider it for any other purpose in this case. Before you could give it any consideration at all you would have to first find beyond a reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty that he did try to make an assault, or assault and battery on Miss Eddins. If you reach that point in your deliberations then you could go further and consider this evidence on the question of his intent, whether he intended to ravish her at the time he made the assault and battery on her, or assault on her, if you find he did make one on her.”

Appellant’s counsel interposed timely objections to the introduction of this testimony and had an agreement with the court that he could have the same objections to each question relating to the subsequent matter and an exception to the ruling of the court in each instance.

While testifying, Mrs. Outlaw gave in detail all facts bearing on her association with the defendant on August 4th. We observe, however, that all questions to which she made answer were material to the inquiry of the intent vel non of the defendant to forcibly ravish her.

Over timely objections and exceptions to the ruling of the court, the statement made by the appellant relating to the Mrs. Outlaw occurrence was permitted in evidence. As indicated above, this statement was in the main corroborative of the testimony of the defendant when he gave evidence in his own behalf.

We have given considerable space in this opinion to the matters above set out. We are keenly conscious of the importance of this decision, and we have no desire to prevent a full review of our conclusions.

In the introduction of facts in prior and subsequent occurrences, the dangers lie: in the almost inevitable result of diverting the minds of the triers of fact from the main issues; the undue multiplication of issues; enlarged prejudices against the accused emanating from the incidents of the other transactions; and a deprivation of the security and rights guaranteed to all under Sections 6 and 9 of our Constitutions.

*11 The early and much cited case of Gassenheimer et al. v. State, 52 Ala. 313, gives an authoritative base for an intelligent approach to the instant inquiry. We quote at length from the body of this able opinion:

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Bluebook (online)
33 So. 2d 484, 33 Ala. App. 7, 1946 Ala. App. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-state-alactapp-1946.