Monsma v. Williams

385 P.2d 107, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 155
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1963
Docket277
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 385 P.2d 107 (Monsma v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monsma v. Williams, 385 P.2d 107, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 155 (Ala. 1963).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

This is a tort action brought to recover damages for injuries alleged by the plaintiff' to have been received in the course of an: attempted rape and sexual assault upon her by the defendant. The trial court, sitting without a jury, found for the defendant and the plaintiff has appealed. The principal questions presented by this appeal relate to> the trial court’s findings of fact.

On a night in September of 1961, the; plaintiff and the defendant met in an Anchorage bar where they engaged in conversation and had a drink together. Between one and two o’clock in the morning the plaintiff decided that she should go look for her fiance with whom she was. living *108 at the time and whom she later married. She left the bar in the company of the defendant as she had agreed to drive him to his home in her car. On the way the parties stopped at two other bars, where they also had some drinks and danced or just talked but did not find tire missing fiance. They left the last bar at 3:30 a. m. and twenty minutes later arrived at a cabin on Klatt Road which, according to plaintiff, the defendant had indicated to her was his home.

The only eye witnesses to the alleged tort were the parties themselves, and there was sharp conflict in many pertinent parts of their testimony.

The plaintiff testified that upon arrival at the cabin, the defendant pulled her out of the car and told her that he intended to satisfy a secret desire of two years standing to have sexual intercourse with her. When she resisted his advances, he became angry and hit her in the shoulder with his fist, causing her to fall down. The defendant then jumped on top of her, pulled off her undergarments and committed a sodomous act upon her. Realizing the predicament she was in and suffering great pain in her shoulder, the plaintiff told the defendant that the ground, which was cold, wet and dirty, was not a proper place for what he wanted to do and that if he would go with her to her trailer, she “would go along with whatever he had in mind.” In her attempts to persuade the defendant she kissed him twice. He was finally convinced and rode with the plaintiff to her trailer. Once there •, she jumped out of the car and ran into the 'trailer, the defendant following her. She apparently expected to find her fiance in the trailer, but he was not there. So she dashed on out through the back door and around to the front of the trailer, jumped into the car, and sped away to the home of one Betty Burrow, her fiance’s secretary, to whom she told the story of what had happened to her.

The plaintiff also testified that she complained to the defendant about her aching shoulder and left arm and told him that he must have broken the arm. Pie showed some commiseration for any injury he may have caused her and said that he would pay any hospital and doctor bills resulting from the injury. She presumed that she had blood on her face because the defendant wiped her face on a white jacket lying in the car. She did have some bruises on her face which she thinks she may have gotten from rocks as she fought the defendant while the parties were on the ground. Soon after the plaintiff arrived at Betty Burrow’s place her fiance was summoned. He called a police officer and then took the plaintiff to the hospital where a doctor treated her for a broken collarbone.

The defendant had a somewhat different story to tell. He admitted that he had attempted to have sexual relations with the plaintiff on the night in question, but insisted that her conduct in kissing and “petting” with him in the bars they visited led him to believe that she was amorously disposed toward him. He denied that he asked the plaintiff to take him home or that he represented to her that he lived in the cabin on Klatt Road. He denied striking the plaintiff or committing a sodomous act upon her and stated that he did not know how she may have been injured. In answer to the question whether there was more petting in the car as it was parked on Klatt Road, he answered: “Yes, and then we got out of the car and went around back and stood up back there and kissed and rolled down on the ground.” All the while the parties were on Klatt Road the plaintiff never objected to tire defendant putting his hands on her.

The defendant also testified that the plaintiff complained about the dirt and suggested that the parties go to her trailer where there was a bed; that she never once complained about a shoulder injury; and that she drove the car to the trailer. While still on Klatt Road the plaintiff had said to the defendant that she would have her fiance shoot or kill him. Then on the way to the trailer she informed the defendant that her fiance would be at the trailer. *109 These statements hy the plaintiff seem to have persuaded the defendant not to venture into the trailer with the plaintiff. For, as he testified, if the plaintiff’s fiance was in the trailer he did not want to go in, instead he “got out of that car and walked right home.”

The record shows that six days after the incident on Klatt Road a misdemeanor complaint was filed in the district magistrate ■court at Anchorage charging the defendant with assaulting the plaintiff on September 16, 1961, “by grabbing her with his hands and throwing her to the ground.” The ■defendant, upon advice of counsel, pleaded guilty to the charge and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100, of which amount $75 was suspended. When asked on cross examination below why he pleaded guilty in the district magistrate court, the defendant replied:

“Well, I was * * * (not discernible) just for the simply [sic] fact that I didn’t have any money I couldn’t * * * g0 ⅛ court, and it wasn’t going to cost much and just to get it out my head, I, my hair, I just went ahead and got it over with.”

Although the plaintiff had testified that she fought with the defendant on the ground and resisted him to the full measure ■of her strength, there was no evidence produced at the trial of any marks upon the ■defendant indicating the resistance she claims to have made. In a pretrial disposition the defendant had said that the plaintiff did resist him. At the trial he was prompted by his counsel to explain that the plaintiff made no actual physical resistance hut resisted only to the extent of requesting that the parties go to the trailer.

Other evidence in the record, worthy of note, is this: The plaintiff, at the time of her encounter with the defendant, was employed as a radio station sales representative and copy writer, thirty-one years of age, five feet five and one-half inches tall, and weighed about 129 pounds. She had two children, by a previous marriage. The plaintiff’s fiance testified that she was a “pretty well built” individual and that any man trying to rape her would “have his hands full.” The doctor, who attended the plaintiff and saw her shortly after she arrived at the hospital, testified that he could not remember seeing any discoloration or damage of the skin over the broken collarbone. He gave it as his opinion that a fall on the ,arm could have snapped the plaintiff’s collarbone; and that it would take a fair amount of force to break a normal collarbone — “a little bit more force than perhaps you would get from being on the ground.” Betty Burrows and the plaintiff’s fiance testified that they saw marks and bruises and even dried blood on the plaintiff’s face and that she was hysterical, disarrayed and complaining of a sore shoulder.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
385 P.2d 107, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monsma-v-williams-alaska-1963.