Montgomery v. State

262 S.W. 755, 97 Tex. Crim. 503, 1924 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 389
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 1924
DocketNo. 8146.
StatusPublished

This text of 262 S.W. 755 (Montgomery v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. State, 262 S.W. 755, 97 Tex. Crim. 503, 1924 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 389 (Tex. 1924).

Opinion

MORROW, Presiding Judge.

Under an indictment charging rape, appellant was convicted of an assault to rape and condemned to confinement in the penitentiary for a period of six years.

The young lady, nineteen years of age, who was the subject of the alleged assault, after attending Normal School in Weatherford, the county seat, for a time was about'to return to the home of her parents some six or seven miles distant in the country. To bring her home, her brother, eighteen years of age, went in a wagon to the county seat, arriving in the evening about half-past eight o’clock. The prosecutrix and a girl friend were at a gathering where they were joined by the brother. The gathering dispersed at about eleven o’clock at night. While walking upon the street in company with her brother and the girl friend, the prosecutrix was called to the car of the appellant and accepted his invitation to convey her to her home. Upon reaching the school-house about four miles on the way, the car was stopped, the lights extinguished, and, according to the prosecutrix, an assault made by the appellant in which he accomplished the sexual act. According to his testimony, the sexual act was not completed in that there was no penetration, and that so far as his advances were *505 pursued, they were not seriously opposed by the prosecutrix. Her conduct, he claims, was such as to lead him to believe that she was passively yielding and that- she was not unwilling that the final act should be accomplished, and that he, of his own volition, desisted without penetration.

If the appellant’s testimony be true, the parties engaged in mutual fondling and caressing for several hours. She sat in his lap, kissed him, submitted to the fondling of her breast and privates, and finally, after several refusals to go further, relaxed, and as he believed from her conduct, gave passive assent. He claimed that at no time was it his intent to force her; that his entire conduct was directed to obtaining her consent; and that it was only when he thought she was acquiescing that he proceeding to the extent described.

According- to her testimony, she resisted to the utmost; that she took no voluntary part in or consented to any of the fondling, and that by force, the penetration took place. In this she was definite.

After they had remained at the place described, for some two hours or more, they rode together in the appellant’s car to the home of the prosecutrix, arriving at about two o’clock in the morning. In the meanwhile, the brother of the prosecutrix, who had gone in the family wagon to bring her home had returned, and the parents of the prosecutrix became aware of the fact that she had left the city in company with the appellant, they became alarmed at her long delay in reaching her hom§. Upon their arrival, the prosecutrix and the appellant were met by her parents, both of whom were armed, and a conversation took place lasting about a half or three-fourths of an hour.

The appellant took upon the trial and takes here, the position that there was affirmative testimony presenting a defensive theory that was not presented to the jury. He contends that he had no intent to force the prosecutrix, and that her conduct was reasonably calculated to lead him to believe and did lead him to believe that his acts were not against her consent, and that this issue should have been presented to the jury. It is his contention that this theory comes not only from his own testimony, bu.t he points to certain other facts in the testimony coming from the State’s witnesses. He had on no previous occasion accompanied the prosecutrix. She consented, without demurrer, to ride with him at night for quite a distance in the country. She admits that she spent several hours in his company and while his car was stopped near the school-house she made no effort to leave; that during the interval and after some of the acts, which she claims were offensive, had taken place, her brother, on his way home in a wagon, passed along the road about fifty or sixty yards distant from the school-house. The evidence is such as might have caused the jury to believe that she knew when he passed and she conceded that she made no exclamation or outcry at that time. Upon reaching home, she did not accuse *506 the appellant of any improper conduct. Her parents were not acquainted with him. She told them who he was. She was not crying upon the arrival, and she made no immediate outcry. Appellant, in her presence, excused the delay by stating that they had had car trouble, and this she did not deny.

There" was testimony from which the jury might have drawn the inference that her first admission of the alleged misconduct upon the part of the appellant was made after some of her underclothing had fallen down upon her getting out of the car.

There was evidence of a hemorrhage and that the prosecutrix suffered from some bruises. There was an issue of fact touching the cause of the hemorrhage, whether from her menstrual period or from the insertion of the appellant’s finger in the vagina. In their finding, the jury rejected the theory of penetration and acquitted the appellant of rape. The prosecutrix was above the age of consent. There was no legal impediment to her acquiescence.

By exception, the completeness of the court’s main charge was challenged upon the ground that it failed to give an affirmative instruction upon the defensive theories of the appellant raised by the evidence. Special charges were also presented and refused, one of them embracing the idea that if the appellant committed an assault upon the prosecutrix with the intent to have carnal knowledge of her on condition of her acquiescence but not against her will, an acquittal of the assault with intent to rape should result; another charge presenting the issue of consent; and still another applying to the issue of aggravated assault and embracing the idea of implied consent, leading the appellant to reasonably believe that his conduct was not objectionable to the prosecutrix.

The refusal to amend the charge or to supplement it with some of the special charges mentioned is properly brought forward for review.

In the statute, “force” is defined as “such as might reasonably be supposed sufficient to overcome resistance, taking into consideration the relative strength of the parties, and other circumstances of the case.” See Penal Code, Art. 1064. The resistance intended is real, not feigned. Barnett v. State, 42 Texas Crim. Rep., 302; Warren v. State, 54 Texas Crim. Rep., 443; Paxton v. State, 157 S. W. Rep., 396; Gadsden v. State, 77 Fla., 627; People v. Marrs, 125 Mich., 376. The mere efforts to persuade, if done with no intent to accomplish the sexual act by force, do not- arise to the dignity of an assault with intent to rape. Bishop’s New Crim. Law., Vol. 2, p. 840. From the same work, page 831, we quote:

“While there may be a rape of a woman who does not resist, one in the normal condition, awake, mentally competent, and not in fear, will ordinarily oppose, with a vehemence and by measures varying with her special nature and the particular circumstances, this greatest *507 of all outrages, unless she mentally consents. So that though she objects in words, if she makes no outcry or resistance, she consents by her conduct, and there is no rape.

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Related

Barnett v. State
62 S.W. 765 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1900)
Warren v. State
114 S.W. 380 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1908)
Shields v. State
44 S.W. 844 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1898)
Isaacs v. State
30 Tex. 450 (Texas Supreme Court, 1867)
Pefferling v. State
40 Tex. 486 (Texas Supreme Court, 1874)
Gadsden v. State
82 So. 50 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1919)
Paxton v. State
157 S.W. 396 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1913)
People v. Marrs
84 N.W. 284 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 755, 97 Tex. Crim. 503, 1924 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-state-texcrimapp-1924.