Morrison v. People ex rel. Richard

52 Ill. App. 482, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 209
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 23, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 Ill. App. 482 (Morrison v. People ex rel. Richard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. People ex rel. Richard, 52 Ill. App. 482, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 209 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a suit under the bastardy act, brought upon the complaint of Cora Belle Richard, charging that appellant is the father of her bastard child. The complaint was filed in justice’s court November 30, 1892, and the cause was tried in the County Court, by a jury, at the February term, 1893, who, by their verdict, found that Cora Belle Richard is an unmarried woman; has never been married; that she has been delivered of a bastard child; that the defendant is the father of said child, and said child is now living.

Defendant filed his motion for a new trial, which was overruled and defendant excepted. The court entered judgment against defendant for §350, to he paid to the clerk in installments of §100, payable April 1,1893, and §12.50 every three months, until the whole amount is paid, and that defendant pay all costs. Defendant craved and was granted an appeal to this court, but no time was fixed for filing bond or bill of exceptions. Bond was approved by clerk and filed March 8, 1893, and bill of exceptions was filed March 4, 1893, and was signed by the judge. When the record does not show that time was given to file bond and bill of excep.tions, nor that bond and bill of exceptions were filed in term time, if the bill of exceptions is signed by the judge, it is presumed to have been presented and filed in apt time. Hyde Park v. Dunham, 85 Ill. 569; Myer v. Phillips, 68 Ill. 269; Underwood v. Hoosack, 40 Ill. 98.

Without reproducing in detail all the evidence, we will uoav refer to and comment upon so much thereof as seems material. It is shown and not disputed, that the prosecutrix was about sixteen years old at the time the alleged sexual intercourse with defendant is charged to have occurred; and his family, with whom she was brought up, consisted of himself, his wife, two grown daughters and a son. That he took her in a buggy to stay with a Mrs. Beverly, his crippled and invalid sister. That he remained there two nights and one day, his sister sleeping in one room, and he and the prosecutrix in an adjoining room, in which she slept on a lounge and he on a bed both nights. That she remained there two months, and then he came for her and took her back to his home, where she stayed until the expiration of two weeks after her child was born, and then an aunt came and took her away. In addition to these undisputed facts the prosecutrix testified that on the second night at Mrs. Beverly’s, she, the prosecutrix, retired first and had been asleep, when defendant came to her and had sexual intercourse with her on the lounge, and nothing was then said, except that she told him she would tell on him, and he replied she had better not, or he would make it hot for her. That defendant had never, before or since, said one word to her out of the way, or had sexual intercourse with her but that one time, and no other person but him ever had sexual intercourse .with her. She also testified positively, that defendant Avas the father of her bastard child, and that she had never been married. Defendant testified that the head of his sister’s bed Avas close to the door between the two rooms, which door stood open both nights he was there; that he and his sister sat up and talked both nights, until about eleven o’clock; that when he went to bed he did not go near the lounge, or speak to the prosecutrix, nor she to him; that he never said aught out of the way to her, nor had sexual intercourse with her; never thought of such a thing; would as soon have thought of doing it with one of his daughters as with her; that he is not the father of her child. On cross-examination he testified he made no inquiries about the peddler after he learned she charged the peddler with being the father of the child.

Defendant’s daughter testified, when her attention was called to the condition of prosecutrix and she first asked the latter about it, she replied she had taken cold, but some time afterward said that when she was at Mrs. Beverly’s an Italian foot peddler came there and fooled her, and was the father of the child she was then pregnant with. That he got the better of her the first Monday after she went there) and Mrs. Beverly was not at home; and after this she showed witness a breast pin and pair of ear rings, she said the peddler had given her. This witness testified before the justice, but did not then say it was an Italian peddler prosecutrix mentioned, but said it was a foot peddler; and the justice in rebuttal testified that on that occasion he don’t think this witness said Belle told her it was on the Monday after she went to Mrs. Beverly’s that the peddler overcame her. The prosecutrix testified before the justice that she told defendant’s wife and daughter that a foot peddler was the father of her child, and on cross-examination in the Circuit Court, also testified, when she came back to defendant’s in July, 1890, she did not have her menses, and defendant’s daughter asked her what was the matter, and she replied that she got in the family way by a foot peddler while at Mrs. Beverly’s, and told defendant’s wife the same thing. On re-examination, she testified that what she had told them about being in the family way by a peddler was not true, and she told it because she wanted a home. That it was not until she had been at Mrs. Beverly’s two or three weeks that a peddler came, and then Mrs. Beverly was there, and she also explained how she purchased the cheap ear rings and breast pin. It thus appears there was a sharp conflict in the evidence upon material points, and it was the province of the jury to determine what the real truth was.

If they believed the prosecutrix, defendant was guilty. If they believed him, he was not guilty. It is said her testimony ought to have been discredited because of her statements to defendant’s wife and daughter; but the fact that she frankly admitted she had made them, both at the examination before the justice, and at the trial, and the reason given by her for making them, very properly influenced the minds of the jury favorably toward her. It is also said to be improbable, that as there was but one act of sexual intercourse, and she had never before had such intercourse, she could have become pregnant by defendant. But these facts were before the jury, and if they found them to be true, and that defendant did have intercourse with her, as she says he did, they were justified in finding as they did, that one act of intercourse was sufficient to' produce such result. It appears, also, defendant occupied the same bed-chamber with prosecutrix and had the opportunity to do what she testified to, and the threat he then made, if the jury believed he made it, would deter her from charging him with the offense, until she had removed from his place. His conduct in making no inquiries and exhibiting no solicitude for her, when he was informed of her condition, doubtless had its effect with the jury in determining the question of his guilt' and the weight his testimony was entitled to. A similar case to this is Lewis v. The People, 82 Ill. 104. It was urged that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence, and in the opinion it is said: “ If the evidence of the prosecution was alone considered, it would not leave a doubt that defendant was the father of the child. It was for the jury to determine whether he had overcome the evidence on the part of the people, and they have found he had not, and we think correctly.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ill. App. 482, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-people-ex-rel-richard-illappct-1894.