Pearson v. State

31 A.2d 624, 182 Md. 1, 1943 Md. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 28, 1943
Docket[No. 3, April Term, 1943.]
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 31 A.2d 624 (Pearson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearson v. State, 31 A.2d 624, 182 Md. 1, 1943 Md. LEXIS 169 (Md. 1943).

Opinion

Melvin, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Archie Lee Pearson, was found guilty of rape by a jury in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, and was sentenced to be hanged. He has appealed to this court for a reversal on the basis of six exceptions taken at the trial. Two of these, the first and fourth, were “abandoned,” counsel for defendant stated, and reliance placed upon the remaining four. Of these, the third exception, relating to the location of a telephone bell in the home of a witness, Mary Offutt, is so clearly irrelevant and free from reversible error that the trial court’s ruling on that point is affirmed without the necessity of further comment. The other three exceptions present the points upon which the present appeal hinges. These are the admissibility of the photograph mentioned in exception No. 2 and of testimony relating to the bank account and the earnings of the witness, Everett English, as mentioned in exceptions No. 5 and No. 6.

Before passing upon these exceptions it is to be noted that the record of facts before the court, and upon which its rulings must be based, is strikingly meagre, weak and inadequate in its presentation of a case involving the life or death of the defendant. On the issue of rape the alleged victim, Mrs. Everett English, claims that she was choked by the defendant and marks left upon her throat. The defendant denies that he laid hands upon her at all. Therefore, the physical appearance of the woman on the morning following the night of the alleged attack was relevant and important, and a photograph, properly verified, of her as of that time would have been clearly admissible in support of the testimony of any witness or witnesses who then saw her. Yet, notwithstand *4 ing this obvious relevancy and importance, the (-photograph that was then taken was not even developed and there is no description in the record of any marks on her as of the Monday morning in question, although there were four eyewitnesses to her condition at that time, namely, her husband, and Rosie Jenkins, in whose home she took refuge, and who was the first person who saw here after the alleged attack, Officer Ralph Howard and Officer Earl Stearn.

The woman, herself, in her testimony in chief does not even mention any marks, and it is only when she was recalled in connection with a picture — supposedly the one taken four days later and referred to in the second exception — that she mentions them at all. Officer Stearn in his testimony “identified,” but did not attempt to describe, “marks or scratches and bruises on her throat,” and although he took a photograph of the same on Monday morning he did not develop it and it was not “available” at the trial. No explanation is given as to why it was not available. He further testified that he took another picture on the following Thursday, which was developed by the witness Jack Berry, and that it was a fair representation of how she looked on Thursday. This was different from her appearance on Monday in that the said marks were not colored on the former day, but had become colored by the latter.

Consequently, there is no testimony whatever in the record of the appearance of the alleged victim of the attack describing any marks or bruises as they may have appeared when she was at the Jenkins home the morning following her experience. .

On the main issue the record is also lacking in any medical testimony as to the woman’s physical condition or appearance following the alleged attack or any other time, thus leaving her version without support from the one source which is almost invariably found in a case of this character. There is still another important element in the case concerning which the record is *5 notably inadequate, and that is a description of the scene or locale of the alleged attack. The record goes no further than to mention crossroads, where the altercation began, one of which roads went in the direction of the Englishes’ home and the other toward the defendant’s; “a dirt road that led by Mr. Clarence Offutt’s house,” and up which the woman says the defendant forced her to go; a “field” which she said they crossed and a “pine thicket” at which they finally arrived.

Just how far altogether it was from the place where the automobile stopped, over the dirt road and across the field to the pine thicket — whether a hundred yards or a mile — is not even indicated in the record, nor any detail or picture, oral or otherwise, given as to the terrain or the route followed.

While these omissions from the record of relevant, important and customary features of testimony is conspicuous in this kind of a case, what the record does disclose in the way of essential facts is likewise surprisingly meagre. The substance of the testimony of the prosecuting witness, Mrs. English, is that she and her husband had made a Sunday evening visit to a tavern. Upon leaving, she first saw the defendant when she came to the side of the automobile, “an old mail truck,” where her husband was sitting. The defendant, whom they had never met before, asked if he could ride with them toward his home, and they agreed. The husband went back into the tavern and purchased three bottles of beer (later mentioned, without contradiction, as being quart bottles) with money provided by the defendant. The truck was stopped at the home of a Mrs. Dunnegan, friends of the Englishes, and the husband and wife went in that house for a stay of about thirty or forty-five minutes, leaving the defendant in the truck. They then resumed their journey homeward. Upon arriving at the crossroads, which was their parting of ways, the husband stopped the truck and told the defendant he would have to get out and go home. Before that, from *6 the time of leaving Dunnegan’s, the defendant “opened conversation about loaning her husband money, but that she would have to get out and take the money.” Finally, “in order to quiet him,” her husband took the $5. When the machine stopped at the crossroads and the defendant got out, he “started fighting and threw stones at her husband, who retreated up the road.” Just why the latter, instead of retreating, did not remain in his truck and keep on going is not explained. As soon as her husband “retreated,” the witness continued, “Pearson returned to the car, got into it and put his arm around her.” Quoting from the record the rest of her story, which is in narrative form, is: “She opened the door, slid out the other side and Pearson immediately followed; then he choked her and threatened her life if she didn’t keep quiet; he grabbed her by the arm and forced her to go up a dirt road leading by Mr. Clarence Offutt’s house; after going across a field they finally arrived at a pine thicket; Pearson choked her once more in addition to the time shortly after getting out of the car; that in this pine thicket he forcibly and against her will ravished her; that after a considerable period of time,- and after she begged and begged him to show her the way back to the road, that he had again ravished her some time before reaching the road; that when they came up to the road she looked for her pocketbook and then went up to a colored house occupied by Rosie Jenkins.” When she stopped there she said her clothes “were badly shattered,” that she was completely a “nervous wreck” and was “almost hysterical.”

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Bluebook (online)
31 A.2d 624, 182 Md. 1, 1943 Md. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-state-md-1943.