People v. Howard

76 P. 1116, 143 Cal. 316, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 818
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1904
DocketCrim. No. 999.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 76 P. 1116 (People v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Howard, 76 P. 1116, 143 Cal. 316, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 818 (Cal. 1904).

Opinions

COOPER, C.

The defendant is charged in the information with the crime of rape, alleged to have been committed on the fifteenth day of August, 1901, by having sexual intercourse with Irene Farias, a female under sixteen years of age. He was found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment at San Quentin for thirty years. This was beyond the expectancy of defendant’s life for that which was not a crime at common law and only a misdemeanor in many jurisdictions. (People v. Derbert, 138 Cal. 467.)

1. It is claimed that there is no evidence that defendant ever had sexual intercourse with Irene Farias, and we think the claim is well founded. Under our statute it is rape to have sexual intercourse with a female under the age of sixteen not the wife of the perpetrator. Any sexual penetration, however slight, is sufficient to complete the crime. (Pen. Code, sees. 261, 263.) It is essential, in order to find a defendant guilty of rape, that sexual penetration be proven, or that facts be proven from which it may be inferred. It is said in Underhill on Criminal Evidence (see. 416): “Proof of *318 penetration beyond a reasonable doubt is always absolutely essential. Evidence that the woman voluntarily remained with the defendant in a room all night is not sufficient. ’ ’

In speaking of the statutory crime which is in many jurisdictions termed the carnal abuse of female children, Mr. Bishop, in his late work on Statutory Crimes (3d ed., sec. 488), says: “The carnal knowledge required in this offense is the same as in rape proper, explained in another connection. There must be res in re, but to no particular depth, and the hymen need not be broken.”

The supreme court of Wisconsin in a case where the defendant was convicted of rape upon a female child twelve years of age reversed the case, and among other things held that the evidence was not sufficient. (Hardtke v. State, 67 Wis. 552.) The court said: “There was not a particle of evidence in the case of penetration.” In State v. Dalton, 106 Mo. 463, the defendant was charged with rape upon a. female child under the age of twelve years, and was convicted. The evidence showed that defendant, a married man, during the absence of his wife and family, in the night-time left his room and went to the room when the girl slept and got in bed with her. He then toyed with her, held her in his arms, pulled up her clothes, and for some time continued his lewd solicitations. The court reversed the case, and said: “We think it clear that the evidence entirely fails to sustain the charge of rape. All the authorities agree that penetration is necessary to constitute the offense. There has been some discussion by the courts and differences of opinion as to the extent of the penetration necessary to complete the crime, but none deny its necessity to some extent, or that it must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. (2 Bishop on Criminal Law, sec. 1132; 1 Wharton on Criminal Law, sec. 554, and authorities cited.) ” And the court correctly charged the jury that sexual penetration is necessary to constitute the crime of rape. It is therefore clear that to sustain the charge the prosecution must have proven sexual intercourse, which includes and means sexual penetration. It is the usual and ordinary practice, so far as we are informed, to prove the facts fully. Not legal conclusions or terms, but the acts that were done by defendant in detail. Such acts, when proven, must show *319 sexual penetration, although it may be slight. In some cases the facts and circumstances are such that penetration may be inferred therefrom. But we know of no case where it has not been held necessary to prove penetration. Here there is an entire absence of such proof. The prosecuting witness did not tell any one about it until months afterwards. She was then sent for by the district attorney; but how he knew anything which justified him in sending for her does not appear. She testified: “I told him it did not occur. Then after that he told me if I didn’t tell him I might get myself in trouble. He said he might put me in jail. . . . Before I left his office he told me not to tell my mother what occurred, asked me to promise him I would not. ... I did not tell my mother. ... I told her in the first place that it was not true. ’ ’ No reason appears why the matter should have been kept a secret from the mother. It was not shown that any examination had been made of the prosecuting witness by a physician, or any one else, so as to ascertain whether or not she was a virgin at the time of the trial. Not a fact or circumstance was proven from which penetration could be legally inferred. It was not even proven that defendant and the prosecuting witness ever had “sexual” intercourse. The district attorney under defendant’s objection was permitted to ask leading questions of the prosecuting witness, but by such questions did not succeed in proving “sexual” intercourse. He asked the following question: “Q. Did the defendant have intercourse with you during the month of August in the tent?” The witness answered, “Yes, sir.”

The witness, in answer to other questions, testified: “That took place on this side of the stove. There was a cot there. There is where it took place.” This is all the evidence in the record as to the act claimed to constitute the crime of rape, except the evidence of the defendant, who testified that he never at any time had sexual intercourse with the prosecuting witness. Intercourse means “a commingling; intimate connections or dealings between persons or nations, as in common affairs and civilities, in correspondence or trade; communication; commerce, especially interchange of thought and feeling; association; communion.” (Webster’s Dictionary.) There was testimony to the effect that the prosecuting witness was often in the defendant’s tent, and that she some *320 times sat on his lap and read to him. This may have been the intercourse referred to in answer to the leading question of the district attorney. The fact that the district attorney appears to have asked a prior question as to “sexual intercourse” does not assist the evidence. Such question was not answered. The only question that was answered did not in its terms relate to sexual intercourse. Nor did the testimony of the defendant that he never at any time had sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix aid the evidence of the prosecution. The proof that a thing did not occur certainly does not tend to show that it did occur. In a criminal prosecution nothing is presumed against a defendant, and all presumptions are in favor of innocence. It cannot be said that because the charge was “sexual intercourse” that we must presume it was “sexual intercourse” that the district attorney was asking about. There would be as much logic in saying that when a defendant is charged with stealing a white horse that it would be presumed that the horse spoken of was a white horse in the absence of proof. This court said in People v. Terrill, 127 Cal. 100: “The presumptions are all in favor of innocence, and if the facts stated may or may not constitute a crime, the presumption is that no crime is charged.” In this case if the facts proven constitute a crime, it would have been sufficient to state them in the information.

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Bluebook (online)
76 P. 1116, 143 Cal. 316, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-howard-cal-1904.