People v. Lambert

108 N.W. 345, 144 Mich. 578, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 1095
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1906
DocketDocket No. 154
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 108 N.W. 345 (People v. Lambert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Lambert, 108 N.W. 345, 144 Mich. 578, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 1095 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

Respondent was convicted of the crime of rape and sentenced to prison for life. The prosecutrix was 16 years of age on May 5, 1904. The act of intercourse, which took place November 19, 1904, was admitted. The only disputed question was whether' it was accomplished by force and against the will of the prosecutrix. [580]*580Upon this subject there was testimony which required the case to be submitted to the jury. The assignments of error which are relied upon relate:

(1) To alleged improper cross-examination of respondent ; (2) to alleged intemperate language of the prosecuting attorney; (8) to the refusal of the court to give to the jury a requested instruction; (4) to alleged prejudicial language of the trial judge.

1. On the cross-examination of the respondent, the following occurred:

“ Q. Is this the first time you have ever been in any trouble ?

“A. No.

Mr. Nichols: I object to it as incompetent. I ask that the question be stricken out.

“The Court: I don’t know what you expect to follow it up with. You can introduce the record as you do any record of any witness to test his credibility.

“Mr. Peters: That is the purpose.

“The Court: It is for no other purpose except to test his credibility. The answer may stand.

“Mr. Nichols: Exception.

Q. Have you been arrested before ?

“ Mr. Nichols: I object to it as irrelevant, incompetent, immaterial, and not proper.

The Court: Answer. I will simply say to you, gentlemen [addressing the jury], this is to test the witness’s credibility. He has taken the witness stand. He is like any witness. He can be inquired about those matters. Let the record show this is all taken under objection and exception.

“Mr. Nichols: You cannot show in testing the witness’s credibility the fact of his having been arrested. If he has been convicted of any offense, that is to show that, but to ask if he has been arrested, I will submit that is. not proper.

‘ ‘ The Court: That is true.

“Mr. Nichols: That is the reason of my objection.

Q. Were you ever convicted of any offense?

“A. Yes, sir. Once for riding a bicycle on a walk.

Q. Any other offense ?

“A. Yes; I guess one time at the Baird opera house, when I worked there. Mr. Baird had some copper down [581]*581cellar. There was some wire there that belonged to the city, and we took this copper he had there for onr pay, and we thought this other city wire went along with it. We went and sold it, and they came after the wire and made a charge against us for larceny. I pleaded guilty to that. That is all I could do. I was convicted of another offense, larceny. Charged with larceny. I pleaded guilty. Was convicted at another time for fighting; pleaded guilty then. Have not been convicted of any ■other crime.

Q. Are you positive that three times is all.

‘ ‘ The Court: He has testified to four times, including the bicycle.

“Mr. Peters: Yes; but I wouldn’t regard the bicycle matter as very serious..

Q. Are you in the habit of having sexual intercourse with women other than your wife ?

“Mr. Nichols: I object to it as incompetent, irrelevant, :and immaterial.

The Court: I think I will sustain that objection.”

It is pointed out in the brief that, while the prosecuting ■attorney claimed the testimony was called for to test the •credibility of the witness, the use made of it is evidenced by the argument made to the jury, in which the following is some of the language used. Commenting first upon the testimony of the prosecutrix, and then upon that given by the respondent, the prosecuting attorney said:

“ If ever I saw a picture of girlhood innocence, an innocent country girl, so to speak, not innocent, perhaps, that is not the right expression to use, but you remember when my brother put any question to her in any other language than she is capable of using, the language that •educated men use, she was ‘ stumped.’ She says, ‘ What •do you mean? ’ He had to address her in plain talk that working people' use. She didn’t understand a word' of more than three syllables hardly, but when a word was put to her in tho language she was acquainted with or a •question, so that she understood it, the answer came right ■straight, fair, and square, examined by a man of 25 years experience, a skilled lawyer and one of the best criminal lawyers in the county of Ingham; and yet he could not twist her or work her out of the true story not one particle. She stood that cross-examination marvelously. I [582]*582want to say to you there is one class of people in the world that can stand such a cross-examination, and that is the party who is telling the truth. Let them get away from it and such a man as Judge Nichols will trip them every time, unless it be such a man as this man, who has been in the criminal courts, tried and convicted, who has been through the mill, who stands ready if convicted to go to State’s prison. That man lying over here in jail will sit down and he will commit to memory a story the devil himself couldn’t break up as far as that is concerned, and yet what about it ?

Mr. Nichols: Exception.”

It is apparent that no harm was done in accepting the-answer to the first question. As to the others which were answered, they were within a rule which counsel for respondent himself suggested and were not objected to.

%. In his opening argument to the jury, the prosecuting attorney used the following language, to which exceptions were taken:

“We have here a charge made by a young girl just past the age of 16 in which she charges this man here— this thing here—

“Mr. Nichols (interrupting): I take an exception to that remark.

“Mr. Peters (continuing): — with having with force and against her will violated her person on the 19th day of last November. * * * And yet that brute goes on that stand and tries to make you believe he left that woman in that condition and she kissed him while he did it. * * * A man that will do what that man did there is no place on earth that is safe for him except behind the prison bars, and I hope you will strengthen the thoughts in me that within three days that man will be where never again will he be given the least particle of an. opportunity to ravish another innocent girl.”

The uncontradicted testimony of physicians, added to the testimony of the respondent, indicated strongly that, whether the intercourse was or was not consented to, the act itself was accomplished with such force and the parts were left in such a condition that pain accompanied the coition. Respondent gave other testimony which in effect was a self-characterization, little, if any, more favorable [583]*583than that given to him by the prosecuting attorney. It would have been more dignified and more in keeping with official character if the prosecuting attorney had refrained from using some of the words which he did use.

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Related

People v. Geddes
3 N.W.2d 266 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1942)
State v. Brewster
222 N.W. 6 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1928)
People v. Fenner
185 N.W. 806 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 N.W. 345, 144 Mich. 578, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lambert-mich-1906.