People v. Lewis

123 P. 232, 18 Cal. App. 359, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 319
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 1912
DocketCrim. No. 169.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 123 P. 232 (People v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Lewis, 123 P. 232, 18 Cal. App. 359, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 319 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Defendant was accused by information, tried by a jury and convicted of the crime of rape committed on April 17, 1911, upon a child under the age of sixteen. He appeals from the judgment of conviction and from the order denying his motion for a new trial. The verdict was, “Guilty of rape as charged. We recommend him to the mercy of the court.” He was sentenced to imprisonment for ten years.

The defendant being unable to employ counsel, the court appointed Mr. Ben Berry as his attorney, who conducted the defense at the trial with zeal and ability, and is prosecuting this appeal with apparent belief in the innocence of his client.

The prosecutrix is defendant’s step-child and at the time of the alleged offense was of the age of thirteen years. Defendant was then and had long been afflicted with weak and inflamed eyes, nearly blind, and deprived of one leg and was at times under treatment by a physician, although the evidence did not show lack of copulative capacity. He was living in Stockton with his mother, Mrs. Sarah Lewis, and his married sister, Mrs. Turner, and three younger brothers and sisters, before his marriage with the mother of the prosecutrix, Mrs. Emily Hamilton, then a widow. The mother and her child had lived in Lodi, and in the early part of 1909 moved to Stockton and took up their residence with Mrs. Lewis, defendant’s mother. Both Mrs. Lewis and Mrs. Hamilton were working women, sometimes going out to families and at other times doing washing at home for patrons. The prosecutrix went to public school with the other children. In September, 1909, defendant married Mrs. Hamilton while living in the family of his mother, Mrs. Sarah Lewis, and not long after moved to a house at a place called “the homestead,” in another part of the city of Stockton. This was a house of three rooms, one of which was a kitchen, where there was also a bed. It was at this house and on .this kitchen bed that the particular act is alleged to have occurred. Part of the time, *361 prior to April 17, 1911, a Mrs. Johnson lived with the family at the homestead. The child, Angie, attended public school not far distant. Both Mrs. Lewis, defendant’s wife, and Mrs. Johnson, while living with the family, worked out generally, but not always, on alternate days, one remaining at home to do the work. Mrs. Johnson was not living with them in April, 1911. The story told by the child involves the conduct of defendant while living at his mother’s house, both before and after his marriage, as also in the house at the homestead. The verdict has no foundation other than the testimony of the prosecutrix, which is not corroborated by any circumstance or fact, except it be the result of the examination made by witness, Dr. Miller, and by him only to the extent of appearances, not necessary to mention, known by physicians to indicate sexual intercourse with someone. This fact, as corroborating evidence pointing to defendant, lost its force by admitted conduct of the prosecutrix with other persons. Counsel urge with earnestness that the verdict, based upon the uncorroborated testimony of his accuser and upon a narrative of facts in itself unbelievable, was the result of passion and prejudice and was without substantial justification. The prosecutrix was permitted, without objection, to lay bare her life both on the examination in chief and on her cross-examination, at the time she lived in Lodi, then but ten or eleven years old, until the date of the particular act, in 1911, selected by the prosecuting attorney. The record shows that it was with great difficulty the witness was brought to the point of telling her story and then only after much urging by the prosecuting attorney and intimations by the court that she must answer the questions or render herself liable to punishment. Apparently her hesitation was not from a sense of shame or delicacy of feeling or failure to understand the questions or from fear, and yet the substantial facts finally came out only in answer to leading questions in which the prosecuting attorney himself narrated the circumstances in their sequence and the witness answered yes or no as the question seemed to require. According to the testimony of the witness given at the preliminary, defendant’s intercourse with her commenced six or seven months before his marriage to her mother and was kept up twice a week, on Mondays and Saturdays; that before that time he had conducted himself with her in a lascivious manner: that after his *362 marriage he continued this intercourse twice a. week up to April, 1911; at the trial she reduced the frequency of inter-, course at Mrs. Sarah Lewis’ house, before defendant’s marriage, to once a month but adhered to her statement that it had continued twice a week most of the time after his marriage and for six or seven months prior to April, 1911, at the homestead; that it occurred in every instance in the home where they were living at the time—at Mrs. Sarah Lewis’ house, where six or eight people were living, young and old, and at the homestead where, at least, a considerable part of the time, Mrs. Johnson lived with the family; that the days were chosen, Mondays and Wednesdays, when her mother went out to work. She testified that she had once, while living in the Lewis house on Washington street and before the marriage of defendant,' accused one Masterson of having intercourse with her and she immediately told her mother of the fact. Some investigation followed and she afterward retracted and the investigation ceased. It appeared also that she had been approached by certain boys and certain suggestions were made to her by at least two other men, of all which she promptly told her mother. There seemed to be no lack of confidence between mother and child, and yet she admitted she never told her mother of defendant’s advances either at the early stage of his alleged relations nor at any other time, although they were continued unintermittently for over two years. When asked why she did not tell her mother she answered, “I don’t know.” It was not until her conduct with certain boys with whom she associated led to her being taken before the juvenile court that she divulged her relations with defendant. There was no evidence that defendant had ever been seen in a compromising situation with the child, or that he had ever been seen to show her any affectionate or loving attention or she any toward him—indeed, on the contrary, she admitted that he had corrected her and at times restrained her from going to places he thought improper for her, though she said she bore him no ill-will. The mother of the witness and the adult persons who had lived in the same house with defendant, at his mother’s and at the homestead, testified that they never saw or heard of any act of impropriety of defendant toward this child. The story of the particular act, as brought out in the manner above stated, was that it occurred on *363 Monday, April 17, 1911, in the kitchen; that her mother got up that morning, leaving her husband in bed and about 8 o’clock went away to work; that witness was working in the kitchen and defendant asked her to come to bed with him, which she did. The details of this incident as assented to by the witness, in response to the questions as put to her, are unprintable. and disclose a condition of mind in the participants which should shock the sensibility of persons not abnormally depraved.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Walker
181 Cal. App. 2d 227 (California Court of Appeal, 1960)
People v. Gunn
338 P.2d 592 (California Court of Appeal, 1959)
People v. Miller
302 P.2d 603 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)
People v. Coontz
259 P.2d 694 (California Court of Appeal, 1953)
People v. Frye
255 P.2d 105 (California Court of Appeal, 1953)
People v. Wheeler
171 P.2d 62 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)
People v. Carlson
167 P.2d 812 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)
People v. Jackson
147 P.2d 94 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)
People v. Coley
143 P.2d 755 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
People v. Holquin
120 P.2d 71 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
People v. Mitchell
119 P.2d 1000 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
People v. Johnson
115 P.2d 605 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
People v. Jefferson
88 P.2d 238 (California Court of Appeal, 1939)
People v. Moreno
79 P.2d 390 (California Court of Appeal, 1938)
People v. Norrington
202 P. 932 (California Court of Appeal, 1921)
People v. Airola
188 P. 817 (California Court of Appeal, 1920)
People v. Whitney
168 P. 1052 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)
People v. Slaughter
165 P.2d 44 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)
People v. Antunez
153 P. 963 (California Court of Appeal, 1915)
People v. Price
147 P. 591 (California Court of Appeal, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 P. 232, 18 Cal. App. 359, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lewis-calctapp-1912.