People v. Merrill

231 P.2d 573, 104 Cal. App. 2d 257, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1610
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 1951
DocketCrim. 2731
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 231 P.2d 573 (People v. Merrill) 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. Merrill, 231 P.2d 573, 104 Cal. App. 2d 257, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1610 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

BRAT, J.

From a conviction of rape with force and violence and an order denying his motion for a new trial, defendant appealed.

Questions Presented

1. Was the prosecutrix’ testimony inherently improbable?

2. Error in exclusion of testimony?

3. Error in denying probation ?

4. Error in denying new trial ?

5. Misconduct of district attorney ?

6. Misconduct of judge ?

1. Prosecutrix’ Testimony.

Mary, aged 28, met defendant, aged 32, in September, 1949, at a garage where she kept her car and where he was employed. She saw and talked to him there frequently late at night when she came in with her car. She went out with him not over six times. She loaned him some money and on January 11,1950, loaned him an additional sum. On April 20, 1950, he phoned her and asked her to meet him at a place called Steve’s Club, stating that he would make a payment on what he owed her. After a few drinks they left and went to Mary’s apartment. While Mary was seated on his lap defendant told her that due to an accident his testicles were damaged and he did not know whether or not he could have intercourse; that if they got married probably the only way they could have children would be through artificial semination. Mary went into the bathroom, and returning, found defendant lying face down on the davenport. She suggested that he leave. He said he wanted to stay all night. She told him no one could do that except her husband if she ever had one. He wanted her to undress. She refused. Pie then grabbed her arm, and hit her in the face. She started to scream. He grabbed her by the throat, shutting off the air so she could not breathe. He told her if she did not keep still that he would strangle her. He kept hitting her, pulled her on to the davenport, pressed his thumb into her eye, and stated that if she did not lie still and keep quiet he would push her eyes clear through her head. He then raped her.

Within an hour Mary phoned the police and reported the attack. Policemen came to her apartment and then took her to the emergency hospital. At approximately 2:10 a. m. she *261 was examined there by a doctor, who found redness in the pelvic region, a discharge present, a fresh laceration and bleeding of the hymen. There was a discolored area on her left upper eyelid; her neck showed some redness of the skin. The policemen testified to this same condition of the eye and neck. The doctor was of the opinion that Mary had not had sexual intercourse prior to this occasion. A specimen from the vaginal contents was taken and submitted to an expert who testified that it contained sperm.

Another expert testified that discolorations on the dress, slip and pants which Mary testified she was wearing at the time of the attack were human blood. Photographs taken the next morning were introduced in evidence, showing Mary’s black eye, marks on her right shoulder and arm and on her chin and neck.

Defendant testified, in effect, to first meeting Mary at the garage and then to what amounted to a pursuit of him by Mary night after night when she came to the garage, culminating on one occasion in a sex experience with her in the storeroom of the garage, in which, however, he claimed there was no penetration (possibly because the condition of Mary’s hymen the night of the assault would be difficult to reconcile with a completed act on the first occasion). Mary denied this incident in toio. On the night in question, when he called her to discuss his indebtedness to her, she insisted on meeting him at Steve’s Bar. He accompanied her to the front door of her apartment house and left her there. He denied being in her apartment and all of the circumstances of the rape. He claimed that as she went in the door, he left, walked to the car line, waited for and boarded a streetcar, arriving home about 10 minutes to 1 a. m. He immediately went to bed, remaining there until late in the morning. A police officer testified that accompanied by another officer he arrived at defendant’s address at approximately 2:30 that morning to ascertain if defendant lived there “but we received no response to the doorbell nor to a knock on the door.”

Defendant contends that because Mary was angry at him for not repaying the money he had borrowed, she planned to get him into her apartment and then threaten him with a charge of rape, and when he failed to come in, she arranged to produce the evidence required to establish the fact. If this were true, she had to work rather fast to get someone to have intercourse with her between about 12 o’clock when defendant claims to have left her, and 1:30 to 1:45 when the radio car *262 operator received the police call to go to her apartment.

A letter she wrote to defendant’s wife in February (defendant left the state in January and did not return until sometime in March) indicates that at that time she was quite bitter towards him. It tended to contradict her statement that she thought defendant was divorced.

The claim of improbability is based mainly upon the fact that after defendant talked lewdly to her and attempted to get her to agree to intercourse, Mary made no attempt to run away or arouse the neighbors in the adjoining apartment, and that after he started to attack her she did not cry out. Her testimony clearly shows that until he actually seized her she did not realize that he would attack her. Before she realized what was occurring he seized her throat, threatened her and hit her repeatedly, and also thrust his finger in her eye and threatened to push her eyes out. While she could have screamed, it is evident that she was afraid to. There was nothing inherently improbable in her story. “Proof of her vehement exertion was not necessary to show her resistance. When attacked by a rapist it is primarily for the woman to decide to what extent she can with safety resist. (People v. Lay, 66 Cal.App.2d 889, 892, 893 [153 P.2d 379].) Where a trier of the facts decides that a prosecutrix’ resistance was overcome by force or that she desisted in her struggle with the rapist by reason of her fear induced by his application of force, the finding necessarily follows that she did not consent to the intercourse.” (People v. Calliham, 81 Cal.App.2d 928, 931 [185 P.2d 342].) Stress is laid on the fact that he told her that he was not sure he was virile, and it is claimed that it is inherently improbable that a man seeking intercourse would make such a statement. “The reviewing court may not reverse a judgment of conviction merely because the testimony of the complaining witness discloses circumstances which are unusual. To justify a reversal upon the ground specified by appellant it must hold that the testimony of the complaining witness is ‘so . . . inherently improbable as to leave the court no recourse, without self-stultification, except to reverse the judgment. ’ (People v. Moreno, 26 Cal.App.2d 334, 336 [

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P.2d 573, 104 Cal. App. 2d 257, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-merrill-calctapp-1951.