People v. Parker

241 P. 401, 74 Cal. App. 540, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 143
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 13, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1253.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 241 P. 401 (People v. Parker) 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. Parker, 241 P. 401, 74 Cal. App. 540, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 143 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

Defendant was charged under section 288 of the Penal Code with committing certain lewd *543 and lascivious acts upon and with the body of a female child under the age of fourteen years, with the intent specified in that section. He was found guilty as charged, and now appeals from the judgment of conviction and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Section 288 reads, in part: “Any person who shall wilfully and lewdly commit any lewd or lascivious act, other than the acts constituting other crimes provided for in part two [one]” (as authority for the substitution of “one” for “two” see People v. Troutman, 187 Cal. 313 [201 Pac. 928]) “of this code, upon or with the body, or any part or member thereof, of a child under the age of fourteen years, with the intent of arousing, appealing to or gratifying the lust or passions or sexual desires of such person or of such child, shall be guilty of a felony ...” The provision to the effect that lewd and lascivious acts, to be punishable under this section, must be “other than the acts constituting other crimes provided for in part two [one] of this code” constitutes an exception to the general rule announced in section 654, wherein it is declared that “an act or omission which is made punishable in different ways by different provisions of this code may be punished under either of such provisions.”

Appellant's main contention is that the acts committed by him, as testified to by the complaining witness, amounted to the crime of rape, as defined by subdivision one of section 261 of the Penal Code, the crime of attempt to commit rape, punishable under section 664, and the crime of assault with intent to commit rape, punishable under section 220 of that code, each of the two last-mentioned crimes being necessarily included within the crime of rape. (22 Cal. Jur., article “Rape,” pars. 13 and 14; People v. Horn, 25 Cal. App. 583, 592 [144 Pac. 641] ; People v. Babcock, 160 Cal. 537 [117 Pac. 549].) "Wherefore it is claimed that the evidence fails to support the charge of a violation of section 288, which makes punishable only such acts of a lascivious nature as do not constitute other crimes provided for in part one of the code.

The testimony of the little girl is of so loathsome a nature that we find it preferable to set forth no more of her sordid story than will suffice for an adequate consideration of the questions presented. The evidence educed by the *544 People tends to show the following: Appellant is a man of mature years. The victim of his lust, a girl eleven years of age at the time of the offense, lived with her mother in the city of Los Angeles. On January 8, 1925, appellant took the girl to Long Beach. Arriving in that city, he proposed that they “rest for awhile.” He then engaged a room in a hotel, which the two occupied during the remainder of the day and all of the following night. Soon after entering the room appellant pulled down the folding-bed and told the girl to lie down and “rest for awhile.” Thereupon they both lay on the bed, close together, facing each other. While in this position appellant put his arms around the girl, kissed her and rubbed his hand on her bloomers—a garment which she wore under her dress in lieu of drawers. He then pulled down her bloomers “to get inside,”, as she described it. After this there followed an act of sexual penetration, which, though slight—it was not enough to rupture the hymen—was penetration nevertheless.

Prom the foregoing it will be seen that appellant’s conduct, from the time he commenced fondling the girl, consisted of a number of separate and distinct acts, performed in sequence and of such a character that they may be grouped in three distinct categories, as follows: (1) fondling the girl in a manner calculated to arouse appellant’s passions and sexual desires, i. e., embracing and kissing her while the two lay close together on the bed and rubbing his hand on her bloomers; (2) pulling down the bloomers so as “to get inside”; and (3) sexual penetration.

In determining whether appellant is punishable under section 288 we shall consider these three classes of acts in their inverse order. Without doubt, the last act, sexual penetration, constituted the crime of rape. (Pen. Code, sec. 261, subd. 1, and sec. 263.) As rape is one of the “other crimes provided for in part two [one] ” of the code, it is manifest that on the trial of appellant for violating section 288 he could not be punished for the last of the above-enumerated series of acts. But it does not necessarily follow that he could not be punished under section 288 for any one of the preceding acts. See People v. Lind, 68 Cal. App. 575 [229 Pac. 990], where we held that one who *545 has committed lewd and lascivious acts leading up to the consummation of the crime of sodomy may be punished for his preliminary acts under this section of the code.

If all of the acts which preceded actual sexual penetration, i. e., all of those which are included within the first and second of our three categories, must be held necessarily to have constituted the crime of attempt to commit rape, or the crime of assault with intent to commit rape, then appellant is not punishable under section 288. But if there be any one of those antecedent acts of lewd and lascivious conduct which, when viewed in the light of all that happened, does not necessarily constitute an attempt to commit rape or an assault with intent to commit rape, then the jury was free to convict appellant of the crime for which he was on trial. The question, then, resolves itself into this: Are the circumstances of the case such that if the jurors found that appellant committed all of the lewd and lascivious acts which preceded the final act of sexual penetration, they necessarily must also have found that each and every essential element of the crime of attempt to commit rape, or of the crime of assault with intent to commit rape, existed as to each of such antecedent acts? Before undertaking to answer this question we shall briefly consider the elements which constitute the crime of assault with intent to commit rape, and likewise those which constitute the crime of attempt to commit rape, where the victim is under the age of consent.

It is the established law in this state that where the female is under the age of consent there may be an assault with intent to commit rape notwithstanding her actual consent. The reason is that in such cases the female cannot consent to the assault. The law resists for her. (People v. Verdegreen, 106 Cal. 211 [46 Am. St. Rep. 234, 39 Pac. 607]; People v. Roach, 129 Cal. 33 [61 Pac. 574]; People v. Babcock, supra.) In People v. Babcock, supra, the court says; “ . . . one who lays his hands upon such a female, with the intent and for the purpose then and there to accomplish an act of sexual intercourse with her, is by so doing guilty of an assault with intent to commit rape, even though he does not use or intend in any event to use any force or violence, and the female in fact offers no resistance whatever, or even expressly consents to all he does.

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 401, 74 Cal. App. 540, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-parker-calctapp-1925.