People v. Parker

131 N.W. 1120, 166 Mich. 587, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 564
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1911
DocketDocket No. 128
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 131 N.W. 1120 (People v. Parker) 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. Parker, 131 N.W. 1120, 166 Mich. 587, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 564 (Mich. 1911).

Opinion

Moore, J.

The above respondent was tried on an information containing three counts. The first count charged that the respondent on the 30th day of November, 1909, in the city of Jackson, Mich., with force and arms in and upon one Dovetta Champion, a female child under the age of 16 years, to wit, of the age of 10 years, feloniously did make assault, and her, the said Dovetta Champion, then and there feloniously and unlawfully did carnally know and abuse. The second count charged that the respondent, at the time and place above mentioned, upon the said Dovetta Champion did make an assault with intent unlawfully and carnally to know and abuse her. The third count charged said respondent with having taken indecent liberties without committing or intending to commit the crime of rape upon the said Dovetta Champion at the time and place above mentioned. Before the case was submitted to the jury, the third count was withdrawn, and the case was submitted to the jury upon the first and second counts. After the jury had been out all night and had called for further instructions, the respondent was convicted upon the second count, with a recommendation of mercy to the court. The case is brought here by writ of error.

Dovetta Champion, the complaining witness, was born in the city of Jackson, Mich., on December 26, 1899. Her father’s name is Charles Champion, and her mother’s name was Anna D. A. Champion, who was, at the time of the trial, the wife of the respondent Parker. Mr. Champion and his wife were divorced January 20, 1905. Mr. Champion, the father of the complaining witness, immediately remarried. Mrs. Champion, the mother of the complaining witness, was married June T, 1905, to Edwin [589]*589Mayo, and lived with him about two years, and in March, 1908, obtained a divorce from him. During this* time, Dovetta Champion, the complaining witness, lived with her mother and Mayo. In April, 1908, Dovetta’s mother married respondent, James Parker, and Dovetta and her mother and Parker, the respondent, lived together in the city of Jackson until the time of Parker’s arrest, which was in March, 1910. The particular act for which the respondent was placed on trial was alleged to have occurred on or about November 30, 1909. It is the claim that in March, 1910, Dovetta had a conversation with her stepmother, Nell Champion, in which her stepmother asked her if Parker ever hurt her or whatever he did to her, and Dovetta said, “I just happened to tell her and she made me tell more,” and thereafter made a complete disclosure of her relations with the respondent.

The defense was that the charge against respondent was a trumped up one made at the instigation of Mr. Champion and his second wife, for the purpose of getting the custody of the child under the order that it was expected the court would make, on the petition that had been filed by Mrs. Parker, for a further allowance of alimony, the first five years having expired, and that the motive of Champion’s second wife in getting the little girl to make these charges against Parker, was to save Champion, her husband, from having to pay the $12 per month, or whatever the court might order him to pay for the support of the child.

The assignments of error may be arranged in three groups:

(1) Errors claimed in the admission and rejection of testimony.
(2) Exceptions to the charge of the court, and his refusal to give respondent’s request to charge.
(3) Exceptions to the court’s overruling respondent’s motion for a new trial.

1. Under this head there are 27 errors assigned. The sixth assignment is based on the court’s permitting the [590]*590prosecutor to put the hypothetical question to Dr. Gibson, an expert called by the prosecution, which question was as follows:

"Q. Assuming that there had been one or two acts of intercourse three or four years ago by a man with this little girl, would those acts account for the condition you found her in March 30th ?”

To which objection and exception was duly taken. When this question was answered, the testimony of the complaining witness had shown that she had had numerous acts of intercourse with a boy and with her stepfather Mayo. We do not think this testimony should have been overlooked in framing the hypothetical question.

Complaint is made of the restriction put upon the examination of the mother of the complaining witness in relation to the understanding about the payment of alimony after the five years from the date of the decree of divorce between her and Mr. Champion. In view of the character of the defense, we think this testimony should have been permitted.

The court declined to give respondent’s request as to the effect to be given to testimony tending to show good character, except as given in the general charge as follows :

“ There has been given some evidence of good character on the part of respondent. That is always proper evidence for a man accused of crime to introduce, to show what his neighbors — those acquainted with him, with whom he associated — think about him in that regard, and is to be considered. Ordinarily, evidence of good character introduced by the respondent should relate to good character in respect to the thing which is charged, and in this case it would relate to his reputation as being a man of regular habits or proper habits in respect to sexual matters. It is possible perhaps for a person to be irregular in those matters or do things in that regard to which he would not gain a reputation. But still the fact a man hasn’t any reputation for doing wrong in that regard is something, and should be considered by the jury in connection with all the other evidence in the case. * * * [591]*591Consider that evidence as to good character with all the other evidence in the case, and if it raises a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused, or if you have, after considering everything, still a reasonable doubt as to his guilt, of course, as I think I have before stated, the respondent is entitled to the benefit of that doubt where it exists, and should be acquitted.”

In the case at bar there was the testimony of the complaining witness, a mere child, as to the occurrences between her and the accused, on the one side, and the denial of the accused, a man about 29 years of age, on the other side. The length of time the jury was out indicated that some of the jurors were in doubt, for a time at least, as to the guilt of respondent. The record contains the testimony of many witnesses who knew him well as to his good reputation.

In People v. Garbutt, 17 Mich., at page 26 (97 Am. Dec. 162), the following language may be found:

“Good character is an important fact with every man; and never more so than when he is put on trial charged with an offense which is rendered improbable in the last degree by a uniform course of life wholly inconsistent with any such crime. There are cases where it becomes a man’s sole dependence, and yet may prove sufficient to outweigh evidence of the most positive character. The most clear and convincing cases are sometimes satisfactorily rebutted by it, and a life of unblemished integrity becomes a complete shield of protection against the most skillful web of suspicion and falsehood which conspirators have been able to weave. Good character may not only raise a doubt of guilt which would not otherwise exist, but it may bring conviction of innocence.

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Related

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25 N.W.2d 128 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1946)
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7 N.W.2d 210 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1942)
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160 N.W. 445 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 N.W. 1120, 166 Mich. 587, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-parker-mich-1911.