People v. Parrish

143 P. 546, 25 Cal. App. 314, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 26, 1914
DocketCrim. No. 267.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 P. 546 (People v. Parrish) 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. Parrish, 143 P. 546, 25 Cal. App. 314, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 260 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of rape, having had sexual intercourse with one Gertrude Gen ant, a girl under the age of consent, and was sentenced to state’s prison for the term of fifteen years. He appeals from the judgment of conviction and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

*316 There is no distinct claim in defendant’s brief that the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict, although it is suggested that much of it is unworthy of belief. The claim is, rather, that defendant did not have a fair trial because of certain alleged errors in the rulings of the trial court and of the alleged misconduct of the district attorney in his address to the jury. Some objections are also urged to the instructions to the jury.

The prosecutrix was fifteen years old on March 4, 1912, and the sexual intercourse complained of was alleged to have occurred on or about June 20, 1912, at the county of Butte. Defendant and his wife conducted a boarding and lodging house in the city of Chico. The prosecutrix went to work for the defendant and his wife, about May 28, 1912, and continued in their service until some time in August of that year, when she left, returning after a week or ten days and remained until in January, 1913, when she went away again and was gone about three weeks,' returning and remaining until some time in May, 1913, when she left finally because of some trouble she had with defendant’s wife. The story of her conduct while at the Parrish House presents a case of shocking moral obliquity scarcely believable in one of her apparent intelligence. She testified that she at first roomed with another of the hired girls, one Annie Hansen, who left about three weeks after the prosecutrix went to work, and she slept alone' until Olive Patterson came, she thought two or three weeks after the Hansen girl left. It was after the Hansen girl left and before the Patterson girl came that the first act of sexual intercourse with defendant is claimed to have taken place. She testified: That in the afternoon, toward evening, defendant, his wife, and some of the men boarders were assembled on the porch of the house; that some of the men, she did not know who, sent for beer and that she drank as much as eight glasses without becoming intoxicated. “After supper he (defendant) wanted me to go to my room with him, and I wouldn’t do it, and he asked me if I had ever had intercourse, and I told him no, and he told me'that he would show me how, that I was old enough to learn.” She was- asked if anything happened to her during the month of June, and answered: “After Annie Hansen left, Parrish came in there one morning. He came in and turned on the light, and pulled back the covers,' and used me just as he *317 wanted to,” which she explained to mean that he had sexual intercourse with her and that it happened before the Patterson girl came. As stated by the district attorney, “to show the disposition of the parties on the subject,” and over defendant’s objection, the prosecutrix testified that this sort of intercourse was kept up between them during her stay at the Parrish house and up to the time she finally left, “maybe it would be every other day, or maybe once or twice a day, or maybe every day, maybe once a week.” Without objection, she testified as follows: “Q. And is it not a fact that you had sexual intercourse with several other men during that time? A. Yes, sir. Q. Where? A. At the Parrish House. Q. Always? A. Yes. Q. And did these young men room at the Parrish House? A. Yes.” It appeared, in the course of her examination and cross-examination, that some six or seven men had these same relations with her, on account of which two of them are serving sentence in the state’s prison. She was very searehingly cross-examined, the result being to show a depraved condition of mind, but not necessarily discrediting the incriminating features of her story. Some corroborating circumstances were shown, such as kissing and hugging of the prosecutrix by defendant, and one instance where the witness, Mrs. Marshbank, testified to having seen the parties in the act of copulation. This is said to have occurred in April, 1913, after the prosecutrix had passed her sixteenth year, and the evidence is made the subject of alleged error which will hereinafter be noticed. The defendant testified in his own behalf and flatly contradicted the prosecutrix as to his -relations with her and denied ever having carnal knowledge of her. There was testimony by defendant’s wife and by several lodgers and boarders to the effect that they never “saw anything out of the way” between the defendant and the Genant girl, and Mrs. Parrish testified that she saw nothing to arouse her. suspicions that anything wrong was going on between them. It was very satisfactorily shown, and much reliance is placed upon the fact by defendant’s counsel, that the Patterson girl came to the Parrish House not later than two or three days after the Hansen girl left, disputing the prosecutrix, who testified that it was two or three weeks. It will be observed, however, that she testified that she did not remember exactly how long it was, but she was positive that the first act of intercourse occurred *318 after the Hansen girl left and before the Patterson girl came, and while she was sleeping alone. It was for the jury to reconcile whatever conflict appeared in the testimony, and we find no warrant in the record for disturbing their finding upon the important fact that sexual intercourse took place between the parties as alleged in the indictment.

1. Defendant’s first point is that it was error to allow the prosecution to prove not only the act charged but subsequent acts. It is admitted that, in People v. Castro, 133 Cal. 11, [65 Pac. 13], the contrary is held, but it is claimed that what was there said was obiter, and non-concurred in by one of the justices. Attention is called to the objection made to the testimony of Mrs. Marshbank, who testified to having seen defendant and the prosecutrix in the act, in May, 1913, after the prosecutrix had passed the age of sixteen. Upon this latter fact we cannot see that the matter of her then age would make any difference in respect of showing the carnal disposition of the parties for which alone it was admissible. It was while the prosecutrix was at the Parrish House, and was but one of an unbroken series of like acts from about May 20, .1912, for nearly a year. Upon the point raised, however, the rule is as stated in People v. Castro, 133 Cal. 11, [65 Pac. 13].

It is well settled that evidence of similar acts of sexual intercourse, both before and after the act charged, is admissible. (People v. Gregory, 8 Cal. App. 746, [97 Pac. 912] ; People v. Soto, 11 Cal. App. 436, [105 Pac. 420]; People v. Jacobs, 16 Cal. App. 480, [117 Pac. 615]; People v. Williams, 133 Cal. 168, [65 Pac. 323]; People v. Matthews, 139 Cal. 530, [73 Pac. 416]; People v. Keller, 142 Cal. 624, [76 Pac. 500].)

2. Without objection from defendant, the prosecutrix testified to similar acts during the time she was at the Parrish House with several other men rooming there.

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Bluebook (online)
143 P. 546, 25 Cal. App. 314, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-parrish-calctapp-1914.