People v. Price

147 P. 591, 26 Cal. App. 544, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 210
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 13, 1915
DocketCrim. No. 281.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 P. 591 (People v. Price) 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. Price, 147 P. 591, 26 Cal. App. 544, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 210 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

CHIPMAN, P. J.

An information was filed against the defendant by the district attorney of San Joaquin County, charging the defendant with rape upon the person of one Nancy Baker, a girl under the age of consent. Defendant was convicted of an attempt to commit rape and sentenced to serve a term of ten years at San Quentin prison. He appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

Appellant’s brief is devoted chiefly to a discussion of the evidence and to a challenge of its sufficiency to support the verdict. The prosecuting witness testified that defendant had sexual intercourse with her—that there was actual penetration of her private parts. A physical examination of the girl by physicians shortly after the alleged crime, and other evidence created such doubt in the minds of the jury that they found the defendant guilty only of an attempt to commit the crime. It is hence argued that this finding of the jury, to *546 gether with many circumstances and facts pointed out, shows that the story told by the girl is wholly unworthy of belief and in fact purely the creature of her imagination.

At the time of the alleged commission of the crime, defendant and his wife were guests of Nancy Baker’s stepfather and her mother who were living in a small house, in the city of Stockton, consisting of a sitting-room, back of which was a bedroom in which the parents slept and back of this another bedroom where their three girls—Nancy, aged 12; Ruth, aged 14, and the third much younger, slept. Opening on the side of this latter bedroom was a room used as a dining-room, back of which was the kitchen. The girl’s bedroom was given to the guests and at night a mattress was laid in the dining-room at the kitchen door on which these three children slept, Nancy with her head toward their bedroom and the younger sister beside her and the older with her head at the other end of the mattress. Nancy’s testimony was that, on Saturday night, September 13, 1913, defendant came to where she was sleeping and there had sexual intercourse with her. For the purpose of showing an adulterous or lascivious disposition toward this girl on the part of defendant the prosecutrix testified that, three days prior to the date named in the information, he had sexual intercourse with her, coming to her bed on the floor as on the later occasion; that when she and her sister were playing out doors near the house he put his hand under their clothing; that he came one night, prior to September 13th, to the place where they were sleeping and displayed his private parts and on another occasion he came to the door leading from the dining-room to the bedroom where he slept and attracted the attention of the girls, who were on the mattress, and again exposed his privates. Nancy also testified that, on the afternoon of September 13th, her mother and aunt (defendant’s wife) were away; defendant bought some beer and cheese and gave the girls; that thereafter she went to her bedroom “to fix her hair” and defendant “threw her on the bed and he said, ‘let me-’ ”; that “she called her sister and she came in and he hid in the closet.” Ruth Baker corroborated Nancy’s testimony concerning defendant’s indecent exposure of his person; she also testified that she went to the bedroom when called by Nancy and the defendant was coming out of the closet and Nancy coming out of the door. Nancy made no *547 complaint and told no one of defendant’s having tampered with her the first time, but, the morning after the second like occurrence (Sunday) she told her mother and Dr. Craviotto, the family physician, was called. He testified that he made a superficial examination and ordered the girl brought to his office the next morning. Of this examination he testified: “I found the hymen had been ruptured and the inflammatory condition that I had seen on Sunday was very much more than I anticipated.” He took some specimens of secretions and examined them under a microscope. He testified: “I then called in Dr. Dozier, who was a specialist along this line of microscopical work.” He examined Dr. Craviotto’s slides and some made by himself. Both testified to having found human spermatozoa. Defendant introduced expert testimony which tended to show that the tests made by Dr. Dozier were not made in accordance with the best approved methods to determine with certainty the presence of spermatozoa, and in some other respects disputing the conclusions reached by Doctors Craviotto and Dozier. Certain facts were brought out by defendant’s witnesses and by the cross-examination of the witnesses called by the people which tended in some degree to show the improbability of the testimony of Nancy, at least so far as actual intercourse with her by defendant is concerned. Defendant also urged with much confidence that Nancy and Ruth invented the entire story for the purpose of retaliating upon defendant for having deprived them of the comfort of their bedroom and thus compelling them to sleep on the floor. • There was no evidence tending in the least to support this supposed motive and it rests entirely upon the assumption that it was a natural thing for these girls to do. We cannot believe that children of their age would conceive and attempt to carry out such a scheme of revenge upon such slight provocation. We must assume that the jury believed the testimony of Nancy and it was not without corroboration. We must also assume “that the jury reached a verdict with full realization of their sworn duty, free from passion and prejudice and that the learned trial judge was satisfied with the verdict or he would have granted the motion for a new trial.” (People v. Lewis, 18 Cal. App. 359, 364, [123 Pac. 232].) We cannot say that the story told by Nancy was so obviously and inherently improbable as to justify us in setting aside the verdict. She may have been *548 mistaken as to the fact of penetration and may have willfully lied as to that fact. Still that would not necessarily discredit the evidence which tended to show that there was an attempt to commit the crime. Dr. Dozier testified that the presence of spermatozoa in the vaginal canal could be accounted for without actual penetration of the male organ, by reason of their affinity for the secretions of a virgin and because of their mobility which would cause them by their own action to find their way from the outside into the vaginal canal.

Some objections to rulings of the court and to instructions will be briefly noticed.

Some questions were asked of the witness, Mrs. Boring, Nancy’s grandmother, calling for an opinion as to whether Nancy’s “sexual organs had ever been entered by a human being.” Mrs. Boring was the mother of fourteen children and she testified that she had assisted many times at the birth of children. It is doubtful whether she qualified as an expert and it is by no means clear that had she done so the question would be admissible. The court refused the question. Inasmuch as the conviction was for an attempt, the ruling was without prejudice.

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Related

People v. Hewitt
281 P. 666 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
People v. Slaughter
165 P.2d 44 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)
People v. Converse
153 P. 734 (California Court of Appeal, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
147 P. 591, 26 Cal. App. 544, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-price-calctapp-1915.