Phelps v. State

56 S.E.2d 837, 80 Ga. App. 544, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 5, 1949
Docket32691.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 S.E.2d 837 (Phelps v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phelps v. State, 56 S.E.2d 837, 80 Ga. App. 544, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 875 (Ga. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Gardner, J.

We will refer to Bill Phelps as the defendant, the female involved as the female. The evidence for the State *545 substantially shows that the female, between 14 and 15 years old, went with her older sister, who was escorted by a young man friend, to a dance at a warehouse. After the dance, the three of them went to Maluda’s, a cafe. On entering the cafe they came in contact with the defendant. Shortly after being served at the cafe, the older sister and her escort concluded to go to some other place for the purpose of meeting a friend of theirs. They left the female at Maluda’s, in the charge of the defendant, who promised to take care of her until the older sister and her escort returned. The defendant was a man of approximately 25 years old. After the female and the defendant sat in the cafe for awhile, the female made complaint regarding her older sister not returning. The defendant suggested to her that they would go outside and sit in a car which belonged to a friend of his, where they might the better see and look for the return of the older sister. The car was only a short distance from the cafe. The place where the car was located was well lighted and the female and the defendant could be easily seen by people in and about the' front of the cafe. They remained in the car on the back seat for approximately 15 minutes. During this time the defendant attempted to caress the female. She pushed him away and refused him this privilege. She expressed a wish to go home, whereupon the defendant proposed to her that he would get the keys to the car from his friend and carry her home if she so desired. She accepted this proposal of the defendant. They started home on a hard-surfaced highway. A short distance from Maluda’s the defendant abruptly turned to the right off the pavement onto a side road or curve about one mile long, which had been left out when the road was paved. This was known as Dead Man’s Curve. The defendant, at the curve of this side road, drove to the edge of it and stopped his car, over the protest of the female. The female inquired of the defendant why he took this side road and he stated that he wanted to talk to the female about her sister, with whom he had formerly gone. Instead of doing this, he proposed intercourse with the female. She refused him and requested that he take her home. Thereupon, the defendant partly removed his clothes and hers and sought by force to know her carnally. She made an outcry. She resisted by moving about *546 in the seat of the car. She kicked him on the shin and skinned it considerably. She became almost completely exhausted by resisting him. Then it was that a car going in the same direction on the curve approached the car which the defendant and the female occupied. During the struggle between the defendant and the female, the defendant in an effort to get the female in a prone position in the front seat of the car, had pushed her .under the steering wheel. When the car approached from the rear, the defendant jumped out of the car, ran around the back to the side of the steering wheel, opened the door and started the car off at such a rapid rate of speed that the back wheels of the car tore up and scattered the soil to a considerable extent. After the defendant had starred the car he slowed it down for the car behind him to pass. The car did not pass.' One of the men in the car behind procured the license number of the defendant’s car. He did not recognize the defendant nor the female. It developed that the number taken down was that of the car in which the defendant and the female were riding. The defendant thereafter carried the female home and put her out. She was crying, ran into the house and informed her family as to what happened. The same night one of the brothers of the female visited Dead Man’s Curve and found that the defendant had driven the car hurriedly from the spot, corroborating the evidence of the female. The next day the father of the female and the sheriff visited the place and further corroborated the evidence of the female. It will thus be seen that insofar as the general grounds are concerned, the evidence amply sustains the verdict. The testimony of the female was corroborated by all of the incidents above related. There was no other evidence for the State as to what happened at the time of the attack.

The defendant made a statement as to what happened at the scene of the attack and corroborated the evidence of the female and of that in corroboration of her evidence to the effect that he did turn off the highway; that he did get out of the car; that he proposed intercourse with her, but he testified also that she consented and that at the time the car drove up behind them he was on the ground with his arm around the female; that there was no scratching or kicking or resisting whatsoever; and that while he was thus on the ground with the female, the car drove *547 up behind them and he and the female re-entered the car; that he did not speed the car off, but that it had rained and the ground was soft, which produced the evidence which indicated that the car had speeded. We might state here that the witnesses for the State who examined the spot of ground where the attack was alleged to have occurred testified that they found no imprint of female tracks on the ground, but that they did find imprints of a man’s tracks. The evidence amply sustains the verdict on the general grounds and there is no merit in the assignments of error based thereon.

We come next to consider the motion which forms the basis of the exceptions pendente lite. In discussing the assignments of error on the exceptions pendente lite we will discuss these assignments together with’ special grounds 2, 3, and 4, because the special grounds and the motion relate to the same subject-matter. We will not go into detail as to the allegations of the motion and the proof in support of it, nor as to the details in special grounds 2, 3, and 4. We will only state that these assignments of error may easily be divided into two divisions: First, as to what took place while the defendant and the female were sitting in the car in front of Maluda’s cafe. Witnesses for the defendant testified that they saw the defendant and the female caressing and embracing to a disgraceful extent. The purpose of this testimony could only be admissible for the consideration of the jury as a circumstance for the jury to consider as to whether the female gave her consent for the defendant to do what he was alleged to have done forcibly and against the will of the female after they left Maluda’s cafe. It could not legally have been admissible for any other purpose. It is an elementary principle of law that a female of the most depraved character (and there is no evidence in this case to show that the female here was depraved by general reputation or otherwise), may be the subject of carnal knowledge of her forcibly and against her will. The jury gave no credence to this phase of the defendant’s testimony. Such evidence of the conduct of the female and the defendant in front of Maluda’s cafe was produced by the defendant himself, by his own witnesses. So this phase of it has no merit.

Second, the motion not to pass judgment, etc., and special *548

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E.2d 837, 80 Ga. App. 544, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelps-v-state-gactapp-1949.