Porter v. State

36 S.E.2d 794, 200 Ga. 246, 1946 Ga. LEXIS 381
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1946
Docket15327.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 36 S.E.2d 794 (Porter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. State, 36 S.E.2d 794, 200 Ga. 246, 1946 Ga. LEXIS 381 (Ga. 1946).

Opinion

1. The charge of the court that testimony of the alleged victims in a rape case must be corroborated by evidence of an outcry, some report, or other physical evidence, the jury being the sole judges of the sufficiency of such evidence, was not error for the assigned reason that there was no evidence to authorize the charge. The excerpt did not intimate *Page 247 that there was such evidence, and was not misleading to the jury.

2. The charge that the jury should take all the evidence, giving to the defendant's statement such weight and credit as they thought it entitled to, apply the law as given in the charge, and make separate verdicts on each count of the indictment, is not subject to the criticism that it was an unsound statement of the law, confusing, and tended to discredit another portion of the charge wherein the jury were instructed that they might believe the defendant's statement in whole or in part and in preference to the sworn testimony.

3. The indictment, which in count 1 charged the defendant with the offense of rape upon a female named therein, and in count 2 charged him with a similar offense upon another named female, was supported by evidence as to each count, and the court did not err in overruling the defendant's motion for new trial on the general grounds.

No. 15327. JANUARY 15, 1946.
James Porter and Foster Keefe were jointly indicted by the grand jury of Fulton County for the offense of rape; the indictment being in two counts, the first count charging that the offense was committed upon a female hereinafter referred to as "B," and the second count charging that the offense was committed upon a female hereinafter referred to as "M." Upon the trial of Porter alone the evidence was substantially as follows:

C. R. Hensley, a city policeman of Atlanta, Georgia, testified that he was on duty in the vicinity of the city water works on April 1, 1945, and that he saw "B" and "M" about 4 o'clock in the morning about the first or second door on Chattahoochee Avenue where it leaves the Howell Mill Road. Prior to seeing them he observed an automobile, with lights out, coming in his direction, but just before the car passed him the lights were turned on and this attracted his attention. He was unable to identify the occupants of the car or the number of them. The girls flagged him down in the middle of the street, and they were wet and kind of bedraggled and very nervous, crying and in an excited condition, and made a report to him. He gave this report to his superior officer, Lieutenant E. H. Johnson, and after taking the girls to a place where he summoned this superior officer he turned them over to him.

"B" testified that at the time of the alleged rape she lived at 1530 Howell Mill Road. On the night of April 1, 1945, she and "M" went to 100 Newnan Avenue in East Point, Georgia, to see *Page 248 the sister of "M" and to have supper. About midnight she and "M" went out on Lee Street to catch a trolley car. While they were standing there an automobile drove up to the curb with five people in it. This car was either a 1941 or 1942 Chevrolet, a dark-colored car, and when the boys drove up to the curb, they asked if the girls were going to town, and the witness answered "Yes." The boys insisted that they go with them, but the witness told them that she and her friend were waiting for the trolley car. One of the boys on the front seat and one on the back seat got out of the automobile and shoved the girls into the back of the car. After driving for a short while the car was stopped in what looked to the witness like a forest. The boys got out of the car and started as if they were walking away from the car, and the girls made an attempt to run, but did not get far from the car because the boy she identified as Porter caught her and struggled with her. The tall black-haired boy caught "M." After a struggle for a while, these two boys called the other boys from the car, and the little "muscle boy" jumped in and stuck his foot between the legs of the witness and she fell to her knees. She was screaming for "M" and lost a comb out of her hair, and Mr. Hay, a detective for Fulton County, later found it. Porter and the "muscle boy" dragged her up on a hill and she was told by the latter to cooperate and do as the boys said or they would beat her head into a mummy. She was told to pull her pants off or else they would be taken off. She finally got her pants down and her coat was torn at the lining. Porter attacked her and in the meantime tried to get her purse. Four of the boys had intercourse with her, and she was so hysterical about her bag that she began crying and begging them to bring it back. She was in a kind of daze from then on. They got back in the car and the boys refused to let her put her pants on until she had gotten half way to town. The boys put the girls out at Chattahoochee Avenue and Howell Mill Road, and the girls were unable to get the tag number of the car. As soon as they got out of the automobile they told the officer what had happened. He took them to the water works to make the call and they stayed there about fifteen minutes. From there they went to the police station with two officers who had come to the water works. Porter did not have a chain around his neck when he attacked her. She first identified and recognized him in the courtroom *Page 249 as being one of the boys who attacked her. She had seen his picture and recognized him from the picture, and she identified him positively as being the one who raped her. In company with Mr. Hay and Mr. Adams she went back to the place where the attack occurred. Mr. Hay found the comb she had lost there, and she recognized it as being her comb, but other articles she had lost were not found. She finally obtained her pocket book, but $38 had been taken out. While Porter had her around the waist she was threatened with a stick by the little chubby boy. She was absolutely positive that Porter was the boy who attacked her and the one who got her pocket book.

"M" testified to the same effect as "B" relative to the two young women being forced into the automobile at the trolley stop and the drive to the scene of the crime. She testified: "This defendant on trial is one of the boys who was in the car. I am positive of that identification. . . When I got out of the car I started running. These boys ran after us and tripped us up, knocked our feet out from under us. They dragged ["B"] up one way and me the other. I think I know which boys attacked me. The defendant was not one of them. He helped knock me down. Later on after they dragged me back to the car he grabbed my purse and I hung on to it. . . So when he wanted to take it away, naturally he couldn't get it with me down on the ground, and he said if I didn't give it to him he would knock me on the head, so he just got the money. I never got my money back. He gave me back my purse. . . I was raped that night. Twice sexual intercourse was committed between me and two of the other boys. I resisted. My clothes were torn from me. I did not get into this car voluntarily when the boys came up. . . A tall boy caught me [as she ran from the car at the scene of the crime]. They don't have him here. The defendant on trial came up and helped detain me. . . I went to the scene of this crime again in company with the officers, L. C. Hay and A. C. Adams, and I recognized the place as being the same place where the attack occurred. . . I am positive that the defendant Porter is one of the boys that was in the car and assisted in the attacks on me, detaining me and accomplishing the attacks on me."

Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.E.2d 794, 200 Ga. 246, 1946 Ga. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-state-ga-1946.