Rowan v. State

124 S.W. 663, 57 Tex. Crim. 625, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1910
DocketNo. 388.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 663 (Rowan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowan v. State, 124 S.W. 663, 57 Tex. Crim. 625, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 18 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

McCORD, Judge.

This is an appeal from a conviction for rape *627 on a female under the age of consent with a penalty of seventeen years confinement in the penitentiary.

There seems to be no issue made on the question that appellant had had intercourse" with the prosecutrix. The contention of appellant in the court below was that the prosecutrix was over the ago of consent. It was attempted on the part of the State to show that the prosecutrix was born in Juljq 1893. The alleged rape was committed in April, 1907. The appellant’s contention in the court below was that the prosecutrix was born in. the year 1890.

1. On the trial of the case in the court below the mother of the prosecutrix, Mrs. Jennie Scurlock, took the witness stand as a State’s witness, and testified that the prosecutrix, Benoni May Scurlock, was born July 7, 1893, and that a short time thereafter she made an entry in the family Bible of that fact, and that she had torn out the leaf of the Bible and brought it with her to court. The State, over the objections of appellant, offered in evidence this leaf of the Bible containing the entry of the birth of Benoni May Scurlock. This was objected to on the part of appellant because the same was secondary evidence, and that the mother being present and testifying to the age, it was not admissible, and was immaterial, irrelevant, hearsay and secondary, and that it was particularly hurtful to the defendant’s case in that it bore directly upon the only controverted issue in the case, to wit: the age of the alleged injured party; and because it had not been shown that the same constituted a record made at the time contemporaneous with the occurring of the events mentioned in said superscription. This action of the court was properly reserved by bill of exceptions, and is now before this court for revision, and the question here presented'is this: Will a party be permitted to introduce the record mf a past event when the party who made that entry in the record is present in court to testify as to the fact recited in said entry? This precise question has not been before our court in the manner in which it is here presented. A question similar to this, however, came before the Supreme' Court of Texas in the case of William Campbell v. M. P. Wilson, reported in the 23 Texas, 253, in which Campbell sued Wilson on a promissory note for $100. Wilson set up the defense of infancy, alleging that he was under the age of .twenty-one years, and on the trial the defendant, in support of his defense, offered in evidence the family record of births, deaths, etc., of the members of his father’s family, contained in a Bible which was produced. The' Bible was sufficiently identified as a part of the family record. He also testified that the defendant’s mother was still alive, and in Austin County. Under these circumstances the court refused to permit the entries in the family Bible to be read to the jury; and the Supreme Court, speaking through Chief Justice Wheeler, held that this action of the court below was correct, *628 and that the court did not err in excluding said testimony upon the ground that there was better evidence accessible, his mother being alive, and within reach of the process of the court. Further on he says: “It has been considered that these entries stand on the ground of family acknowledgments, and that they are admissible, on account of their publicity, without proof that the entries were made by a member of the family. But when better evidence is shown to be accessible, they are excluded, by the rule that excludes the secondary, when primary evidence can be obtained. When admitted, it is, in general, as the declaration of the persons by whom they were made. But they can not be received where the father, mother or other declarant is present in court, or within reach of process.” The doctrine here announced was again reaffirmed in the case of Smith v. Geer, 10 Texas Civ. App., 252, and in this last named ease the court held that an entry in a Bible is inadmissible if parents have testified as to the age of the child. A case, however, in point, and similar to the case now before us is the case of The People v. Mayne, 118 Cal., 516. Mayne in that case was indicted for rape upon a female child under the age of consent. There the mother was in court, as in this case, and testified to the age of the child. The State offered in addition thereto an entry made in the Bible by the mother giving the date of the girl’s birth, and the court in that case held that the testimony was not admissible, citing a number of authorities, and, as we think, the reasoning of the court in that case is conclusive of the question here involved. We, therefore, quote with approval the following extract from said opinion: “An entry in a family Bible is a written declaration of a fact made out of court, not under the sanction of an oath, or with any opportunity to test its correctness by means of cross-examination. It is but a declaration by the person who made the entry, and is of the same character as any other declaration, whether written or oral. Being made in a book where entries of this nature are often made, it is entitled to greater weight by reason of 'its formality than would be a similar verbal declaration, but the principles upon which it is received in evidence are the same as govern verbal declaration of the same fact. It is hearsay evidence, and subject to the general rule by which that class of evidence is governed, that the fact sought to be established can not be otherwise shown. This rule was formulated by Chief Justice Marshall in Mima Queen v. Hepburn, 2 Cranch, 3, in the following terms: ‘Hearsay evidence is incompetent to establish any specific fact, which fact is in its nature susceptible of being proved by witnesses who speak from their own knowledge.’ Such evidence is admitted in matters of pedigree, but, as Mr. Greenleaf says (Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 103) : ‘The rule . of admission is restricted to the declarations of deceased persons who were related by blood or marriage to the person.’ Taylor, in *629 his treatise on Evidence, ninth edition, section 641, says: ‘Where, however, the declarant is himself alive and capable of being examined his declarations will be rejected;’ and in the American notes to this edition, it is said: ‘A familiar form of record is the family Bible. Declarations in such form of facts of pedigree, made by deceased members of the family, are competent evidence of the facts therein stated.’ See also Dupoyster v. Gagani, 84 Ky., 403; McCausland v. Fleming, 63 Pa. St., 36; Leggett v. Boyd, 3 Wend., 376; Green-leaf v. Dubuque, etc., R. R. Co., 30 Iowa, 301; Campbell v. Wilson, 23 Texas, 253; 76 Am. Dec., 67; Robinson v. Blakely, 4 Rich., 586; 55 Am. Dec., 703; 1 Phillips on Evidence, secs. 248, 250.

“Although the term ‘pedigree’ includes the facts of birth, marriage and death, and the times when these events happened (Greenleaf on. Evidence, sec. 104), and evidence of these facts is pertinent for the purpose of establishing pedigree, the several facts, or either of them, do not themselves constitute pedigree, and a case in which the age of an individual is the issue to be determined is not a case of pedigree. ‘A case is not necessarily a case of pedigree because it may involve questions of birth, parentage, age, or relationship.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 663, 57 Tex. Crim. 625, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowan-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.