Schrum v. State

187 N.W. 801, 108 Neb. 186, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 228
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1922
DocketNo. 21913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 187 N.W. 801 (Schrum v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schrum v. State, 187 N.W. 801, 108 Neb. 186, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 228 (Neb. 1922).

Opinion

Brown, District Judge.

Willicm H. Schrum was contacted in the district court for Douglas county of hatting committed the crime of incest upon his 12-year-old daughter, Ida Schrum, on July 8, 1920, and Avas sentenced to seiwe a-term not exceeding 20 years in the penitentiary. From this judgment he has brought the- case to this court for review. A number of alleged errors are relied upon in his brief and were presented on oral argument, but we deem it necessary to consider only two of them.

The most important of the errors assighed relates to the giving by the trial court of instruction No. 8, which reads as follows:

“The charge made against the defendant in the information is that he committed the act of incest, that is, had sexual intercourse with the prosecuting witness, on or about July 8,1920, and this is the specific act charged and of Avhich you are called upon to say whether the defendant is guilty or innocent. EAÚdence of other acts of like intercourse by the defendant Avith the prosecuting witness prior to July 8, 1920, has been admitted upon the trial; this evidence is properly admitted but for the purpose only as bearing upon the probability or improbability of the defendant being guilty of the particular act charged in the information, and it is to this extent only you should consider said testimony.”

The plaintiff in error, who will for convenience hereafter be designated the defendant, urges that the portion of this instruction beginning Avith the words “evidence of other acts of like intercourse” specifically authorized the jury, under the evidence in the case, to consider the testimony of the prosecutrix as to other similar acts by the defendant with her as corroboration of her testimony as to the specific act charged in the information.

In order to determine whethei; or not this contention [188]*188is correct, it will be necessary to consider briefly certain portions of the evidence. The record discloses that the defendant secured a divorce from his wife on November 21, 1918, and that on March 10, 1919, she sent their two daughters, Ida and Myrtle, to live with the defendant. The three of them lived together up until July 10, 1920, two days after the alleged act of incest charged in the information, when the mother came and took the girls away. Ida testified that about 6 o’clock on the evening of July 8, 1920, her father sent Myrtle to a grocery store a block and a half away for groceries for supper, and, while a still younger sister, Eugina, aged 0 at the time of the trial, who had recently been sent by their mother to live with them, was in the house and Myrtle was gone, her father took her into the front bedroom and had sexual intercourse with her upon the bed; that during the act Myrtle returned from the store, entered the. front door into the living, room, off from which the front bedroom opened, passed through the room, stopping only long enough to glance through the partly open door into the bedroom and see her father lying on top of Ida in the act of intercourse, then went on into the kitchen and deposited her groceries, and then returned and started to go into the bedroom as though she had observed nothing; and that while Myrtle was in the kitchen her father got off from her and told her to pull down her clothes, and when Myrtle returned and entered the bedroom the defendant was making a pretense of .looking about, the room for a tie pin. She also testified that she did not make; any complaint, but that her sister told their mother. Over the. repeated objections of the defendant, she was permitted to testify further that her father had sexual intercourse with her on numerous occasions, the first time being on Christmas, 1919, and practically every week from then on up to July 8, 1920, sometimes as often as three, times a week. She, further testified that no one ever saw them in the act of intercourse except her sister, Myrtle, on the. one occasion on July 8, 1920. Myrtle testi[189]*189fled substantially the same as her sister with respect to the occurrence on July 8, except that she said that, after returning from the kitchen and entering the bedroom, her father in her presence got off Ida and told Ida to put down her dress. She also testified that her little sister, Eugina, was asleep on the bed in the back bedroom when she went to the store. This trial was had early in December, 1920, an I the record discloses that about a month and a half prior thereto the case had been tried, resulting in a mistrial. It was shown that on this former trial Myrtle had testified somewhat differently as to the relation between her movements and what she saw after returning to the house on July 8. Both of the girls testified to the fact that, at the time of the alleged intercourse on July 8, the front door of the house Avas open, the screen door was not fastened, and the door of the bedroom in which Ida and her father Avere was not closed or locked, but Avas standing partly open. The record discloses that the house in question stands Avith houses on adjoining lots, the nearest being only 20 feet away, and in a thickly populated portion of South Omaha.

The defendant denied specifically that he had ever had or attempted to have sexual intercourse, with Ida. He testi-. fied that he was 41 years old and had lived in the, same, house since September, 1907. He presented seven character Avitnesses, four Avomen and three men, all being married and haA’ing children, and two of the men being business men in the community. All but two had lived in the community ten or twelve years or more, and those two had lived there about fitve years, and all had known the defendant during their residence. Two of them Avere the defendant’s nearest neighbors. All of them testified that the defendant's reputation in the community was that of being a moral, laAv-abiding and decent citizen; and one of the Avomen testified that the defendant’s wife had been arrested tAvice Avhile she liA’ed there. The lady Avho lived next door, 20 feet away, had resided there for over 10 years, had a [190]*190grown family, and testified she saw the little girls nearly every day, showing ample opportunity for them to have made complaint.

The defendant contends that the prosecution was the result of ill-feeling and hatred toward him by his divorced wife, and there are evidences in the record that the feeling between them was not good. However that may have been, it is clear that there is no evidence in the record corroborating the testimony of Ida as to any act of intercourse other than that alleged to have occurred on July 8, 1920, and the state so admits in its brief filed in this court. In this state of the record the trial court in the eighth instruction virtually instructed the jury that Ida’s uncorroborated testimony as to other acts of intercourse prior to July 8,1920, should be considered by them “as bearing upon the probability or improbability of the defendant being guilty of the particular act charged in the informationin other words, that Ida’s uncorroborated testimony as to other acts of intercourse might constitute corroboration of her testimony as to the act of July 8.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 N.W. 801, 108 Neb. 186, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrum-v-state-neb-1922.