Sherrill v. State

1930 OK CR 149, 287 P. 747, 47 Okla. Crim. 275, 1930 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 298
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 5, 1930
DocketNo. A-7093.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1930 OK CR 149 (Sherrill v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherrill v. State, 1930 OK CR 149, 287 P. 747, 47 Okla. Crim. 275, 1930 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 298 (Okla. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, J.

The plaintiffs in error, hereinafter called the defendants, were by information charged in the first count with rape in the first degree, and in the second count with rape in the second degree; were tried, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty, and fixed the punishment of each of the defendants at one year in the reformatory at Granite. Motion for new trial was filed, considered, and overruled, and the case is on appeal to this court.

The defendants demurred to the information on the ground, first, that the first count of said information fails to allege facts sufficient to charge said' defendants with the crime of rape in any degree; and, second, that the second count of said information fails to allege facts sufficient to charge said defendants with the crime of rape in any degree.

*277 The testimony on behalf of the state tends to show that the defendant Yernie Parmlee came to the home of the prosecutrix, Edith Priddy, on a Sunday evening for the purpose of taking her for a car ride; that the prosecuting witness had been keeping company with Parmlee for about a year; that he had been taking her to parties, church, and neighborhood gatherings; the prosecutrix also knew Luther Sherrill; that, before Parmlee went to the home of the prosecutrix, Sherrill got out of the car a short distance from the home, and waited for the prosecutrix and Parmlee to come and pick him up. Prior to' going to the home of the prosecutrix, the defendants had gone to another home for the purpose of securing a girl, but the parents of the girl would not permit her to gO' with them. The testimony shows that on this occasion Sherrill went to the home, and Parmlee waited some distance from the house.

The testimony tends to show that, after the defendants got the prosecutrix in the car, they drove to various places, and late in the afternoon returned home and found there was no one at home; that the defendants and prose-cutrix then left for the purpose of attending a religious service some distance away; after they had driven some distance from the home of the prosecuting witness, Sherrill purchased some whisky; the prosecuting witness denies she knew anything about the whisky until after it had been purchased, stating that:

“Luther drove into Mr. Whitmers’ place and got the liquor; we then turned north to the Bunchgrass schoolhouse, and then went up to Johnie Carsons, and turned east to Bud Whitmers; we drove down to a canyon, and Luther and Vernie begin to drink the liquor, and then they forced me to take a drink — had me to. At that time they had taken three swallows and I taken one; they would hand it back and forth to each other; they began to swear, *278 and said it was awfully strong; the whisky was taking ef-feet, and Yernie said he was going to be sick at his stomach, and Luther said he wanted to take another swallow; it was finally all drank; they begun to get kinda rough; I mean by getting kinda rough they began to talk smutty to me; he asked me if I would cohabit with him, and I told him I wasn’t that kind of a girl; he says ‘you will anyway’; I jumped out of the car, and went up to a little old bridge, and he caught me before I got across it; the bridge was south of the car, west quite a little ways; then he had Yern help him drag me to the car; they told me if I would go back to the car they would go on to church; but we did not go on to' church; Luther then begun to take my bloomers off and I kicked and screamed and fought him and pinched him; Luther Sherrill and I were in the back seat and Yernie Parmlee was in the front seat; Luther Sherrill did not accomplish any act of intercourse with me until Yern helped him hold me; he was not able to- overcome me my himself; Yernie Parmlee held my hands to my sides, Sherrill got between my legs, one hand around my waist, and got me in a position he could get on me; after Sherrill had penetrated me, Yernie Parmlee turned me loose, and Sherrill held my hands and Vernie got in the same position Sherrill was in, and Luther Sherrill kept telling me to be still; I tried to get away, and they finally pushed me down in the seat again, and Yernie got hold of me and had sexual intercourse with me; it was about a half mile from where this occurred to the closest house; this road where this occurred was just a road used by the community; that is, it was not a public highway; after they got through, they said we had better go back, and I told them I would tell my folks, that there would be something happen, and stated they would have to' do something.”

The testimony of the prosecutrix further shows that, after the whisky was secured by the defendant Sherrill, they continued to drive from place to place until they finally stopped on the road where the road crosses a canyon about a half mile from the nearest house.

*279 The testimony further tends to show that the prose-cutrix in this case was fourteen years of age, and under sixteen, and that the defendants were each under the age of eighteen years. Some days after the occurrence the prosecutrix advised her mother what had taken place, and a letter was written to Yernie Parmlee asking him to come, that something had to be done, tending to show that they thought the prosecutrix, as a result of the cohabitation, might be pregnant.

The testimony of the defendants tends to show that the prosecutrix had been going with different boys to parties and other places, that she drank as much of the whisky as the defendants did, and the defendants both admit they drove from place to place, and that they drove the car down in the canyon where the prosecutrix says they did. The defendant Luther Sherrill in his testimony attempts to shew that, before they got to where they stopped the car, he had been fondling the prosecutrix, squeezing and loving her, and that he had made indecent proposals to her to permit him to have sexual intercourse, and she stated she would if he would prevent her from getting pregnant; that, when the car stopped, the defendant Parmlee was in the front seat of the car, and that he and the prosecutrix were in the rear seat, and that he there, with the consent of the prosecutrix, had intercourse with her; that the defendant Parmlee took a. cushion out of the car, and put it on the ground, and the prosecutrix lay down on the cushion, and Parmlee cohabited with her, while the defendant Sherrill was sitting on the running board of the car smoking a cigarette. The defendant Sher-rill attempts to say that, while they were in the act of cohabitation, the prosecutrix asked him to kiss her three different times. The defendants in their testimony attempt to show that the prosecutrix suggested they with *280 draw from, the act of cohabitation like some one else had been doing before the conclusion of the cohabitation; the defendants denying that the prosecutrix got out of the car and sought to get away as testified to by her, and that they forcibly returned her from the bridge mentioned by the prosecutrix; that they used no force in cohabiting with the prosecutrix, or that she made any objection whatever to the act of cohabitation with either of the defendants.

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Related

Ables v. State
1958 OK CR 98 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1958)
Burtt v. State
1938 OK CR 26 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1938)
Gordon v. State
1934 OK CR 35 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1930 OK CR 149, 287 P. 747, 47 Okla. Crim. 275, 1930 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherrill-v-state-oklacrimapp-1930.