Simmons v. State

114 S.W. 841, 54 Tex. Crim. 619, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 446
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1908
DocketNo. 4052.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 841 (Simmons 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
Simmons v. State, 114 S.W. 841, 54 Tex. Crim. 619, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 446 (Tex. 1908).

Opinions

The indictment is in the usual form, charging appellant with the seduction of Miss Bessie James in Haskell County.

The record discloses that Miss Bessie James and appellant became acquainted with each other in McLennan County about Christmas, 1904. That he began waiting on her in the summer of 1905, about the first of June, and continued going with her until his return from Haskell County to McLennan County, about August, 1906. The father of prosecutrix moved from McLennan to Haskell County the latter part of December, 1905, carrying prosecutrix with him. That about the 10th of January, 1906, appellant also went to Haskell County, and while there would go to the residence of Mr. James, where his daughter Bessie lived, about every week; some times when not employed he stayed there several days. Usually, when employed, he would spend Sunday with the James family. They became engaged to be married in McLennan County before moving to Haskell County under her testimony and intended to be married along in the winter of 1905-6, but for some reason it was put off, and it was discussed from time to time between herself and appellant. Finally, they fixed the time to marry in August, 1906, with a view of then returning to McLennan County. She says the first time appellant had intercourse with her was about the first of March, 1906, in what she calls the Logan house where her father resided; that it was at night and upstairs. She says: "At that time he asked me to let him have intercourse with me and I told him no. The reason for saying no to him was because I didn't have any faith in what he said. He told me that it would be all right, and that there was no use of being scared of anything. I told him that I was scared. I don't know what I was scared of — I was scared of being caught up, of getting with child, and I told him that. He told me that he would marry for sure. He had intercourse with me along at times up until he went back home in McLennan County in August after he commenced it in March before that time. From having intercourse with Wade Simmons I became pregnant. That was in May that I became pregnant as near as I can tell. I have since that time given birth to a baby; the birth of the baby was on the 11th *Page 621 day of February, 1907. The child that was born at that time was Wade Simmons'. It is a boy. All of this intercourse sexually with Wade Simmons occurred in Haskell County and the State of Texas. . . . When he failed to marry me on Christmas, then the date was set for the next summer to get married. He came out here I said about the first of January, and that he had intercourse with me in the next March after that time, and the first time that he had intercourse with me was when we were upstairs at home. At that time my sisters were downstairs and so was my brother, and I suppose my father was there too. I suppose that my aunt was also down there. I don't know where any one of them were, but I suppose that they were down there. I don't know what part of the night this was, but I suppose that it was in the fore park of the night. Before having intercourse there that night me and Wade had not been out any where. There ought to have been two rooms upstairs, but there is just one; there was just one great long room clean across the house. We did not receive company up there in that room. At that time me and Wade went up there to go out on the gallery, and we stayed out there a part of the time. We did not have intercourse out on the gallery but in the house. There was no bed in there. I don't know what all Wade told me then at that time. He asked me to have intercourse with him. At that time he said that we were going to marry, you know, in August, and if anything should happen, why, I believed that, of course. I did not state a while ago that I didn't believe what he said. You know what I mean, sir. I didn't believe him when he commenced to tell me all he would do if I should happen to get in trouble. He said that I should become pregnant that he would marry me; he said that if anything happened that he would not let that interfere with our engagement. He said that we would marry then if anything happened; that if anything happened that we would marry, but would marry in August anyway. At first I opposed having sexual intercourse with him, and the reason I opposed it was I was afraid that I would become pregnant; that was not the only reason, of course, I had lots of reasons, but that was my main reason. I don't know how many times Wade Simmons and I had intercourse in this county, but it was quite frequently."

In regard to the marriage, the father of prosecutrix testified, as follows: "On the first Sunday after he came out here, I don't now remember positively, — just a day or two, — any way it was on the first Sunday that he was here. On that Sunday morning me and him walked out down below Logan's barn, and he told me that they had agreed to marry, — him and Bessie, and he had come after her and wanted to carry her back home, and I told him that I could'nt do that; that I couldn't agree to that. I says, `You ought to have said something about that sooner. The way it is here, she is the oldest child and the only housekeeper I have got here, and under the *Page 622 circumstances I couldn't do that.' I said, `I haven't got anything against you, but under the circumstances I couldn't agree to that. You'll have to put that off, for I can't consent to that, or make other arrangements.'"

Logan testified to some conversation that he states occurred between himself and the father of prosecutrix, and Jim Simmons, brother of appellant, in which it was sought to corroborate the State's case by showing offers on the part of Jim Simmons to settle the matter by payment of money about the time of the institution of the prosecution. Logan was quite busy in trying to secure the payment of money on the part of either Jim Simmons or appellant or both to old man James, father of prosecutrix, as a means of avoiding prosecution. These matters were denied by the witness Jim Simomns, so far as his offering any money or agreeing to offer any money is concerned. His statement was, in substance, that these parties offered to take money, which he emphatically declined to give. Through this witness Logan they also introduced the statement of appellant in the general nature of an admission to the effect that he reckoned the child was his, but he would prove that others had also been intimate with her. The State also proved through the witness Jim Simmons that appellant had admitted to him that he had had intercourse with prosecutrix in McLennan County before her removal from that county to Haskell County, but further stated appellant had never admitted to him that he had intercourse with her in Haskell County. This is a sufficient statement of the State's side of the case. Appellant did not testify. By several witnesses appellant proved the general bad reputation of prosecutrix for chastity and virtue in McLennan County. Evidence was also introduced, which the prosecutrix admitted to be true, and as her father did, that he and prosecutrix, and another daughter had attended a Bohemian dance. It was considered disreputable for ladies to attend Bohemian dances. One of the witnesses said that he thought the attendance upon these Bohemian dances by American girls meant that they were bad characters. The witnesses who testified to the bad reputation of the girl were men and women. Mrs. Shipp testified that she and prosecutrix picked cotton together for a couple of months, and they talked a great deal. On one occasion she said they were talking about dancing, and the witness said that she did not feel very well that day.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 841, 54 Tex. Crim. 619, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-state-texcrimapp-1908.