State of Oregon v. Gordon

302 P.2d 214, 208 Or. 455, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 239
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 302 P.2d 214 (State of Oregon v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Oregon v. Gordon, 302 P.2d 214, 208 Or. 455, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 239 (Or. 1956).

Opinion

BRAND, J.

On 29 December 1955 an indictment was returned against the defendant Jack Gordon charging that

“The said Jack Gordon on or about the 1st day of May A.D. 1955, the exact date being to the Grand Jury unknown, in the County of Klamath and State of Oregon, then and there being, did then and there *457 wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously carnally know one Ruby Gay Robinson, a female child under the age of sixteen years; * *

The defendant pleaded not guilty. He was found guilty by verdict of the jury on 1 February 1956. On 27 April 1956 he was sentenced to the penitentiary and on the same day he moved that the judgment of conviction be set aside and a new trial granted. The motion was denied and defendant now appeals from the judgment of conviction.

Ruby Gay Robinson, the complaining witness, is the issue of the marriage of Yera Robinson and Louie L. Robinson. She was born on 5 March 1947. At the time of the trial she lacked about two months of being nine years of age. Pursuant to stipulation, and because of her youth, Ruby Gay was examined as to her competency as a witness by the court in chambers. That examination disclosed her age, the fact that she was in the third grade in school, attended Sunday School, and understood her duty to tell only the truth when sworn as a witness. Without objection she was then permitted to testify before the jury. The father and mother were divorced, and in the latter part of February, 1955, Yera, the mother, unmarried, was living at 234 Martin street, Klamath Falls, Oregon, with the defendant Jack Gordon and her four children. In March 1955 they all moved to 617 Adams street in the same city. Yera was unemployed but the defendant Gordon was employed at Metier Brothers lumber mill. On work days he left the house at about 7:10 a.m. and returned after the day’s work at about 4:10 p.m. Ruby attended school in May 1955 until it closed and she commonly arrived home around 3 p.m.

The defendant assigns as error the denial of a motion for dismissal which was made immediately after *458 the state had presented its evidence and had rested. The grounds stated in the motion for dismissal were (1) that the state had elected to rely on an act committed on May 25, 1955, and that the testimony of the complaining witness was in conflict as to the date, and “fails to establish with satisfactory evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that on that date that the defendant in this case had sexual intercourse with Ruby Gay Robinson”, (emphasis ours); (2) that there was a conflict of testimony between Ruby and her mother; (3) that Dr. Massey who examined Ruby on the 26th day of May testified that “it happened two or three weeks before the 25th day of May.” Ruby testified concerning a specific occasion when she was playing with her brothers and sister and with Carolyn and Janet, two friends who lived across the street. She was then living at 617 Adams street. Ruby testified directly to an act of statutory rape committed upon her by the defendant on the occasion to which we have referred. She said that while she was playing at Carolyn and Janet’s the defendant Gordon came, “and then after that he called me into the house and told the other kids to stay out. And then after that he took me into my mother’s room, * # She then testified with some detail concerning an act of sexual intercourse committed upon her by the defendant. Ruby testified that no one was in the house at the time and that the act took place after the defendant “got off work.” This is the incident on which the state relies. It appears that Ruby either misunderstood some of the questions or was confused in some of her answers. Tbe question propounded to her was, “When, in relation to your last birthday, Ruby, did this act occur? Did it happen before or after your last birthday? Ruhr answered, “Before.” She testified that the de *459 fendant had performed the act with her four or five times and that some of said acts preceded the one which occurred on the day when she had been playing with Carolyn and Janet. As to this last-mentioned occasion she was further interrogated on direct examination and before any recess had been taken. She then testified clearly that the particular act in question was ■committed on May 25th, the day before she was taken by her mother to the doctor. It is established that the visit to the doctor was on May 26th. We quote:

“Q Euby, you have told the Court and jury about a certain act, I believe you stated it happened in your mother’s bedroom?
“A Yes.
“Q Is that the act you remember best?
“A Yes.
‘‘Q How long before you went to the doctor did that act occur?
“A Well, it was May 25th, and then the day after that—I mean that day my mother told me she was taking me to the doctor May 26th.
“Q How is it that you remember that date?
“A Well, since I have been living with—when I was living with Mrs. Cearley, sometimes she kept asking me, ‘Do you remember what date that was?’ ”

The jury could have found from the evidence that the defendant had intercourse with Euby on the 25th of May, which was after her birthday, and also on some day or dates prior to her birthday. She testified that on the other similar occasions the act was performed in her mother’s bedroom on Adams street. On cross examination, also before any recess was taken, the defendant attempted to tie the witness to her statement that the particular act concerning which she first testified occurred before her birthday, which was *460 on the 5th of March. The attempt was not successful. We quote:

“ Q Well, can you tell us how many days before this first incident you have testified to happened before your birthday?
“A Well, about four times before.
“Q About four times before your birthday?
“A Oh, before my birthday?
“Q The first one you testified to you said happened before your birthday. Now, how long before your birthday did it happen?
“A I think it was four or five times.
“Q I asked you how many days before your birthday did that incident you testified to in your mother’s bedroom happen?
“A I don’t remember. Well, before my mother had her birthday—what I just told was the day before she took me to the doctor, and that was after my birthday.
“Q You say the one you were talking about happened the day before you went to the doctor ?
“A Yes.”

Ruby testified that she told her mother concerning the defendant’s conduct with her and was warned by her mother not to tell her father. She testified further that she told her father that the defendant had not bothered her, and added, “The reason I told him ‘No’ is because if I did tell him, well, my mother said he would kill Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
302 P.2d 214, 208 Or. 455, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-oregon-v-gordon-or-1956.