State v. Baca

242 P.2d 1002, 56 N.M. 236
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1952
Docket5447
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 242 P.2d 1002 (State v. Baca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Baca, 242 P.2d 1002, 56 N.M. 236 (N.M. 1952).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The defendant was convicted of statutory rape and sentenced to a term of thirty-five to fifty years in the state penitentiary. He prosecutes this appeal from the judgment and sentence so rendered against and pronounced upon him.-

The prosecuting witness was a young girl, only five months past her fourteenth birthday, who resided with her parents at the small settlement of Atarque in Valencia County. Her father owned and operated a ranch near Fence Lake some seven miles from the family home and the wife, mother of the prosecuting witness, frequently accompanied him there to assist in ranch chores. This happened to be tibe case on or about .November 27, 1950, the day the offense charged was committed. The prosecuting witness had remained home from school that day to do the family washing and was there alone in mid-afternoon of the day when defendant, a neighbor about forty years of age who resided nearby, called at her home to borrow an axe. She located and handed him the axe which he took and departed.

It was not long after defendant borrowed the axe that he returned it. Undoubtedly the fact that the prosecuting witness was alone in the house had not escaped his attention. It was upon his return that he en- ' gaged in an act of sexual intercourse with her on a bed in one of the bedrooms. The defendant left the bedroom and went to the kitchen upon completion of this act. The mother and father of the witness must have returned from the ranch shortly thereafter since that is where the mother found both the defendant and her daughter upon entering the kitchen, the former seated near the stove drinking coffee and the daughter, prosecuting witness, standing at the stove nearby.

The mother noticed nothing unusual in the daughter’s appearance or demeanor at the time, nor was there anything in the condition of the bed occupied by defendant and her daughter to attract her. attention, the latter having testified in answer to an inquiry on the subject on cross-examination, in effect, that she had rearranged the covers on the bed.

So matters stood until February 15, 1951, when the prosecuting witness was brought home sick from the school she attended by the principal and her -brother. Then, for the first time, she informed her mother that she was pregnant and that the defendant was responsible for her condition. Later in the evening of this same day she told again, both her mother and father being present, of the act of sexual intercourse in November, nearly three months previously and charged defendant with being the father of her expected child. She asserted, also, that she had not engaged willingly in the act of intercourse with him. At the time of the trial the child was yet unborn, although the condition of pregnancy of the prosecuting witness must have been obvious to the jury when she testified.

Notwithstanding protestations of the prosecuting witness that the defendant forced her to have intercourse with him, the. evidence is quite satisfying that she consented to the act, in so far as she was .capable.of consenting. Indeed, the attorney general does not seriously contend otherwise and both the state and defense treat this a case of statutory rape. As said in State v. Richardson, 48 N.M. 544, 154 P.2d 224, 229, which was also a case of statutory rape:

“She (prosecuting witness) may not hesitate to testify to intercourse; but reluctantly, if at all, will she admit that she consented thereto.”

And we quoted approvingly in that opinion from State v. Morang, 132 Mc. 443, 172 A. 431, being still another case of statutory rape, language applicable to the facts in the Richardson case which we deem applicable here, too, to-wit:

“Stress is laid on the fact that the girl claims she was forced to submit, and it is argued that the situation of the parties prevented intercourse unless both were willing. The prosecutrix, although she resisted at first, may have finally become passive. Her claim of resistance may be entirely false. The jury, however, were undoubtedly aware, as all men know, that a young girl, when discovered in her shame, often seeks refuge in a story of unwilling submission to force. * * * They were not bound to reject her entire testimony because her story of the use of force seems doubtful.”

The primary question for decision is, then, whether the trial court erred in permitting the mother of the prosecuting witness to take the stand and relate what her daughter told her when the latter’s pregnancy forced disclosure, namely, that the defendant at the time mentioned, had sexual intercourse with her and was the father of her yet unborn child. Actually, defendant also assigns error in the same particular as to testimony by the father of the prosecuting witness. But if we read the record correctly, after the district attorney by obviously leading questions already had gotten the matter before the jury, the court sustained an objection by defense counsel .and instructed the jury to disregard any statements made by prosecutrix to her parents. The father was never again placed on the stand as a witness.

However, the mother was brought on as a witness and she testified that the daughter had told her on February 15, 1951, when brought home from school by the principal and her brother, that she was pregnant and that defendant was responsible for her condition. Counsel for the defendant objected again as he did when the father was on the stand, upon the ground the testimony sought to be elicited was not a part of the res gestae and was too remote to be admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule. He was overruled and so the question is squarely put. If the objection be well taken, the defendant is entitled to a new trial.

The trial court erred in permitting the mother as a witness to relate in evidence over defendant’s objection details of the complaint made to her by her daughter, the prosecutrix, including the identity of the one she accused of abusing her. Territory v. Maldonado, 9 N.M. 629, 58 P. 350; State v. Ellison, 19 N.M. 428, 144 P. 10; State v. Shults, 43 N.M. 71, 85 P.2d 591. One of the earliest cases on the question in this jurisdiction is Territory v. Maldonado, supra [9 N.M. 629, 58 P. 351], a case ■of common-law rape. The court had this to say on the subject, to-wit:

“The prosecutrix may be asked whether she made complaint of the injury, when and to whom, and the person to whom she complained may be called to prove the fact; but the particular facts stated by the prosecutrix are not admissible in evidence, except when elicited on cross-examination, or by way of confirming her testimony after it has been impeached. Indeed, the complaint constitutes no part of the res gestae. People v. Hulse, 3 Hill [N.Y., 309] 316; People v. Magee, 1 Denio [N.Y.] 19; Steven [Stephen] v. State, 11 Ga. 225; Whart. Cr.Law, 1150; Oleson v. State, [11 Neb. 276, 9 N.W. 38] 38 Am.Rep. 366, cases cited in note; Kirby v. Territory, [3 Ariz. 288] 28 P. 1134; People v. Hicks, [98 Mich. 86] 56 N.W. 1102.”

The court quoted approvingly from the case of Reddick v. State, 35 Tex.Cr.R. 463, 34 S.W. 274, 275, the main body of what follows, to-wit:

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Bluebook (online)
242 P.2d 1002, 56 N.M. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baca-nm-1952.