State v. Bailey

126 S.W.2d 224, 344 Mo. 322, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 224 (State v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bailey, 126 S.W.2d 224, 344 Mo. 322, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 402 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J.

The appellant was convicted of statutory rape upon Pearl Summers, a girl fifteen years old, in the Circuit Court-of Dent County on change of .venue from Shannon County, and his punishment assessed by the jury at imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years. He has filed no brief in this court. His motion for new trial in the circuit court complains: that the State’s evidence was insufficient to make a prima facie case; that the sheriff intruded upon the deliberations of the jury; that the Circuit Court of Dent County acquired no jurisdiction of the case because the proceedings by which the venue was transferred thereto were void; that all the instructions given for the State-were erroneous; and that the court failed to give an instruction on appellant’s alibi defense.

The appellant resided near Hartshorn, and had served as constable of his township in Shannon County for five or six years. He was a young bachelor and had been going with a number of the girls in that vicinity during the times here involved. He had known the prosecutrix for two or three years and had had social contacts with her five or six times. But he said these were not sought by him, and happened through his meeting her at church or school dinners, or dances, whence he would take her home at her request, her sister *324 usually accompanying them. From indications in the record the prosecutrix and her family were poor and illiterate. Her father was a farmer, but she was born while the family were living in a lumber camp. Her sister worked in the home of a neighboring family.

The prosecutrix testified she and her sister Ethel first met the appellant at church in 1934 and went to a dance with him. Later, in November, 1934, both girls attended a pie supper at Hartshorn school. On appellant’s invitation they permitted him to take them home in his Ford roadster. First he delivered Ethel to the home of “Wint” Deatherage where she lived and worked. Then he and the prosecutrix continued toward the latter’s home, a distance of three miles, On the way, at appellant’s solicitation she got out of the car and had sexual intercourse with him. This was in Shannon County. On a subsequent occasion the appellant took the prosecutrix home from a dance, his sister accompanying them. There was a mud hole in the. lane leading to the .prosecutrix’s home about a quarter of a mile from the house. The appellant said he couldn’t drive his car through it, so he left, his sister in the car and walked with the prosecutrix to her home, having intercourse with hqr on the way. Still later on their way back from a Young People’s Meeting at Black Valley Church they committed the sexual act.

The prosecutrix went to a Fourth of July picnic, at Bear Claw in 1935, with a man named Fred Helton. That was 15 or 20 miles from her home. According to her testimony she had met the appellant’s sister at Hartshorn the day before the picnic and the latter invited her to stay at the home of appellant’s family the night of the picnic. That evening she rode to the Bailey home with the appellant, his girl friend, his mother and sister, in appellant’s car, and spent the night there. The next morning the appellant offered to drive her as far as Hartshorn. He was living in a house not far from the Bailey home, and stopped there on this trip, inviting her in. This was in Texas County. . She refused but he compelled her to do so, holding his pistol in his hand, and there ravished her. As a result of this intercourse in July, 1935, she became pregnant, according to her testimony. On former occasions the appellant had used a contraceptive device. The charge in the information is based on the first intercourse, after the pie supper at the Hartshorn school in November, 1934.

After the ravishment of the prosecutrix on July 5, the appellant took her — not to Hartshorn as she testified he started out to do, but — to her home in the country five miles northeast of Hartshorn. The prosecutrix did not tell her family of her ravishment, but about a month later the mother discovered her condition and some two months after that took her to Hartshorn, informed appellant of her pregnancy, charged him with responsibility therefor, and asked what he was going to do about it. The appellant disclaimed any guilt, so *325 the mother and daughter went to the prosecuting attorney the same day and had a complaint issued charging appellant with rape in November, 1934.

The corroboration of the prosecutrix’s testimony came mostly from members of her family. -Her father and mother testified as to her age and the family history. The latter also related about the appellant’s bringing the prosecutrix home on July 5, and about confronting him thereafter and charging him with responsibility for her daughter’s pregnancy. Ethel Summers, sister of the prosecutrix, told of accompanying her and .appellant as far as the home of “Wint’,’ Deatherage after the school entertainment in the fall of 1934 and said the other two continued on in the direction of the prosecutrix’s home. (It was on this trip that the rape charged was perpetrated.)' The witness fixed the time of the trip as the last of October or first of November, 1934, but stated the school room was decorated with paper representations of turkeys and other things. The appellant admitted he took the prosecutrix home from a dance on one occasion when his sister was along but said that was in March, 1935, the last time he went with her; and denied they encountered a mud-hole on the way, and that he walked from there with the prosecutrix to her home.

Speaking generally, the testimony for the defense in addition to' that already mentioned, was as follows: The appellant denied ever having had sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix; and denied there was a Thanksgiving entertainment at the Hartshorn school in November, 1934, from which he accompanied the prosecutrix and her sister to their homes. On the contrary, he said the pie supper was in October for Hallowe’en, and that he did not escort the two Bailey girls home on that occasion, but took a Mrs. Tom Smith and her children. • Mrs. Smith, a relative of the prosecutrix, lived in Hartshorn and her children took part in a program at the supper. She corroborated appellant on all the foregoing, as did Mrs. Ruthene Jordan, teacher of the school, and Andy P. Johnson, sheriff, with respect to the time and nature of the entertainment. On the other hand Willis Mullens, a director of the school, after consulting the school clerk’s record, and also W. L. Stoops and the prosecutrix (being recalled) all said the pie supper was held the week, before and in, celebration of Thanksgiving.

Mrs. Bailey, mother of the appellant testified that though she had never seen the prosecutrix before, yet the latter at the Bear Claw picnic in July, 1935, practically invited herself to spend the .night with the Bailey family, and the next morning hinted, pouted and complained until the mother made the arrangement by which the appellant took her home. The sister of appellant, who was connected with several incidents mentioned in the testimony, did not testify. The appellant said he did not go with the prosecutrix after March, *326 1935, which was some six months before she had him arrested; that he did go with other girls; and that the prosecutrix went publicly with at least three other young men (which she admitted).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 224, 344 Mo. 322, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bailey-mo-1939.