State v. Barnes

29 S.W.2d 156, 325 Mo. 545, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 29 S.W.2d 156 (State v. Barnes) 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. Barnes, 29 S.W.2d 156, 325 Mo. 545, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 628 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

BLAIR, P. J.

Defendant was convicted of rape. His punishment was fixed at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a term of three years. He has appealed from 'the judgment entered on the verdict.

The prosecutrix lived with her parents in Sedalia. Her testimony was that, on the evening of May 28, 1928, she was induced by defendant to enter his automobile for the purpose of taking a ride. They drove east of Sedalia on the Smithton road. Defendant drove' his automobile off the main 'highway and parked it along the roadside. He there forced prosecutrix to submit to him and had sexual intercourse with her in the automobile. She was at that time under sixteen years of age, the statutory age of consent. It may well be doubted from the testimony of prosecutrix that she offered any serious resistance to' defendant, because she testified that she afterwards entered defendant’s automobile upon several occasions and drove with him to out-of-the-way ■ places near Sedalia *549 where they indulged, in the same act., The relation continued for three or four months.

In October, and after prosecutrix discovered that she was pregnant, she told her mother for the first tim.e of her relations with defendant. A child was born, to prosecutrix in February, 1929. Prosecutrix testified that she had never had sexual relations with any man other than defendant.

No one who testified, except the sister of prosecutrix, testifying in rebuttal, had ever seen prosecutrix with defendant. The sister said that she had been in the automobile with prosecutrix and the defendant on several occasions and had seen,them together a number of times. Prosecutrix said she would leave home, ostensibly to go to church, and would there meet defendant, and go away with him in his automobile, She said she had never gone with any other boys, and she and, her parents testified that; she ■ had been forbidden to do so. Her meetings .with defendant appear from her testimony to have been practically, clandestine. ¡ ‘

Defendant stoutly ■ denied. having taken, prosecutrix into his automobile at any time or that he had ever been out with her or,alone with her. He knew her, by sight, because. they lived in the same general neighborhood, but he did not even have a speaking acquaintance with her. He denied having had sexual intercourse with her.

Prosecutrix fixed the time of the first act as the evening of May 28th.- Defendant testified that he was in attendance upon meetings at a different church or tabernacle- in Sedalia on the nights prosecutrix testified he was with her. In this he was corroborated •by two young, women, one of them apparently the fiancee of defendant, who testified that they were with him at such meetings. Defendant offered evidence tending to show that he sustained a good reputation for honesty and morality. The State offered no evidence to the contrary. Defendant also offered evidence tending to show that prosecutrix sustained a bad reputation for morality.

Defendant -introduced evidence tending .to show that prosecutrix had been seen leaving church, riding in automobiles and at other places’ with young men other than defendant. These Witnesses had never seep, prosecutrix with defendant.- He also-.produced witnesses who testified 'that they had- seen -prosecutrix at a dance in the country near Sedalia; that she was drinking at:the time; that she took young men. outside and was -out with them for some time. The inference -sought to be "created, no doubt; was. that she .was then engaged in immoral conduct 'with them.

How testimony of.'specific acts of alleged < misconduct on the part of prosecutrix was admissible, is not clear; .but the, State seems to have let it' come in without objection. However, the State called in rebuttal the men who gave the particular, dance-and they denied *550 that prosecutrix was the young woman described by defendant’s witnesses. Prosecutrix herself stoutly denied her presence at that dance. Defendant also sought to show a specific act of church disturbance by prosecutrix. But the minister in attendance testified that the prosecutrix was not the girl who created the disturbance. She also denied any such act on her part. In fact, the charge of her attendance on this dance and drinking* and misbehaving herself thereat and the charge of church disturbance were quite thoroughly refuted by the State. If the jury thought these witnesses had testified falsely and that defendant had procured their perjured testimony, they may have weighed the other evidence offered by defendant in the same scales.

■ Defendant contends that the testimony of prosecutrix is uncorroborated in any substantial way and is so unbelievable, so unconvincing and so contradicted by the overwhelming weight of the testimony, that this court should not permit the conviction to stand. Counsel admit that a conviction may be sustained upon the uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix, but argue that we should not permit the' conviction to stand in this case, and cite State v. Patrick, 107 Mo. 147, 17 S. W. 666, and State v. Goodale, 210 Mo. 275, 109 S. W. 9, in support of their contention.

Counsel admit that the rule seemingly laid down in the Patrick case by Court en Banc is not now the law. It was there said that, where the prosecutrix in a rape case is not corroborated and the accused denies the charge, there is an equipoise of oaths and the evidence must be deemed insufficient to support a conviction. In State v. Marcks, 140 Mo. 656, 41 S. W. 973, 43 S. W. 1095, Court en Bane effectively disposed of such supposed rule and held that a conviction for rape could be sustained upon the uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix. Such has been the rule uniformly followed ever since.

However, defendant relies upon the Goodale case. Like the Marcks case and many recent decisions, the Goodale case recognizes the rule that a conviction for rape may rest upon the uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix. But in the Goodale case, and in the others of like effect which defendant has not cited, this court seems to have usurped the functions of the jury and refused to let convictions stand because the testimony of-the prosecutrix was deemed unconvincing and improbable in view of the facts and circumstances of the case,-notwithstanding the positive, though uncorroborated, testimony of the prosecutrix tending to show a state of facts neither impossible of existence nor inherently improbable in itself and not contrary to human experience.

No sufficient reason appears why a rape case should stand on any different 'ground from- any other case in respect to the sufficiency *551 of the evidence to make a case for the jury. Where, as here, the prosecutrix tells a "positive and unshaken story of sexual outrage, which in itself is entirely possible and not contrary to human experience, it is the exclusive province of the jury to pass upon the truth of her story. ■ An appellate court should not usurp the proper functions of the trial court and jury and set the conviction aside merely because it may disagree with the jury as to the truthfulness of the story told by the prosecutrix or think the trial court should have set the verdict aside as against the weight of the evidence.

1 ' We have been over this matter so frequently in recent cases that it should be' unnecessary to cover the same ground again.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W.2d 156, 325 Mo. 545, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barnes-mo-1930.