State v. Bebb

125 Iowa 494
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 21, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 125 Iowa 494 (State v. Bebb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bebb, 125 Iowa 494 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Bishop, J.

1. Complaint prosecutrix. The prosecutrix, being called as a witness for the State, testified that she was twelve years of age at the time of the assault alleged; that the crime was committed about September 1, 1901, and on the Bebb’ farm? where she was living with her parents- — the latter being in the employ of the father of the defendant on such farm. Among other things, the prosecutrix was asked if she had made complaint to any one of the assault alleged to have been made upon her by defendant. To this the defendant interposed the general objection that the evidence sought to be elicited was incompetent and immaterial.. The-objection was overruled, and, we think, properly so. In cases of this kind, evidence that subsequent to the commission of the alleged offense complaint thereof was in fact made, while trenching upon general rules, has .been held generally to be admissible. It is not considered that the fact of complaint forms a part of the res gestee; on the contrary, the exception is allowed upon the theory that proof of the. fact is proper to be considered as affecting the credibility of the prosecutrix as a witness; on the one hand tending to corroboration when the fact of complaint is made to appear, and on the other hand to the discredit of her evidence in the event no complaint is shown to have been made. State v. Wolf, 118 Iowa, 564; State v. Peterson, 110 Iowa, 647; State v. Mulkern, 85 Me. 106 (26 Atl. Rep. 1017); State v. Niles, 47 Vt. 82.

2. Same. II. Counsel argue, however, that the complaint said to have been made was too remote, and for that reason was not entitled to any consideration. Conceding that defendant is in position to present the question in view of the record, the argument is not sound. We do not say that a complaint may not be so long delayed as to rob it of all force, and hence warrant a refusal to receive it in evidence. But that delay is fatal to the admissibility of the evidence is not true of necessity. ‘Ordinarily, the fact of delay goes to the weight of the evidence only, [496]*496and is, therefore, a subject of consideration for the jury. The reason for the exception is not difficult of ascertainment. The law takes note that within common experience, when an outrage of the character here in question has been committed, the instincts and emotions of womanly nature will prompt an outcry against the wrong committed and the perpetrator thereof, not only as an expression of grief, indignation, or resentment, but as calling for sympathy and assistance. Further, the law recognizes that in some instances it is possible that through timidity or fear a wronged woman may fail to make prompt disclosure. The law indulges, therefore, in the generous supposition that in the ordinary course of things a woman thus wronged will complain thereof as soon as opportunity offers, or at least when no longer controlled by conditions of restraint in character, as above referred to. State v. Cross, 12 Iowa, 66; Stevens v. People, 158 Ill. 121 (41 N. E. Rep. 856); Parker v. State, 67 Md. 329 (10 Atl. Rep. 219, 1 Am. St. Rep. 387). Accordingly the operation of the exception has been extended so far as to permit the introduction in evidence by the State of the fact that a complaint in character as indicated has been made; in other words, and to be exact, that, inspired by confidence in friends or others believed by her to be capable of sympathy and assistance, the woman had been prompted by her emotions, or her sense of wrong and indignation, to make revelation of the fact of the outrage committed upon her, and that, all circumstances considered, this was done within a reasonable time. The defendant may point out, therefore, the time when and the circumstances under which the same was made as affecting the value thereof for corroborative purposes. On the other hand, the State may introduce evidence to show why the complaint was not sooner made. State v. Tomlinson, 11 Iowa, 401; State v. Cross, 12 Iowa, 66; State v. Snider, 119 Iowa, 15.

[497]*4973. Whatconstitutes a comPLAINT. [496]*496III. No motion was made to strike out the evidence [497]*497introduced in proof of complaint, but, after instructing the jury as to the necessity for corroboration, the court pro-. ceeded to say, in effect, that if complaint was made as testified to by the prosecutrix and her . aunt, and m the light of Circumstances shown such complaint was made within a reasonable time, the fact _of such_ complaint might, be considered by the jury as evidence tending to corroboration. Exception was taken to the instruction thus given, and as applied to the case made, we think it involves error. The court evidently regarded the evidence, if believed by the jury, to be sufficient to make out a case of complaint, and it is in this view that we disagree with the learned trial court. We set out the testimony upon the subject in full. In answer to the interrogatory propounded to her, the prosecutrix said: “ I' told my aunt, Hattie Gelatt, Christmas evening, while coming from town.” On cross-examination she testified: “ I told no one until Christmas eve. When my aunt asked me, I told her. Did not tell .her of my own free will. * * * The Monday before Christmas met him [defendant] on the road. I was then living * * * seven or eight miles from Bebb’s. He asked me if I had been unwell since the time he was with me, and I said No,’ and he asked me if mamma knew it, and I said, c Yes.’ * * * My mother knew I hadn’t been unwell. I told her before we left Bebb’s. Made no complaint to her about Tom Bebb. She did not ask me. * * * Never complained to anybody thát I was in the family way before I told my aunt,” Mrs. Gelatt, when subsequently called as a witness for the State, testified without objection that the prosecutrix came to live with her in November, 1901, and, further: “ She made complaint to me about Christmas eve. She did not complain to me voluntarily.” Such is the testimony in full.

Now, by the expression, to make complaint,” as used in connection with cases of this character, is meant nothing. [498]*498more than to make disclosure of the pain, grief, indignation, mortification, or resentment directly occasioned by the outrage. Clearly enough, it does not include a complaint in the technical sense of an accusation intended to be made the basis of proceedings designed to punish the offender. Applied to such, the reason and spirit of the exception is wholly wanting. It is equally apparent‘that a statement • made by the testatrix long after the alleged assault, not voluntary in character, but, on the contrary, responsive merely to the demands of relatives or friends for information respecting her condition for instance, as to pregnancy — and as to the author of such condition, is not within the spirit, and therefore not within the meaning, of the expression as used. The facts disclosed by the record before us are such as to make it clear to our minds that in the restricted legal sense contemplated by the exception no complaint was made by the prosecutrix. It will be observed that nothing was said between her and her mother, save as to the matter of her failure to menstruate properly. The statement made to her aunt, four months after the occurrence of the assault, was not a voluntary one, and it must be manifest that it was made in response to a demand for explanation as to her condition respecting her failure to menstruate and pregnancy.

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Bluebook (online)
125 Iowa 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bebb-iowa-1904.