State v. Donnington

151 S.W. 975, 246 Mo. 343, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 975 (State v. Donnington) 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. Donnington, 151 S.W. 975, 246 Mo. 343, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 189 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

KENNISH, J.

The defendant was tried in the circuit court of Bates county, at the February term, 1911, under an indictment containing two counts. The first count charged him with carnally knowing Esther Cronkhite, a female child under the age of fourteen years, and the second charged him with defiling Esther Cronkhite, a female under eighteen years of age, who had been confided to his care. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty on the first count and a verdict of guilty on the second. Defendant was sentenced to [348]*348four years in the penitentiary and appealed to this court.

The evidence for the State tended to show the following facts:

At the time of the alleged offense the defendant was thirty-seven or thirty-eight years of age and weighed over two hundred pounds. He was a hardworking man, had been married three times and had a daughter eighteen years of age. His second wife died in March, 1907, and in May of that year he married her sister, who had been making her home at his house prior to the death of his second wife.

In August, 1909, defendant and his wife went to Kansas City and procured, through the mediation of the Detention Home, three children of one R. T. Cronk-hite, a laborer, whose wife was dead. The children were Esther, the prosecutrix, who was twelve ^years of age on January 2, 1909, Forest, a boy aged ten, and Alice aged two. The arrangement made with the father of the children was that defendant and his wife were to take them and care for them as their own. The children were taken to defendant’s home on a farm in Bates county and all three remained there until Christmas, 1909, when the father went to visit them and insisted on taking the youngest back home with him. A few days later he did take the baby to his home in Kansas City, and did not see Esther or Forest again until after the indictment herein was returned.

The testimony of the prosecutrix was to the following effect:

The defendant “took advantage” of her five times during February and March, 1910; once during the first week in February, three times in the latter part of that month, and once on the first day of March. On each of these occasions her brother Forest, the defendant’s wife, and Mahan, a farm-hand, employed :by defendant, were all away from defendant’s home, [349]*349leaving defendant and lier. alone in the house. The first three times defendant’s wife had gone to town and the last two times she was visiting a neighbor. When the second offense was committed, which was in the latter part of February, Mahan was in the field plowing corn. The first time defendant “took advantage” of her he called her upstairs, in the daytime, caught her by the hands, laid her on the bed and attempted to ravish her. She screamed, fought and resisted in every way she could and he did not accomplish his purpose. When, about three weeks later, he did succeed in defiling her, and also on three subsequent occasions when he forced her to yield to him, the circumstances were precisely the same as at the-time of the first assault; defendant either called or sent her upstairs to the same room, in the daytime, caught her by the hands, laid her on the bed and forcibly ravished her, while she resisted in just the same manner as at the time of the first attempt. In the first attempt there was no penetration whatever, but she bled a few drops. The second time there was penetration, from which she suffered pain, but she did not bleed. Defendant warned her if she told what he had done it would mean sudden death, and she never informed any person of what had happened or complained to any person of the treatment she had received, except her brother Forest. She told him of each offense on the road to school. In each instance that was the first opportunity she had to tell him, although three of the offenses were committed on Saturdays when there was no school and would be none until the following Monday. She remained at defendant’s home until she and Forest were taken away by the sheriff on June 13, 1910, which was the day before the grand jury returned the indictment against the defendant, and between March 1 and June 13 defendant made no attempt to violate her person. After the commission of the third offense and before the com[350]*350mission of the last one, defendant’s wife went to the town of Adrian and remained from Friday until Sunday, and during that time defendant did not molest, her.

On cross-examination she testified that after defendant defiled her he whipped her and her brother for-stealing money from the hired man and lying about it and for playing truant from school. She denied that, she stole the money, but testified that Forest confessed' it and then defendant whipped both of them for stealing and lying and for truancy. In a' deposition taken eight months before the trial, she denied that defendant whipped her. She admitted that both she and Forest wanted to get away from defendant’s home because of “the mistreatment.” In her deposition she-testified that both she and the boy wanted to leave defendant’s place because his wife beat them, and in that connection the following questions and answers appear in her deposition: “Q. Did you and your brother Forest talk about trying to get away from Mrs. Donnington? A. Yes. Q. Did you both agree that if you could tell about Mr. Donnington this would help you get away? A. Forest told. Q. Did he tell this so you could get away? A. I don’t know.” She admitted that while living in Kansas City she shot at a man, but her testimony does not disclose the circumstances of the shooting. In the course of her cross-examination, the following occurred: “Now, do you remember an old Swede named Swanson? A. Yes, sir. Q. You used to visit him occasionally? A. I visited his wife. Q. His wife — why he was a widower? A. I did his washing for him; my oldest brother always took the clothes to him.” She admitted that in a conversation with defendant’s mother soon after he was arrested she was asked why she did not tell the mother about defendant’s misconduct when the mother visited his home, and that she answered by saying: “Oh, I forgot it; I didn’t think about it.”

[351]*351In her deposition, taken two months after defendant was arrested, she stated that when the first assault took place the defendant told her to lie down upon the hed and she.refused to do so; that he threatened to whip her unless she did as he told her, and she then lay down upon the hed. At the trial her testimony was that on that occasion he placed her upon the hed hy force. In the deposition she said that when the first assault was made she did not know that there was any hlood upon her garments until she went to hed that night. At the trial she testified that the defendant noticed the hlood on her garments and made her go- downstairs and wash them immediately after the assault took place. Asked to explain this discrepancy in her testimony, she said: “I just got it wrong the other time.” In the deposition she testified that she did not know in what month defendant first assaulted her; that he “took advantage” of her five times, hut she could not tell when any one assault occurred. At the trial, eight months later, she fixed the time of each offense positively; one during the first week of February, three in the latter part of that month and the last one on the first day of March.

After prosecutrix left the witness stand she was recalled hy the State and explained that when she said Mahan was plowing corn in February, she meant he was plowing up corn stalks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 975, 246 Mo. 343, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-donnington-mo-1912.