State v. Duffey

31 S.W. 98, 128 Mo. 549, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 98 (State v. Duffey) 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. Duffey, 31 S.W. 98, 128 Mo. 549, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 51 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J. —

The defendant, Ed. Duffey, was indicted, tried and convicted at the September term, 1894, of the Gentry circuit court, of rape of Daisy "Wilson, a female child under the age of fourteen years, to wit, thirteen years on the nineteenth of May, 1894. He was sentenced to the penitentiary for five years, and from that judgment has appealed to this court.

The facts disclose a very low grade of morals among all the actors connected with the crime charged. The testimony for the state tends to show that on the night of May 18, 1894, the prosecutrix, in company with Elijah Summers, started in a buggy from Stanberry, in Gentry county, to drive to a dance at one George Allen’s, some several miles in the country; that they drove out to Allen’s, but did not get out of their buggy, turned and started to return to Stanberry. They had not gone far, however, when they were overtaken by defendant and one John Lemley, who were riding horseback; that defendant caught the reins of the team driven by Summers, stopped it and compelled the girl to leave the buggy and accompany him across the road into the brush, where, the prosecutrix says, defendant forcibly ravished her; that she attempted to resist and to make outcry, but was intimidated and put, and kept, in fear by the threats and exhibition of the pistol held first by defendant and then by his accomplice, [553]*553Lemley; that upon the consummation of the crime by defendant, Lemley also raped prosecutrix under the same circumstances; that while these deeds were being accomplished, they in turn held the team and kept Summers under cover of a revolver.

It was shown that the prosecutrix was under fourteen years of age. The prosecutrix and her mother both testify positively to this fact, though there was evidence for defendant that she was over fourteen.

Defendant admits his presence at the time and place the crime was committed. He says he secured the consent of Summers to take “his girl” for a walk while he (Summers) remained in the buggy and held the team; that he took prosecutrix out in the brush; that they sat down and talked; that he suggested that they return to the buggy; that she said: “Ain’t you going to do anything after you brought me out here?” that he said, “No,” and laughed at her; that she cursed him, and asked him for a bottle of whiskey or twenty five cents, and that he gave her twenty five cents; that she asked him who the other fellow was (referring to Lemley), and he told her, and she said, tell him to come over here, and he did; that when she and Lemley returned he asked her if they had had intercourse, and she said no, Lemley didn’t have any money.

It is also shown that defendant wrote a letter while in jail in which aid to escape was asked. His admissions are also shown.

An attempt was made to impeach the reputation of prosecutrix and her mother, but the reputation of the witnesses called for that purpose was in turn also impeached, and the jury evidently discarded it. For instance, one witness, at the time of testifying to the bad reputation of the parties, was himself under indictment for burglary and larceny; another witness, Lewis [554]*554Deering, is shown to have pleaded guilty to petit larceny; and the defendant had pleaded guilty to burglary in the second degree, and had been sentenced to the penitentiary; he had also pleaded guilty to larceny from a dwelling house.

Various errors are assigned, and will be discussed in the order of appellant’s brief.

I. The first ground upon which a reversal is demanded is that the verdict is against the evidence. Appellant concedes that the general rule is that, before this court will relieve on this ground, there must be a total failure of evidence to sustain the charge, or it must be so weak that the necessary inference must be that the verdict is the result of passion, prejudice, partiality or evident mistake. State v. Glahn, 97 Mo. 679; State v. Cougot, 121 Mo. 458. But his contention is that this case falls within the exceptions, and the evidence upon the two essential facts, that the female was under the age of fourteen years, and the act of coition or copulation was not sufficient to support the verdict or establish either of these material facts.

The evidence as to the age of Daisy Wilson was as follows: She testified herself that she was fourteen years old on the second day of July after this alleged offense on the nineteenth of May, 1894. Her mother, Maria Wilson, testified that Daisy was born July 2, 1880, at Mt. Ayr, Iowa. She did not keep, or have, a family record. She had six children; Daisy was the oldest, and the only child when she moved to Stan-berry. William H. Sullivan testified that he knew the parents of Daisy Wilson. He remembered seeing Mrs. Wilson first in the fall of 1880. She then had a baby in her arms. The child was about two or three months old. He always understood Daisy was the child they had with them when they moved back from Iowa. G-eorge Shoemaker testified he lived on the same street with [555]*555the Wilsons in February, 1881. Mrs. Wilson then had one small child. It might have been anywhere from one to three years old. Paid no attention to it. Mr. Samuel Jordan made the enumeration of school children for 1894 in May. He asked Mrs. Wilson Daisy’s age, and she gave it as fourteen. Don’t remember that he asked her birthday, or when she was, or would be, fourteen. Mrs. Cranor, for the defense, testified that she had a daughter that would be sixteen in January, 1895, and Daisy was born in July after this daughter was born. John Cogdill testified in a general way that he had known Daisy about twelve years. Judged from her looks that she was about three when he first saw her near Mr. Shattuck’s. Mrs. Bartlett, the mother of defendant Duffey, testified that she had lived in Stan-berry fourteen years the twenty-seventh of August, 1894. Had known Daisy ever since the week after she arrived. She saw her toddling around on the sidewalk the week after she arrived in Stanberry.

Here we have the direct positive evidence of the mother, daughter and Mr. Sullivan that she was under fourteen contradicted by the indirect and unsatisfactory evidence of those who could readily be mistaken about the dates in which they were not particularly interested. We have no hesitation in saying that the jury were amply justified in finding she was not fourteen years old when the crime is alleged to have been committed.

Now as to the evidence of copulation. The undisputed evidence shows that Daisy Wilson lived with her mother, Maria Wilson, in Stanberry, Gentry county, Missouri. On the evening of May 18,1894, she accompanied Elijah Summers in a buggy to a dance at the house of Mr. Allen, seven miles from Stanberry. On their return they had only gone a short distance when they were overtaken by defendant and John Lemley [556]*556who were traveling on horseback. When Duffey and Lemley caught up with Summers, Summers’ team was stopped. He and Daisy say by Duffey. He rode up on the left side and caught Summers’ horse by the reins, and stopped the team. The defendant simply proceeds with his narrative after the team was stopped. Does not inform us how they came to halt at that point. Summers and Daisy both say Duffey said he was going to have that girl and Summers demurred. Thereupon Duffey got into ■ the buggy and displayed a revolver and forced Daisy to get out by pulling her and threatening; that he forced her under a wire fence on the side of the field and took her a short distance into the brush and raped her.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 98, 128 Mo. 549, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-duffey-mo-1895.