State v. Gentry

8 S.W.2d 20, 320 Mo. 389, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 783
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 20 (State v. Gentry) 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. Gentry, 8 S.W.2d 20, 320 Mo. 389, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 783 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

By an information filed in the Circuit Court of Jasper County, Overton H. Gentry, Jr. (appellant), and one Wilkins Taylor were jointly charged with the crime of rape. A severance was granted, and, upon a separate trial, Gentry was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for ninety-nine years, in accordance with the verdict of the jury. The case is here for review on his appeal.

Bertha Goen, the prosecutrix, testified, in substance, that, at the time in question, she was eighteen years of age, weighed between 98 and 100 pounds, and was employed as a domestic servant in the home of Mrs. Walter Jackson in the city of Joplin. About 5:30 on Wednesday afternoon, January 5, 1927, she went to Jamison's Drug Store to get some stamps and face powder. On her way back to the Jackson home. Thelma Gishner came up behind her and asked her to take a ride with her (Thelma Gishner) and two friends. She had met Thelma on the street before, and had gone to a show with her once or twice. After some hesitation, she consented, and Thelma took her back along the street a short distance, and introduced her to Gentry and Taylor, who were sitting in the front seat of a Buick Sedan, parked in front of the West Side Pharmacy. She had no previous acquaintance with Gentry or Taylor and had never seen either of them before. After they talked a few minutes, Thelma left, saying she would go to her friend's room and change her dress and come back for the ride. Gentry and Taylor asked her to get in the car, and, when she declined, Gentry got out, took her by the arm and shoved her toward the car, and she sat down on the front seat. Gentry then got in the front seat and closed the door of the car. She made no effort to get away and did not call for help. Presently, Taylor, who was driving, started the car, and said they would take a ride and come back for Thelma. At her request, they said they would drive by the Jackson home, and she could tell Mrs. Jackson that she would not be home for awhile. When Taylor failed to make the proper turn to go in the direction of the Jackson home and she told them she was going to get out. Gentry put his arm around her, pulled her down in the car, and held his hand over her mouth. She tried to get out, but made no outcry. She did not scream before Gentry put his hand over her mouth, because she "wasn't afraid of him." In this connection she said: "Well, I resisted as much as I could, but I couldn't do much; I was in such a position in the car that I couldn't do very much, but I resisted to the best of my ability." After they drove quite a distance north of Joplin, Taylor stopped the car and held her, with one arm around her and his hand over her mouth, while Gentry unlocked a gate. They drove through the gate, and off of the public road, to a house that looked like a shed. Gentry unlocked the house, went in, and lighted a lamp. She refused *Page 395 to go in the house, and, when Taylor tried to take her out of the car, she resisted and screamed two or three times. Taylor took her into the house by taking hold of her arm and shoulder. She resisted, but was unable to escape. She tried to strike him, but "kicked more than anything else." They took her through the living room of the house and into a little room, where they put her on a bed. They took her clothes off and put them in the living room. First, Gentry, and then Taylor, attacked her, and had sexual intercourse with her, by force and violence and against her will. This continued, at intervals, from 6:30 or seven o'clock in the evening (after dark) until two or three o'clock in the morning. She resisted as much as she possibly could, but was unable to prevent it. She said Gentry had intercourse with her from twelve to fifteen times, and Taylor, from four to seven times. She said she meant they put their privates into hers that many times, and that she didn't know "how far that act went." After they had intercourse with her several times, Gentry held her while Taylor forced his privates into her mouth, and, when she resisted, Taylor burned her with a lighted cigarette and hit her with something and bruised her shoulder. She exhibited a sear from a burn on her chest while so testifying. Gentry, also, forced his privates into her mouth, and when she resisted him, he struck her on the head with some kind of a stick. She did not know all that was going on during a part of the time, but remembered that there was water on the bed and that the bed covering was damp. They laid her across the bed, and Taylor held her while Gentry put his mouth on her privates. They left her alone in the little bedroom from two or three o'clock in the morning until two or three o'clock the following afternoon, when they brought her clothes to her and told her they would take her back to town. In the meantime, she tried to get out of the bedroom, but was unable to do so. She did not know whether they remained in the living room all of the time, but she heard music in that room that sounded like a radio. She had nothing to eat while in the house and did not smoke any cigarettes. She tried to get away when Taylor first started to carry her to the car, then concluded she "might as well ride." She rode back to town between Taylor and Gentry and they let her out in front of Robertson's Apartments. She did not talk to them about their treatment of her until she got out of the car. Then, she told them she "was going to have something done about it," and they said "it wouldn't do any good because they had plenty of money." She went to the Tatum home, where her sister (Mrs. Ruth Williams) worked, and reported to her sister what had occurred. "I didn't think anyone would believe my story but my sister." Later that afternoon, she went to the Jackson home. Mrs. Jackson was not at home and did not return until late that night. She told Polly *Page 396 Waite (colored servant at Jackson's) of her experience, and also told Mrs. Jackson that night and the next morning "about the whole thing," but not until Mrs. Jackson asked her all about it. She remained at Jackson's about ten days, and, a few days later, she had a nervous collapse and was sent to a hospital, where she remained for ten days, under observation for appendicitis. After leaving the hospital, she lived in the home of the sheriff of the county (Guy Humes) until shortly before the trial. She had on a hat, coat, princess slip, "teddys," hose and shoes, when she went to the cabin. When her dress was exhibited at the trial, she referred to a rip in one of the scams and other torn places, which she said were caused by Gentry and Taylor in taking her dress off over her head. She did not know what caused two "burned places" in her dress, and said she had never noticed them before. She had never seen nor heard of Thelma Gishner since that night on the street. She talked to Mrs. John Wise about her age: she didn't think she told Mrs. Wise she was twenty years old, but said: "I am not certain. I wouldn't say I didn't tell her that." She admitted that, in September, 1925, she forged two checks on a bank in Pierce City, her former home; one for $165 in her cousin's name, and the other for $10 in her sister's name: and that she spent the greater part of the money for clothes and a watch and a ring. She said she was not arrested, because her father and brother endorsed her note at the bank and settled the matter, and that she had paid the bank "quite a good deal" on the note out of her wages. She also admitted that, while in St. Louis looking for work on one occasion, she got sick and fainted on the street, and was taken to a hospital, and that, after her folks "telegraphed a ticket" to her, she returned to her home, and was accompanied as far as Monett by Mrs. G. Allender, matron of the Travelers Association in the St. Louis Union Station. She said Mrs. Allender had business in Monett.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 20, 320 Mo. 389, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gentry-mo-1928.