State v. Godwin

178 P.2d 584, 51 N.M. 65
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1947
DocketNo. 4961.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 178 P.2d 584 (State v. Godwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Godwin, 178 P.2d 584, 51 N.M. 65 (N.M. 1947).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The defendant appeals from a sentence of life imprisonment imposed by the district court of Valencia County following conviction before a jury of having on July 10, 1945, unlawfully and carnally known and abused Nan Bost, a female child three years and one month old in violation of 1941 Comp., § 41-3902.

On the date'mentioned, at about 7:30 p. m., Nan Bost, three years and one month old fled screaming from the rear door of the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Adams in Belen, New Mexico. She crossed a small court yard and went to the rear door of the apartment in which she lived with her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. George V. Bost of Belen. The child’s mother, attracted by her screams, went to the back door to meet and admit her. Immediately after getting inside, the child exclaimed: “That man hurt me” and when questioned by the mother informed her that it was a man over at the Adams’ apartment wearing a white hat. Her condition was described by the mother as follows: “She was torn up physically, her hair was mussed, her clothes were off partially, both her legs were through one leg of her sun suit, she was holding the bib of her play suit.”

The child was found to be bleeding at the vagina and there was blood on her lower stomach and legs. A medical examination conducted by two physicians within an hour following the injuries suffered disclosed that the child’s labia was bruised and bleeding and that the hymen was ruptured.

As soon as Mrs. Bost had examined her daughter she crossed the small court yard and went to the rear door of the Adams’ apartment. Receiving no response to a knock, nor to a call, and the rear door being open, she stepped from the outside through the screen door into the kitchen and called again but still got no response. The apartment seemed to be vacant. She then called a woman living nearby to come to her apartment. Together they took the child to the office of the physicians.

Less than an hour and a half prior to the time the child, Nan, ran screaming from the Adams’ apartment in the condition described, the defendant had been left there in an apparent drunken stupor in a chair in the living room by Robert B. Adams, tenant of the apartment and Ray Borland. The defendant, Adams and Borland were all fellow employees of the Santa Fe Railroad Company which maintains a division point at Belen. The three had come to the apartment following a meeting on the street after visiting two bars and drinking for a time in each. The defendant already was in a drunken condition when Adams first met him on the street about midafternoon of that day. While in the latter of the two bars visited some woman came in and seated herself by defendant and remained between 40 and 45 minutes during which time he and she sat with their arms around each other, “loving each other, loving”, as a witness described their actions. When she left the defendant inquired her address and on being told left his companions and was gone about 30 minutes.

It was while proceeding from the last bar visited by the trio to the Adams’ apartment and just before arriving there that the group met George Bost, accompanied by his little daughter, Nan, en route to a grocery store to make a purchase. This was about 6:30 in the afternoon. Following the usual greetings, the defendant inquired of Bost if • the child was his daughter and upon being told that she was responded that he didn’t know Bost had a daughter.

It was Adams’ intention, upon leaving the first bar visited with defendant to take him to the Kuhn hotel where defendant lived but he refused to give them his room number. Accordingly, after the trio visited the second bar they took him to the Adams’ apartment. Adams had just quit work when he met defendant, so he conceived the idea of going home to wash up when all three would go up town to eat at some restaurant. However, when they attempted to arouse defendant from a drunken stupor into which he had fallen while seated in the chair in the living room of the apartment, he gave no reaction, even to an application of face towels dipped in ice water. The other two then proceeded up town without him.

They first went to a drug store to get some sandwiches. While still there, George Bost, the father of Nan came to the store looking for defendant. Adams left the store with Bost and one Sid Smith who had been encountered in the meantime and went directly to the Kuhn hotel where they found defendant. They took him with them to the doctors’ office. When first contacted at the hotel, the defendant said: “Hello Bob, hello Sid, what is going on”, or something to that effect. Adams replied that he, the defendant, was in trouble. The defendant made no response to this statement.

When they reached the doctors’ office, they parked their car directly in front of it. They met the child’s mother and others, who had accompanied her there coming out of the doctors’ office, Frank Mauldin, a neighbor, carrying Nan in his arms. Bost, Nan’s father, Godwin, the defendant, and Adams walked toward the party and when only a short distance away the father, without doing anything to indicate the defendant, said to his daughter: “Is this the man ?” Nan, pointing directly to defendant, said: “Yes, Daddy, that is the man.” The accused made no response but “dropped his head and changed color”, as one witness described it. Whereupon, the father of the child struck defendant on the head and in the face with his fist, knocking him down and kicking him two or three times while on the ground. It was about 8:00 p. m. when this happened.

Just as one of the examining physicians, Dr. Parkinson, was about to leave in his car, following his examination of the child, he was called by Mauldin and asked to return to his office to examine the defendant. The latter had been knocked out momentarily but was picked up, taken inside and placed on a table in the doctor’s office. Regaining consciousness, he wanted to know what had happened and was told by the doctor to lie down; and that some one else would have to tell him about it. He lapsed into unconsciousness again after the doctor had forced him back on the table for an examination — either unconsciousness or a stupor from the inebriated condition into which he had gotten himself earlier in the afternoon, it was difficult to say which, both the blows given him by Bost and the liquor probably contributing to his condition.

The doctor understood he was asked to examine defendant for the purpose of determining whether he had venereal disease. Hence, he made no special examination for the discovery of blood on his male organ' or underwear. Actually, he observed none. There was fresh bleeding on his forehead and around the mouth from the blows struck by Bost, father of the child. The defendant’s trousers were found to be unbuttoned all the way down in front, save for the top button holding them together. The male organ disclosed a slight redness on portions thereof that would have been irritated by sexual intercourse. This condition, however, could have been due to other causes and was in no way conclusive that defendant had engaged in recent sexual intercourse.

Following the visit to the doctors’ office with her daughter, Mrs. Bost returned home and in the company of her husband and another visited the Adams’ apartment looking for Nan’s panties.

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Bluebook (online)
178 P.2d 584, 51 N.M. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-godwin-nm-1947.