State v. Harris

154 P. 198, 51 Mont. 496, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 135
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1915
DocketNo. 3,716
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 154 P. 198 (State v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Harris, 154 P. 198, 51 Mont. 496, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 135 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLY

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant, charged by information with statutory rape •by having unlawful sexual intercourse with Vivian Brooke, a female under the age of eighteen years, was convicted and sentenced to a term of service in the state prison. He has appealed from the judgment and an order denying his motion for a new trial.

[498]*498The charge in the information is that the crime was committed on December 1, 1914. The evidence of the prosecuting witness disclosed that the first act of sexual intercourse between the defendant and herself occurred on or about August 1, 1914, in the outskirts of the city of Billings. After the witness had testified to a similar act which she said had occurred about two weeks later, counsel for defendant objected to evidence tending to establish any act other than the first, and suggested that the county attorney be required to elect upon which act he would ask for a conviction. The objection was overruled and the suggestion disregarded. The witness then, without further objection, testified to several acts after that time, covering the period until January 1, 1915, the exact date at which any one of them occurred and attendant circumstances not being stated, except as to one which she stated had occurred in the defendant’s barber-shop in Billings on the evening of December 25. At the close of the state’s case the court, on formal motion of counsel, required the county attorney to elect upon which of the several acts he would rely. • He elected to stand on the one which occurred on the evening of December 25. The charge to the jury contained these paragraphs:

“No. 10. You are instructed in this case it is not necessary for the state to prove the date of the alleged offense precisely as charged in the information herein. Therefore, if you find and believe from the evidence in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, D. H. Harris, at the county of Yellowstone and state of Montana, accomplished an act of sexual intercourse with the prosecuting witness, Yivian Brooke, as alleged in the information, and that at the time of such intercourse the said Yivian Brooke was under the age of eighteen years, and not the wife of the defendant, and you further find that such intercourse was had at any time within five years prior to the filing of the information in this case, then you should find a verdict of guilty.
“No. 17. The court instructs the jury, that the state in this case has selected the particular act of sexual intercourse [499]*499alleged to have taken place at the defendant’s harber-shop on Christmas night of 1914, as the act upon which they are to depend for conviction, and you are instructed that in this case, unless it is proven to you beyond all reasonable doubt that the defendant had said act of sexual intercourse with Vivian Brooke, then you are to find the defendant not guilty. ’ ’
“No. 18. The court instructs the jury, that the state having selected the act of sexual intercourse alleged to have taken place at defendant’s barber-shop on Christmas night of 1914, as the alleged act of intercourse on which they intend to rely for conviction, any testimony as to any other acts of intercourse by the defendant with the complaining witness Vivian Brooke at any other time is to be disregarded except in so far as it is corroborative of the act alleged to have been committed at the barber-shop on Christmas night, and that unless the state proves to you beyond all reasonable doubt that the defendant had said particular act of sexual intercourse with Vivian Brooke, then you are to find the defendant not guilty.”

It is argued that the court committed prejudicial error in failing to require the county attorney to announce his election [1] when the suggestion was first made. Some of the courts hold to the rule contended for by counsel. (People v. Castro, 133 Cal. 11, 65 Pac. 13; People v. Williams, 133 Cal. 165, 65 Pac. 323; People v. Flaherty, 162 N. Y. 532, 57 N. E. 73; State v. Hilberg, 22 Utah, 27, 61 Pac. 215; Newsom v. Commonwealth, 145 Ky. 627, 140 S. W. 1042; People v. Jenness, 5 Mich. 305; Elam v. State, 26 Ala. 48.) The rule deducible from these cases is that, while the specific act alleged in the information need not be proved as charged and conviction may be had upon proof of any of the acts of the same kind, provided it occurred within the period of limitation prior to the filing of the information, when the evidence discloses two or more offenses, the defendant is entitled to know against which he is required to defend, and if the court does not require an election to be made at the opening of the trial, the law makes the election of the first act disclosed. The reasoning of these cases is exemplified [500]*500by this quotation from People v. Jenness, supra: “The prosecutor having the right to select among all the acts of the kind which he could prove to have been committed between the parties, within the period alluded to, and within the jurisdiction, any one of those acts, before evidence had been introduced, was as properly the act charged in the information as any other. In other words, until evidence of some such act had been given, the charge in the information was floating and contingent, aimed as much at one as another, and at no one act in particular; and it remained for the evidence to point the charge to the particular act intended. But when evidence had been introduced tending directly to the proof of one act, and for the purpose of procuring a conviction upon it, from that moment that particular act became the act charged. What had, till then, been floating and contingent, had now become certain and fixed. The prosecutor had made his election, and could not elect again; nor could he be allowed to prove any other act of the kind as a substantive offense upon which a conviction might be had in the cause. The information could be used as a drag-net only till the first act had been entangled in its meshes. Every other act must be allowed to escape this throw of the net, and thenceforth the evidence must be aimed at this act. If others of the same kind lie in the same range, they can only be noticed for a secondary purpose, as they may be connected with or bear upon this.” This reasoning seems to us to give importance to form rather than substance.

Other courts have announced the view that an election made at the close of the state’s case serves all useful purposes, and we think this view is founded upon the better reasoning. (State v. Acheson, 91 Me. 240, 39 Atl. 570; State v. Parish, 104 N. C. 679, 10 S. E. 457.)

It is settled law in this jurisdiction that in this class of cases [2] proof of similar acts by the defendant and the prosecuting witness is always admissible to corroborate the testimony of the latter. (State v. Peres, 27 Mont. 358, 71 Pac. 162; State v. Vinn, 50 Mont. 27, 144 Pac. 773.) The rule is recognized by [501]*501all the eases cited.

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Bluebook (online)
154 P. 198, 51 Mont. 496, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harris-mont-1915.