State v. Hibler

51 S.W. 85, 149 Mo. 478, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 9, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 S.W. 85 (State v. Hibler) 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. Hibler, 51 S.W. 85, 149 Mo. 478, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 48 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

BITRGESS, J.

At the July term, 1898, of the circuit court of Chariton county, defendant was convicted of rape alleged to have been committed on one Imogene Sublett at said county on the twelfth day of June, 1898, and his punishment fixed at five years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary.

He appeals.

The defendant and Imogene Sublett were about the same age — twenty years — lived about three quarters of a mile apart, and had attended the same school. The families of which they are members were upon intimate terms, and the younger members, especially, exchanged visits. Defendant had never called upon Imogene but-once, however, before the evening of June 12, 1898. In pursuance of an arrangement of two weeks standing, she in company with the defendant left her home in a two horse buggy on the evening of that day, to go to Zion Church, about three and one-half miles distant to attend “Children’s Exercises.” They were late getting there, and when they did arrive the exercises had begun and the church was crowded, so be'ing unable to get seats they started back home. She testified that when they left the church, two other buggies turned around and left also, traveling the same road, one going east in front of them for a mile until they came to a cross road, when they turned north, while the buggy in front continued eastward; that as soon as they turned north, defendant put his arm in back of her, and when she requested him to remove it he refused but talked about the lascivious conduct of other girls. [482]*482She requested him several times to “shut his mouth” but he, persisted in his unseemly talk and conduct, and when she told him if he did not desist that she would jump out of the buggy he told her if she did he would get out also. When they were within three-quarters of a pule of her house he stopped his team and assaulted her, whereupon she started to get out of the buggy, but he threw his arms around her and pulled her back. Some one was then heard to be approaching in the rear, which startled defendant and caused him to drive on up to and past the Sublett residence about three-fourths of a mile across Salt creek and South Branch bridge where he stopped again. She screamed and tried td'get away from him. Hearing another buggy coming, he started the team and drove into a field about three-fourths of a mile away, where he stopped his team for a third time and continued his assault upon her. She screamed, fought and resisted as best she could, but he succeeded in accomplishing his purpose. While on the way home she told him he had just as well kill her and throw her in the ditch. He told her if she would not say anything about it he would marry her. She replied: “No, I won’t do it, narry a time.”

She was not out of the buggy from the time they started to the church until they returned to the Sublett home about eleven o’clock that night and was on the seat all the time.

When she reached home all the members of the family had retired except her sister Dollie. She was excited and had been crying. Her sister tried to get her to tell what was the matter with her, but she told her that she would not do so that night but would do so in the morning. She slept none that night but cried continuously. Her hat and clothing were badly soiled, her underclothing tom and bloody, her private parts lacerated, and her person sore so that she could not do anything for about a week.

The next morning early after the assault she told her mother and sister how she had been treated by defendant the [483]*483night before. She did not at that time tell her father, for fear that he would hill defendant and get into trouble over it, nor did he learn of it for about a week, and a few days thereafter a warrant was issued for defendant and his arrest followed on June 21, 1898.

Defendant in response to a note written to him by Imogene at the command of her mother called at Sublett’s on Thursday evening after the offense is alleged to have been committed, and when charged by Mrs. Sublett in the presence of Imogene with the crime did not ' deny it, but begged her to say nothing about it, and said they would marry that fall.

Defendant testified as a witness in his own behalf, and stated that as they were on their way home some one in a buggy followed close behind them. That when they reached the Sublett home they thought best to drive on as they did not want to be recognized by the person in the buggy behind them. After driving on some distance across a small stream known as Salt creek to a point beyond where the road crossed another into which the party in the rear turned, they started back home. On reaching the Sublett home, the prosecutrix got out of the buggy and went into the house; while defendant went on to his home. "While at the Sublett residence Charles Sublett, a brother to the prosecutrix, came out, got in the buggy with defendant and rode with him to the next cross road. He did not deny that he had carnal intercourse with Imogene Sublett, but denied that he raped her. Thomas Yaughn, a witness for defendant, testified that he attended the exercises at Zion Church the night of June 12, 1898, and that on his way home he caught up with a buggy as they were near the Sublett place, and that there was also a buggy following close behind him, but did not state who the occupants of either of the buggies were.

The road was a public road and traveled a great deal, and on or near that part of it over which defendant traveled that night after leaving the church and before returning to the [484]*484Sublett home there were several residences which were occupied, but none of the occupants or any other person seems to have heard the cries of the prosecutrix.

1. In his argument to the jury one of the counsel for the State made use of language which defendant insists was outside of the record, a personal attack upon and prejudicial to him, and for which the judgment should be reversed. It is true, that the language complained of was somewhat harsh, but not so much so we think as that which was used in State v. Summar, 143 Mo. 220, and which was held not to justify a reversal of the judgment in that case. While counsel in their arguments before juries should confine them to the facts disclosed by the evidence, and never indulge in personal abuse of the defendant on trial in a criminal case, it is not every divergence from this course that will justify the reversal of the judgment. But in order to justify such a result it should appear to the court that the remarks complained of were prejudicial to defendant, and probably had something to do in bringing about the conclusion reached by the jury, and such we think was not this case.

2. It is next insisted that the evidence was insufficient to authorize the verdict. To this contention we can not agree. If the prosecuting witness, Imogene Sublett, testified truthfully there is no escape from the conclusion that defendant forcibly ravished her. It is true that he testified that he did not rape her, that she did not halloo, but he did not deny having connection with her, nor did he deny having committed the offense when charged with it by the mother of the girl in her presence. Of the weight of the evidence the jury were the sole judges and they having found defendant guilty, and their verdict having been approved by the trial court, this court will not interfere. This rule has been so often announced by this court that it' is not thought necessary to cite authorities upon the question.

3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 S.W. 85, 149 Mo. 478, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hibler-mo-1899.