State v. Huffman

87 S.E.2d 541, 141 W. Va. 55, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 29
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1955
Docket10706
StatusPublished
Cited by151 cases

This text of 87 S.E.2d 541 (State v. Huffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Huffman, 87 S.E.2d 541, 141 W. Va. 55, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 29 (W. Va. 1955).

Opinion

*58 Haymond, Judge:

At the January Term, 1954, of the Intermediate Court of Kanawha County the defendant, David Lee Huffman, was indicted for a felony by the grand jury attending that court. The indictment charged that the defendant, David Lee Huffman, during the month of December, 1953, in Kanawha County “in and upon one Myrtle Lee Davis, a female person not his wife, violently and feloniously did make an assault, and her, the said Myrtle Lee Davis, then and there violently and against her will and by force unlawfully and feloniously did ravish and carnally know, against the peace and dignity of the State.” The in-dorsement on the indictment was signed by the foreman of the grand jury and by the prosecuting attorney of Kanawha County, but it designated the defendant as David Lee Hudson.

When the defendant was arraigned for trial on February 10, 1954, during, the same term of court, he moved to quash the indictment because the indorsement contained the name of David Lee Hudson. The court overruled the motion and, at the instance of the prosecuting attorney, over objection and exception of the defendant, amended the indorsement by substituting the correct name of the defendant.

A demurrer of the defendant and his motion to quash the indictment were overruled and the defendant entered his plea of not guilty. By its verdict the jury found the defendant guilty of an attempt to commit the crime of rape. The court overruled the motions of the defendant to set aside the verdict and in arrest of judgment and, by order entered February 11, 1954, sentenced the defendant to be confined in the penitentiary of this State for a term of not less than one year or more than five years.

Upon writ of error to the Circuit Court of Kanawha County that court on July 27, 1954, affirmed the judgment of the intermediate court. To the judgment of the circuit court this Court granted this writ of error and supersedeas on November 15, 1954, upon the petition of the defendant.

*59 On the night of December 17, 1953, the defendant twice visited a restaurant at 1222 East Washington Street in Charleston, known as the Kawash Cafe, where the prosecuting witness had recently obtained employment and asked her to go with him after the restaurant closed that night. A few minutes after midnight she left the restaurant to go to her room at the DuPont Hotel. The defendant, who was waiting for her on the opposite side of the street from the restaurant, met her and they walked together to the Charleston High School, which is located west of the restaurant in the same city block. The school building fronts on Washington Street and extends through the block to Lee Street. They walked on Washington Street to Brooks Street, continued on Brooks Street to Lee Street, entered the grounds of the high school from Lee Street, and descended a ramp which extends below the level of the street. There they remained for several minutes and during that time the defendant engaged in the acts and the conduct which resulted in the indictment.

After leaving the Charleston High School they continued to walk east on Lee Street, from Lee Street to Quar-rier Street, and east on Quarrier Street to the corner of Quarrier Street and Elizabeth Street near the residence of the mother of the defendant. At that point the defendant called a passing taxicab which they entered and in which they rode together to the Capitol Hotel on Summers Street in a business section of Charleston. They went in the hotel, the defendant registered them as husband and wife, and they obtained a room in which they spent the remainder of the night and stayed until ten o’clock or eleven o’clock that morning when they left the hotel and went to a nearby restaurant called the Little Drake Inn on Summers Street where they had coffee.

The prosecuting witness then left the defendant at that place, went to the hotel where she had a room, got her clothes and returned to the Little Drake Inn. There she left some of her clothes. From the Little Drake Inn she went to the Kawash Cafe, quit her employment, and told *60 her employer of the acts and the conduct of the defendant. Her employer advised her to inform the police and took her to the detective bureau of the city police department where she reported the matter to a city detective. Later that day the detective and another officer went to the Little Drake Inn where they got the clothes she had left there, to the Charleston High School where they found her pen, and to the Capitol Hotel where they found her brassiere. While at the detective bureau, using the name of Dorothy Jones, she signed a complaint against the defendant on which a warrant for his arrest was issued.

After the prosecuting witness left the Little Drake Inn the second time the defendant, expecting her to return to meet him, waited for her there for sometime, then left and returned about three o’clock, learned that she had not been there,' left again and returned a second time about five o’clock. At that time he was informed that officers had been there and had taken her clothes. He then went to the home of his grandparents, where he learned that a warrant had been issued for his arrest, told them and his mother that he was leaving, obtained some money from them, and travelled by bus to Beckley where he was arrested about eleven o’clock that night. The following morning he was brought back to Charleston and apparently placed in jail. At the time of his arrest he was on probation in connection with a prior conviction of a misdemeanor.

As the record discloses that the acts and the conduct of the prosecuting witness and the defendant, from the time they first met on Washington Street until they got in the taxicab and from the time they entered the hotel room until they went to the Little Drake Inn later that morning, are actually known only to them, and as their testimony with respect to some of their acts and conduct is conflicting, it is necessary to relate the material facts testified to by each of them upon the trial of the indictment.

The prosecuting witness, who in December, 1953, was *61

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tapero Carleone Johnson v. State of Alabama
Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2025
State of West Virginia v. Henry Jo Ward
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2023
State of West Virginia v. Jeffrey Thomas Phipps
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2020
State of West Virginia v. Burton L. Anderson, Jr.
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2020
State of West Virginia v. Michael Wayne Palmer
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2019
Jeffrey R. Finley v. Donnie Ames, Superintendent
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2019
State of WV v. Julian Lee Richardson
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2019
State of West Virginia v. Michael Joseph Stines
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2018
State of West Virginia v. R.M.
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2018
State of West Virginia v. Carlos A. Tilley
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2018
State of West Virginia v. Keith A.
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2018
State of West Virginia v. Mandy Lee O'Hara
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2017
State of West Virginia v. Tulsa Johnson
797 S.E.2d 557 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2017)
State of West Virginia v. Rashaun R. Boyd and Christopher R. Wyche
796 S.E.2d 207 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2017)
State of West Virginia v. Brannon J. Hamilton
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2017

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E.2d 541, 141 W. Va. 55, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-huffman-wva-1955.