State v. Hughes

76 N.W. 520, 106 Iowa 125
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 5, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 76 N.W. 520 (State v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hughes, 76 N.W. 520, 106 Iowa 125 (iowa 1898).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

That some man had sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix about March 30, 1896, is put beyond dispute by the birth of a fully-developed child, December 18th of the same year. As to whether the defendant is that man, the evidence is in conflict, she affirming and he denying. Her previous chastity is not questioned, nor is the'fact that she was then unmarried. But the defendant insists the evidence utterly fails to show that intercourse, if had, was procured through artifice, flattery, or deception. That he paid his attentions to the prosecutrix, by taking her to church several times, to a literary society, a theater, and a dancing party, during February and March, 1896, is admitted; and she testified that he hugged-- and kissed her [127]*127repeatedly, told her she was pretty and sweet, and on the night in question addressed her as his “pretty sweetness.” On the way home from the dancing party, according to her testimony, after some caressing, he took liberties with her person, and told her what he wanted, and that he was going to have it. She responded that he was not. He then said he would not harm her, and would be careful, and remarked: “You don’t need to be afraid of me knocking you up. If I was ornery enough to do the like, and get a woman in a fix, I would marry her. I know my sweet little girl won’t refuse me.” He also promised her that he would not get her in a family way. He then helped her from the buggy to the robe laid on the ground by the roadside, . and the act complained of occurred. All of this he denies. The evidence tends to show that the prosecutrix submitted to the embraces of the defendant, if at all, by reason of his promises that he would not get her in a family way, and that, if he did, he would marry her. While the statement, if made, was not direct, it was meant to be so understood by her, and she so accepted it. His assurances that no harm would be done evidently related to physical injury, and were not representations as to the character of the act. But it cannot be said that she relied upon these promises entirely freed from the flattery and arts he had been previously and was then practicing. Indeed, it was held in Wilson v. Stale, 73 Ala. 527, that the prosecutrix will not be permitted to testify that she yielded in consequence of a promise of marriage or of any act or declaration of the defendant, because that is a matter of inference to b'e drawn by the jury from the facts and circumstances proven or presumed. While such is not the rule in this state, it is yet true that the jury may and should consider all the influences exerted by the defendant in overcoming the objections of the prosecutrix. Here she says the promises caused her to yield, but she does not state that these were the only influences operating on her will. What ■she doubtless meant was that but for these promises she would [128]*128not have submitted. As said in State v. Higdon, 32 Iowa, 262: “The exact amount or what kind of seductive arts is necessary to establish the offense charged cannot be defined. Every case must depend upon its own peculiar circumstances, together with the condition in life, advantages, age, and intelligence of the parties. All these circumstances, it must be-presumed, were observed and duly considered by the jury and court below. Erom her demeanor they could tell whether her story went beyond or fell short of the real facts.” It was held in State v. Knutson, 91 Iowa, 549, that to induce intercourse by a promise to marry the prosecutrix if anything; went wrong might constitute seduction, the court- remarking: “It is said that the promise of defendant, which caused her to yield to him the last time, was conditional, and wholly insufficient to induce a chaste woman to submit to sexual intercourse. It appears that several promises were made, and their effect upon the prosecutrix was for the jury to-determine.” In State v. Hemm, 82 Iowa, 609, an instruction to.the effect that procuring intercourse “by representing that there was nothing wrong in the act, and that no one would find it out,” constituted seduction, is approved, and it is there, said: “By the act of intercourse in this case, the prosecutrix became a mother, and his representations were false. If she yielded because of his representations, it was a case of deception or fraud, for he was the means of her public exposure. His representations were no less than a promise that it would not be known, which he rendered false. See State v. Prizer, 49 Iowa, 534. But it is said that a woman with chaste character would not yield because of such representations. That was a question for the jury. The law does not determine that she would not.” The reasoning of these cases leads to the-inevitable conclusion that to induce an unmarried woman of previous chastity to yield her virtue by a promise of marriage-in event she becomes pregnant may be seduction. Whether a woman of chaste character would so yield, and whether, if she so does, it is voluntary, and to gratify her desires, rather [129]*129than because of such conditional promise, may well be considered in connection with all the facts and circumstances shown upon the trial. But it cannot be said as a matter of law that an unsophisticated country girl of seventeen years, when addressed by a young man of five or six years her senior, with possibly a greater knowledge of the world, as in this case, and under the circumstances disclosed, would necessarily be of previous unchastity in yielding on the strength of such a promise, or that she submitted as a result of passion, rather than the false promises of the defendant. The question is not determined in State v. Reilly, 104 Iowa, 13. Where a promise of marriage must be the inducing cause, as in New York and Oregon, intercourse procured by conditional agreement to marry in event of conception is adjudged not to be within the statute. People v. Van Alstyne, 144 N. Y. 361 (39 N. E. Rep. 343); State v. Adams, 25 Or. 172 (35 Pac. Rep. 36). As applied to,our statute, the reasoning of these authorities is not controlling, but important in passing on the facts of each particular case.

2 II. Proof of acquaintance and of opportunity is not alone sufficient corroboration of the prosecuting witness. State v. Painter, 50 Iowa, 317; State v. Smith, 54 Iowa, 743; State v. Araah, 55 Iowa, 258. The evidence in this case, however, tends to show that the defendant was waiting on the prosecutrix as a suitor. If this were not true, how, then, shall the fact that he was with her, attending church or entertainments, taking long drives, seven or eight times in as many weeks, be explained ? There are some circumstances indicating the deliberate purpose on his part of accomplishing her ruin. He was engaged at the time, and was married to another within two weeks after the alleged seduction. Besides, one witness testified that the defendant told him prior to the offense that he was going to go with the prosecutrix, and was going “to show her a hot time.” To another witness, on the Sunday after that event, he stated that he was going to the home of prosecutrix for sexual inter [130]*130course. If the jurors believed he was waiting on Gyrene only ostensibly as a suitor, and relied on the testimony of the other witnesses referred to, then they might well find that evidence other than that of the injured party tended to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense.

3 III. It is said that the evidence of defendant’s statement that he was going to the house of prosecutrix for sexual intercourse was not admissible.

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

Related

State v. Marker
20 N.W.2d 886 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1945)
State v. Weaver
198 Iowa 1048 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)
State v. Rolling
190 Iowa 1139 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1921)
Fletcher v. Ketcham
141 N.W. 916 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1913)
State v. Norman
140 N.W. 815 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1913)
State v. Holter
138 N.W. 953 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1912)
State v. Price
138 N.W. 520 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1912)
Weidenhoft v. Primm
94 P. 453 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1908)
State v. Bennett
137 Iowa 427 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1908)
State v. Donovan
102 N.W. 791 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1905)
State v. Brown
102 N.W. 799 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1905)
State v. O'Hare
68 L.R.A. 107 (Washington Supreme Court, 1904)
Burdick v. Raymond
77 N.W. 833 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1899)
State v. Olson
77 N.W. 332 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 N.W. 520, 106 Iowa 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hughes-iowa-1898.