State v. Lohm

125 S.E. 758, 97 W. Va. 652, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 241
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 758 (State v. Lohm) 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. Lohm, 125 S.E. 758, 97 W. Va. 652, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 241 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

*654 Hatches, Judge:

Defendant Lolim seeks to reverse the judgment of the Criminal Court of Harrison County, by which he was convicted of the crime of rape upon a girl under the age of sixteen years, and sentenced to serve fifteen years in the penitentiary. The judgment was the result of'a second trial of the accused, the jury in the first prosecution having failed to arrive at a verdict. Though counsel set out twenty-two assignment^ of error, based on practically every phase of the case, from the indictment to the refusal of the circuit court to award a writ of error to the Criminal Court’s judgment, they confine themselves in argument to substantially eight points. Although our determination of the case is not founded upon the evidence, a brief summary of the proof is essential to an understanding of certain of the points relied upon.

Defendant is a lawyer, and at the time of the alleged crime was well established in practice in Clarksburg. By reason of his professional, social and political activities his trials upon so grave a charge were attended with unusual public interest and notoriety. The case, as made out by the state, is that defendant met the prosecuting witness for the first time on December 31, 1920, and from that time developed an illicit acquaintanceship with her, which relation culminated in an act of intercourse alleged to have occurred February 2, 1923. It was upon this particular act that the state elected to stand for a conviction; The girl was less than sixteen years old at the time. Evidence of other acts of intercourse, notably one occurring January 29, 1923, was introduced, but after the state’s election the offer of such evidence was justified by the prosecution merely as persuasive proof of the offense of February 2, 1923.

The defense was an absolute denial of any and all of the incriminating evidence offered by the state. It was charged that the first meeting of defendant and the witness occurred in defendant’s office, and that their acts of intercourse took place at Terra Alta, where she lived for a time, and later in defendant’s law office. Defendant says the girl was never in his home, that he never visited her at Terra Alta or any other place and that she never was in his office, except that she might have been there with her mother in July or August, *655 1920, when he and the mother had an interview on a matter of business. In short, he denied having had intercourse with the witness on February 2, 1923, or at any other time. Defendant and other witnesses in his behalf undertook to prove his whereabouts and activities on the evenings of January 29th and February 2nd, but of all this the jury must be held to have had the right to judge, and their verdict must control, unless we find that it was arrived at illegally.

A formal assignment of error relates to the sufficiency of the indictment, but counsel present no argument on the matter, and we deem the indictment sufficient.

We stated above that the public manifested considerable interest in the trials. This was especially true of certain organizations in Clarksburg. One was the Kappa Sigma Pi, seemingly a young peoples’ organization fostered by certain of the churches. The other was the Ku Klux Klan. The latter, according to the affidavit of the chairman of its executive committee, was especially zealous in procuring affidavits in aid of the prosecution of the defendant. Such activity on the part of the above organizations together with the general public animus, which it is contended was directed towards defendant, constitutes the basis of his second assignment of ;rror, that is, that he was improperly denied a change of venue.

Defendant was first brought to trial on March 22, 1923. The jury, not being able to agree, was discharged on the 24th. The second trial began on June 18th, on which date defendant filed his petition for a change of venue. He supported it with thirteen affidavits, including his own, and eight excerpts from newspapers and kindred publications, all indicative of the public interest in the prosecution. The affidavits are evidence not alone of public interest, but if they are to be credited to any degree, show also that the citizens of Clarks-burg and the community entertained no little ill will and even prejudice against defendant. Such feeling was made manifest by the bitter remarks of the people who thronged the court room at the first trial, also by the conversations of those frequenting hotel lobbies and other public places. One affidavit is that of F. C. Wilkes, a special writer of syndicated articles for magazines. In pursuing a study of the Ku Klux *656 Klan and its workings be swears that he interviewed the chairman of the Klan’s executive committee, and that that officer stated not only that the organization initiated the prosecution, but that the membership in Harrison County were determined to back the case to the end. According to this affidavit, the executive committee at first offered defendant the opportunity to quit the city, and it was upon his refusal to do so that the case proceeded.

The newspaper articles were taken from the Searchlight (the official organ of the Ku Klux Klan, as shown by the record), issues of March 10th, March 30th and March 31st, 1923; Cumberland (Md.) Times, issue of February 17, 1923; Clarksburg Telegram, issues of March 21st and 22nd, 1923; Clarksburg Exponent, issue of March 22, 1923; Fairmont (W. Ya.) Times, issue of March 22, 1923. Each of these excerpts was in the nature of a sensational “story” telling of' the revolting character of the alleged offense, and the Searchlight capitalized especially the work accomplished by the Ku Klux Klan in connection with the prosecution. The issues published at the time of the first trial carried copious quotations from the testimony. We can not doubt that the articles published were calculated to arouse popular feeling among those who might read them. In the accounts of the testimony, the evidence as to the wild orgies and parties alleged to have been carried on in defendant’s office were portrayed in great detail. Defendant’s denial of the accusations received relatively less attention. One element, however, is lacking; nowhere do we find any mention of the extent of the circulation of the various publications in Harrison County, and, of Bourse, if they were to affect public opinion, it was necessary that they be distributed. Except in the case of the two local newspapers, we have no right to assume that the publications mentioned had a wide circulation in the county.

The state did not lack for affidavits. A number of persons, including the sheriff of the county, were of opinion that a fair trial of the accused could be had in the county, and the chairman of the Ku Klux Klan’s executive committee avowed that while, at the request of certain Klan members he had turned certain affidavits over to the prosecuting attorney, neither he *657 nor tbe Elan was any more interested in the prosecution of the accused than any other class of good citizens would be.

After all the difference of opinion between the various af-fiants, however, -we, are struck by the circumstance that in spite of the public feeling and newspaper reports, defendant did secure a drawn verdict in the first trial. Further, all of the newspaper accounts were dated practically three months prior to the second trial.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 758, 97 W. Va. 652, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lohm-wva-1924.