State v. Marcks

41 S.W. 973, 140 Mo. 656, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 6, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 41 S.W. 973 (State v. Marcks) 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. Marcks, 41 S.W. 973, 140 Mo. 656, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 269 (Mo. 1897).

Opinions

Gantt, J.

The defendant was indicted at the May term, 1895, of the St. Louis Criminal Court, for rape alleged to have been committed by him upon one Nellie Berger, a female over the age of fourteen years, in the city of St. Louis on the first day of April, 1895. At the July term, 1895, he was duly arraigned and entered his plea of not guilty, was tried and convicted, and his punishment assessed at five years in the penitentiary. From sentence on said verdict he appeals.

The testimony developed that defendant was a brother-in-law of the prosecutrix, having married her sister on the twenty-sixth of February, 1895. He carried on a business of making ‘‘shop coats.” The prosecutrix not only worked for him, but often visited his wife, her sister. On the morning of April 1, 1895, she went to his house, and when she arrived defendant and his wife had not yet arisen. Her sister sent her on an errand, and while she was absent defendant and his wife arose, dressed and ate breakfast. There were three rooms in the apartments occupied by defendant —two rooms, a hall, and the kitchen across the hall. When prosecutrix returned that'morning, she sat down on the bed in the kitchen with defendant and his wife, [660]*660and they chatted and laughed awhile, and then defendant sent his wife into the shop room across the hall to work. After her departure he began playing with the prosecutrix, wrestling with her in a joking way, as they often did. While sixteen years old, she was still quite small and wore short dresses. Her station in life appears to have been very humble. She seems to have permitted his familiarities as if he were her brother. She testified that while they were thus playing together on the morning mentioned, he seized her so unexpectedly that before she could realize her position he had her completely in his power, and by force had sexual connection with her. She testified that she resisted his assault to her full ability, with all the strength she had, and never at any time consented to the intercourse. She testified she holloed. “I just screamed at first; then I holloed and I said, ‘My Grod, Charley, you are killing me.’ He told me to shut up, and then I was in so much pain I couldn’t hollo.” She says she did not tell her sister when she came into the room soon after the occurrence; that her sister had only been married to defendant a few weeks, and she hated to tell her. She told her mother about a week after the occurrence.

I. The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction f.or rape is challenged. We think there was sufficient direct and positive evidence to justify a conviction of rape in this case. Taking into account the age of the girl; that she was still wearing short dresses; the relationship of defendant; the familiarities permitted on account of that relation; the sudden attack and advantage taken of the girl; her resistance and cries, and her positive evidence that she never at any time consented to the intercourse, we think the criminal court properly submitted the facts to the jury.

It is urged that she is not corroborated; that her [661]*661own evidence destroys the charge of rape. Bnt is she without corroboration! Without knowing what the defendant would testify, she went on the stand and testified (carefully and candidly it seems to us) to the time when and place tohere the outrage was committed, and named the defendant as her despoiler. In all these essential particulars she was fully corroborated by the defendant himself, and contradicted by him only as to the force in accomplishing the penetration. She is'also corroborated by the loathsome disease which he imparted to her.

Is he to go acquit because she made no immediate complaint to her sister, or her mother, or because she gives an unsatisfactory reason for her failure to do so! It is true there is no evidence of threats of violence if she told of the outrage, but it is not to be forgotten that she was young and ignorant, and might well have hesitated at charging her sister’s husband with such a crime to that sister. But let it be admitted that her delay was unreasonable, measured by ordinary experience, and that it is a circumstance which excites suspicion of her veracity and tends to discredit her, the question arises, does it do more than this! Does it raise such a conclusive presumption against her evidence that an appellate court is justified in ignoring the verdict of a jury, and the refusal ■ of the criminal court to set aside that verdict on that ground alone! On this point we think the great weight of authority is to the contrary. In Higgins v. People, 58 N. Y. 379, Chief Justice Chubch, for the court, said: “Any considerable delay on the part of a prosecutrix to make complaint of the outrage constituting the crime of rape, is a circumstance of more or less weight, depending upon the other surrounding circumstances. There may be many reasons why a failure to make immediate or instant outcry should not discredit the witness. A [662]*662want of suitable opportunity, or fear may sometimes excuse or justify a delay. There can be no iron rule on this subject. The law expects and requires that it should be prompt, but there is and can be no particular time specified. The rule is founded upon the laws of human nature, which induce a female thus outraged to complain at the first opportunity. Such is the natural impulse of an honest female. But if instead of doing this she conceals the injury for any considerable length of time, it naturally excites suspicion of fraud and tends to discredit her.”

In State v. Peter, 8 Jones’ Law (N. C.), 21, Chief Justice Peabsokt, for the court, discussing a charge in which the fact that the woman had not made known or complained of the outrage for two weeks was presented to the jury as a circumstance affecting her credibility, said: ilIt is not a rule of law that silence, under such circumstances, raises a presumption that the witness has siuorn falsely. The passages in the books to which reference was made on the argument use the word ‘presumption,’ not as a rule of law, but an inference of fact, and treat of silence as a circumstance tending strongly to impeach the credibility of the witness, on the ground that a forcible violation of her person so outrages the female' instinct that a woman not only will make an outcry for aid at the time, but will instantly and involuntarily, after its perpetration; seek someone to whom she can make known the injury and give vent to her feelings. The want of this demonstration of feeling or ‘involuntary outburst’ is treated of as a circumstance tending to show consent on her part; but it is nowhere held that this female instinct is so strong mid unerring as to have been made the foundation of a rule of law, as distinguished from a rule in respect to evidence, and the weight to which it is entitled is a matter for the jury.”

[663]*663In State v. Knapp, 45 N. H. 148, the court said: “The grounds upon which is received the proof of complaints by the prosecutrix, made soon after the injury, are that they are corroborative of her testimony on the stand, and tend to repel the presumption that would arise from the absence of such complaints; for it is laid down, very generally, that if such com-plaints are not made soon, or within a reasonable time after the injury, or without an inconsistent delay, it is a strong though not conclusive presumption against the truth of the charge.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W. 973, 140 Mo. 656, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marcks-mo-1897.