State v. Mott

205 N.W. 234, 53 N.D. 222, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 65
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 205 N.W. 234 (State v. Mott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Mott, 205 N.W. 234, 53 N.D. 222, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 65 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

Worn, District Judge.

The defendant, Eva Mott, appeals from a conviction of crime in the district court of Ward county. Appellant assigns 17 errors, all of which fall within four general classes, as follows: — 1. The verdict is contrary to the evidence. 2. It was error to receive the verdict in the absence of the defendant. 3. It was error not to require the state to elect upon which charge it relied, before the close of the whole evidence. 4. Errors in the admission and exclusion of evidence.

The prosecution was under chapter 190, Session Laws 1919. The information, omitting formal parts, was in this language: — “That heretofore, to wit, on the 26th day of October, a. d. 1923, at the county of Ward, in said state of North Dakota, one Eva Mott, late of said county of Ward and state aforesaid, did commit the crime of Immorality,’ committed as follows, to-wit:—

“That at the said time and place the said Eva Mott did wilfully, wrongfully, unlawfully and feloniously enter and remain in a certain room in a building located in the city of Minot, Ward county, North Dakota, for the purpose of prostitution, lewdness and assignation, contrary to the form of the statute,” etc.

No objection was made to the form or the sufficiency of the information, upon the trial. No exceptions were taken to the charge of the court, and no errors are assigned as to the charge.

*224 Tbe verdict, omitting formal parts, reads: — “We thé jury in. the above entitled action, find the defendant guilty of the crime of ‘Immorality’ as charged in the information.”

The verdict is not challenged as to its form or sufficiency, the only attack upon it being that it is contrary to the evidence. No specification of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain it is given.

The defendant did not testify. The essential facts, proved by the uncontradicted testimony, are, concisely, the following:—

About October 16th, 1923, the defendant and a man named'Harris, rented a room from a Mrs. Johnson, in her dwelling, in Northeast Minot, Harris paying the rent for one month, in advance. For the next ten days, defendant and Harris were frequently seen to enter the room together in the nighttime; they were heard in the room together, and on one occasion, they were seen by the landlady in the room, in bed together. They were frequently seen to leave the house together in the morning, usually about 11 o’clock. They had a child of about three years of age with them in the room the last few days they occupied it, which child appears to have been born to the defendant.

On the evening of October 26th, the defendant was brought into the police station in Minot, at 10 or 11 o’clock, charged with being found in a room, other than the one usually occupied by her, with another man. She was turned over to the police matron, to whom she said that she had a child at her room and wanted to get it. The matron had a policeman who was acting as desk sergeant, get a car and they all went to the Johnson house, where defendant said she was living. At the house, the matron, over the objection of the defendant, followed her to and into the room. She noticed the odor of tobacco smoke and saw some man’s wearing apparel in the room and asked the defendant about it, who then said, “Bill, you may as well come out,” and the man, Harris, came out from under the bed, undressed, except for a suit of .summer underwear. He was placed under arrest and directed to dress. The defendant, at the request of the matron, went down to the car and the desk sergeant returned to the room with her. Harris was taken to the station, but the defendant was left in the room, with her child. The next morning, the matron, having found a place for the child, brought the defendant back to the station.

When Harris was arrested in this room, he took certain of his per *225 sonal belongings with him, among them, being some medicine. The matron asked him what that was and he, in the presence of the defendant, said it was medicine he got from his doctor for a venereal disease.

The defendant, at her preliminary hearing, told the matron that she had lived in this room with Harris for a few days more than two weeks.

Evidence was introduced as to the reputation of the defendant, and as to the reputation of places she had frequented, among them being two houses of ill fame. Her being at one of them was before her arrest; the other instance, after her arrest, but before the information in this case was filed. Evidence was also introduced as to the reputation of the man, Harris, as a frequenter of' houses of ill repute.

The defendant, introduced evidence of her marriage to a man other than Harris, after her arrest, and before her trial.

1. Hnder the first assignment of error, it is contended that there is no evidence that the defendant resorted to this room for purposes of either prostitution or assignation, as those terms are defined in- the law. Conceding but not deciding that claim, for the purposes of this decision, yet it is perfectly apparent that she did resort to the room for purposes of lewdness, as defined by the law, and that is ample to sustain the verdict. The evidence of lewdness is plenary. The verdict is amply sustained by it.

2. It is assigned as error that the court received the verdict against the defendant in her absence; but it is not argued in the briefs, nor was it touched upon in the oral argument, nor does the fact anywhere appear in the record that such was the case. Hpon such a record, we must give heed to the presumption of regularity in the conduct of the court in that regard. No such error appears.

3. It is claimed that the court erred in not requiring the state to elect, at the outset of the trial, upon which particular act of resorting to a room for criminal conduct, it relied for conviction. Evidence was introduced, over defendant’s objection, that the defendant had resorted to other rooms, with men or in houses of ill fame. This evidence was clearly competent under the express terms of the statute. Whether this is a case where any election need be made, because of the provisions of the statute for proving more than one act in conflict with it, we need not decide. After the evidence was all in, and just as the state’s attorney commenced to address the jury in his opening argn *226 ment, the court interrupted proceedings and, conformably to the many demands of the defendant theretofore made, required the state to elect-. Proper election was made, the state relying on the' resort to the room in the Johnson house. If an election were required, it was made in time. State v. Marty, 52 N. D. 478, 203 N. W. 679.

4. The errors assigned relating to the admission and exclusion of evidence fall within four general classifications: — 1. In admitting evidence of the defendant’s reputation. 2. In admitting evidence of the reputation of Bill Harris, who was- not called as a witness. 3. In ádmitting evidence that Bill Harris had been convicted of crime. 4. In sustaining the objection of the state to certain questions asked on cross-examination. Assignment number 1 relates to the admission of evidence relating to the medicine and talk concerning it, in the defendant’s presence, in the room, when Harris was arrested.

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Related

State v. Simpson
49 N.W.2d 777 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1951)
State v. Taylor
293 N.W. 219 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1940)
State v. Farrier
240 N.W. 872 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
205 N.W. 234, 53 N.D. 222, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mott-nd-1925.