State v. Nash

272 S.W.2d 179, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 777
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 8, 1954
Docket44324
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 272 S.W.2d 179 (State v. Nash) 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. Nash, 272 S.W.2d 179, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 777 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Judge.

Defendant has appealed from a sentence of imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for a term of seven years imposed upon him in conformity with the verdict of the jury finding him guilty of the crime of incest upon his thirteen-year-old daughter. He contends that: (1) the testimony of said daughter, hereinafter for convenience referred to as prosecutrix, is uncorroborated and unconvincing; and (2) the verdict is (a) against the greater weight of the credible evidence and (b) the result of passion and prejudice. These contentions require a detailed statement of the testimony.

Prosecutrix testified: She lacks one day of being fourteen years of age, lives in Kansas City, attends Northeast Junior High School, has eight brothers and sisters whose ages range from 21 years to 20 months, and now resides with five of them and her rpother. She knows the nature of an oath. It is a bad thing, perjury, a criminal offense, to lie. She understands the seriousness of the charge against her father and that it is a penitentiary offense. On January 2, 1953, her mother went to the General Hospital for three days. Her father did not want to sleep with the baby, so she slept with the baby. About 9:30 p. m., her father came into the room, forced her — told her — to take off her pajama bottoms and there had sexual relations with her. She understands what sexual relations are, his privates penetrated hers. All six of the children were at home. This had occurred before. It started when she was about eleven years old. Her father would warn prosecutrix not to tell her mother. “Mother always told the girls that if anything ever happened to them they would have to go to a home * * * and he always told me it would be just as bad for me as it would for him, if I told it.” Prosecutrix never told anybody about it until her eleven-year-old sister told the teacher at school. Prose- *181 cutrix then told her mother. “Q. Before April, when you told your mother about it, before that, did you and your other sister (Carol Jean), did you talk about what was going- on? A. Well, she told me that he had been bothering her that once, and I believed her, but I didn’t tell her I believed her, because I didn’t know what to do about it, and so I just let it go. No, I don’t think we ever discussed it together.”

On cross-examination prosecutrix testified: There are six rooms in the home, three upstairs, three downstairs. On January 2, 1953, her 21-year-old brother and his wife occupied a kitchenette and bedroom on the second floor. On the second floor is also a large bedroom in which “us four girls sleep”. Three of them were in that room that night.- The baby slept with prosecutrix in Daddy’s (and Mother’s) room. A six-year-old brother also slept in the latter room in a small separate bed. The continuing sexual relations between prose-cutrix and her father took place “in the bedroom, mostly, or upstairs, when we were working upstairs, on the front porch, or when we would go in — he would bother me when we were out * * * feeding the hogs, or something like that.” She has no idea as to the number of times. “Q. Fifty? A. Maybe. I couldn’t estimate it.”

Prosecutrix also testified that she went to school on January 2nd, and then explained: “Yes, we went to school, because on that— Oh, on January 2nd, no, sir. I am sorry; I was mixed up with April 10th. No, we did not go to school January 2nd.”

She further testified: Her father did not touch her from January 2nd to April 10th; her mother was at home all the time. Asked as to being chided by her father about a boy, she answered: “These three boys that I go to school with, and usually a gang of u-s usually come home together. Well, they was up in the pasture hollering. My mother was sick. I suggested — -Daddy says, ‘Either call the police or call his parents,’ so I says, ‘I will call his parents.’ It was all right with me. So I called this one boy’s parents and told them, and she told me to go out and tell him — they was in a pasture next to the house — to go out and tell him to go on home. After that night the boy don’t speak to me, or nothing. The only reason that' was — I didn’t have dates with the boys, or nothing — I kind of liked this boy, he come up to the pasture, I went over twice to talk to him, that was all. One time my father told me I could. I went with Carol Jean over and talked-to him a little while.”

Carol Jean, prosecutrix’ sister, testified: She is now twelve years old. She knows what is meant by telling the truth and that she would be punished if she did not. She had sexual intercourse with her father in her mother’s bedroom when, her mother was in the hospital, once in the morning and then in the afternoon. “He just said that I better hadn’t tell Mama on him.” She told prosecutrix and afterwards told her school teacher on a Friday. On that day her father kept calling the school when her mother was in the hospital, saying he wanted her to come home, saying that to Miss Thompson. Miss Caldwell, another teacher, then called her mother and told her about it.

Witness at first said her conversation with the teachers took place on April 10th. Then she said it took place on January 2nd as she was dressing for school; that her oldest brother and his wife had left for their work; that she knew it was on January 2nd because her mother was in the hospital and the lawyers, or policemen, had helped to fix the dates. (It seems clear that the witness became confused as to the dates of the two different incidents about which she was testifying, to wit: the incident of her father having sexual intercourse with her and the incident of telling the teachers about it on April 10th.) That morning he started “-playing nasty with me” — and that was the day she told the teacher. It (sexual intercourse) happened twice, but witness cannot remember the dates.

Defendant's wife, called as a witness on behalf of defendant, testified: On- April 10, 1953, she was called to the school and told by Miss Thompson that Carol Jean was *182 afraid of her father, that he had molested her. Carol Jean’s father had, called the school three to five times that day. When the youngest boy got out from school, he, the father, sent him back over there after her. The teachers would not let her go, because Carol Jean was afraid; Carol Jean sent word to her father that she was sick. The school principal called the Welfare Department. Witness took Carol Jean home. Defendant came down to meet witness and Carol Jean as they walked homeward. “I accused him of what they had told me. He denied it, and I knew the way he denied that he was lying, and so I said, ‘You wouldn’t expect me to believe your story about this girl’ — however, I hadn’t known about the second one at the time.” Witness made complaint against defendant on Saturday.

The only unusual treatment of prosecu-trix and Carol Jean by defendant that witness ever noticed was: “No, not — only when I would ask him to punish the 13-year-old girl, who was in here to testify a while ago, he would let her get away with anything. The others, he would cross them. I have always said, ‘Why will you let her go and get away with something, that you wouldn’t the others, sassing back, and— why would you let her get away with that?”’

Witness further testified: Defendant goes to the General Hospital for “checkups”. He has not worked much for the last five or six years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 S.W.2d 179, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nash-mo-1954.