State v. O'Meara

190 Iowa 613
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 11, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 190 Iowa 613 (State v. O'Meara) 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. O'Meara, 190 Iowa 613 (iowa 1920).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

ciency of evidence. — I. The defendant, Ray O’Meara, is accused in the indictment of having- committed the crime of rape on Elsie Hargens, November 4, 1917. He was then 17 years of age, as was prosecutrix. The accused contends there was not sufficient evidence to carry the issues as gUiit to the jury. It appears that prosecutrix went to the home of Ida Knudsen, who was about a year younger, at about 7:30 o ’clock P. M., and remained there until about 15 minutes before 9, when they went to the post office in Ida Grove, and obtained the Chicago and Sioux City newspapers, read them a while, and, a few minutes after 9 o’clock, started along the street towards the corner. As they so did, a Ford automobile, inclosed, stopped near them, and O ’Meara, who was in the car with Ernest Rathbun, invited them to take a ride. The girls accepted, though, as they say, on condition that the car was not to leave the pavement, and that they were to get back within a half hour. Prosecutrix sat with defendant in the front seat, and her companion with Rathbun behind. The automobile was driven about town, and stopped near the cemetery. After talking a while, the girls insisted on going along, and, as the boys paid no attention to this, they undertook to crank the car, and, as they failed to do so, started on foot towards toAvn. After they had gone a short distance, the boys overtook them; and, on invitation, the girls entered the car as before, and were driven out of town over the Maple River bridge, where defendant turned the automobile into a lane toward the rendering works, where it was stopped again. Ida Knudsen informed the boys that, if they were not going to start the car, she would go home, and started toward town. According to the undisputed evidence, after running a short distance, she asked prosecutrix if she was coming, and the latter responded that she couldn’t. Ida testified that prosecutrix then “screamed a heavy, shrill scream,” and that she saAV O’Meara grab her around the shoulders, and the last time that she saw her, “O’Meara was holding her by the shoulders.” Rathbun and prosecutrix agree that O’Meara so did, and the latter, as will appear later, admitted this. Ida testified further that she ran to a garage near the depot without calling for help, although passing many houses which were lighted, and that, from the [616]*616garage, the proprietor and a doctor took her home in the latter’s automobile; and that she told them what had happened to prosecutrix. The girls were agreed that neither had seen either of the boys previous to that night, and did not know them; but O ’Meara insisted that he had been in school with and had known Ida Knudsen. The latter swore that the defendant had given his name as Johnson, and that Rathbun had tried to kiss her, when near the cemetery. She admitted having done nothing to rescue prosecrttrix, and explained that she did not think about giving the alarm to anyone she did not know, and did not suggest at the- garage, nor offer to show the way to the car where prosecutrix had been detained. The proprietor of the garage corroborated the witness concerning what she had said there, and that she had been taken home, as did also the doctor, and said further that she wanted them to take her home, and then go back and see what 'became of the other girl. The prosecutrix swore to having been in the employment of Mrs. Meents in Ida Grove; that, at about 2 o ’clock in the afternoon, she visited her sister, and went to the home of her parents, where she stayed until about 7:30 o ’clock in the evening; and that she then went to the home of Ida Knudsen. She testified substantially as related by the latter, concerning what was done until the automobile stopped in the lane, and Ida started back to town; that she then started to get out, but that defendant held her in the seat by the shoulders; that, to Ida’s question as to whether she was coming, she answered that she couldn’t, and screamed; that defendant then choked her, and told her to 1 ‘ shut up, you damn fool, or I will kill you;” that one of the boys then took her by the feet, and the other by the shoulders, and lifted her to the ground near the car; that she was screaming all the time, and trying to get away; that the one who had carried her by the arms held her arms over her breasts, being back of her head, and that the other lifted her dress, tore open her underwear, and had sexual intercourse with her; that, immediately thereafter, the latter changed positions with the one at the head, who also had sexual intercourse with her; that all this was done without her consent, and while she was resisting to the extent of her strength; that she then got up, and, finding her hat, returned to town, and on to her home, to which she was admitted by her father; that she [617]*617went directly to her mother’s bedroom, and told her what had happened; that her hair was down, and full of leaves, and her coat dirty, her face scratched near one eye, one leg scratched below the knee, and a bruise on each arm; that there was a hole in one stocking; that her underwear was torn and stained with blood. These garments were identified and introduced in evidence, as was her waist, worn that night, and appearing to have been torn. She testified that these garments were entire, previous to the ride, and that,she returned to her employment at about 10 o’clock the next morning, and did a washing. Her father, mother, sister, and the sheriff corroborated her testimony that her hair was down, and leaves therein, and that she was crying; and Mrs. Meents corroborated her story as to the bruises. Dr. Conn swore that he examined her person, the following day, and found a bruise on each arm, and a scratch on her face and right leg, and that the latter was bruised; and that her sexual organ was in “an ordinary condition for a girl of her age. It was open enough to have been penetrated, and some secretions.” On cross-examination, he said that there was no external laceration.of the organ; that there was no-hymen; but that it might be absent, and there have been no intercourse. Ernest Rathbun, who had previously been convicted of having committed rape on prosecutrix, told the story substantially as did prosecutrix, saying that O’Meara restrained her in the seat of the automobile; that they lifted her to the ground; that each had intercourse with her; and that she was struggling and trying to get away all the time; and that this happened in the lane, about 100 yards from the end of the bridge. Both defendant and Rathbun swore that, on the next day, about noon, they drove to Denison, from there on to Council Bluffs and Omaha, and then went about 30 miles west of Omaha, where they picked corn for 2,y2 weeks, after which they returned to Omaha, drove to St. Joseph, Missouri, came back to Council Bluffs, and then on to the home of Rathbun’s brother, about 6 miles from Ida Grove, and there learning- that they were wanted, proceeded to town, the day following their return, and were arrested. Rathbun admitted having stated repeatedly that O’Meara had not had intercourse with prosecutrix, and explained that they had made it up that each would so state with regard to the other. [618]*618A girl about 16 years of age and a widow woman testified that these boys had taken them out riding, accompanied by the widow’s baby, starting a few minutes after 7 o’clock in the evening in question, and that they drove to a schoolhouse about 5 miles out of town, where the women left the car, and walked back, the boys driving tbe automobile in. Two other young women related that later these boys accosted them from the car, inviting them, to take a ride, and one of them, in answer to the question as to when she first saw them, answered:

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Bluebook (online)
190 Iowa 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-omeara-iowa-1920.