State v. Pierce

147 S.W. 970, 243 Mo. 524, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 376
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 970 (State v. Pierce) 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. Pierce, 147 S.W. 970, 243 Mo. 524, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 376 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of assault with intent to ravish one Ruth Old-ham in Ray county, Missouri. He appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of that county fixing his punishment at two years in the penitentiary.

The defendant, a farmer, twenty-seven years old, resided with his grandmother. Prosecutrix, eighteen years old, lived with her father on a farm near defendant. Both ol them bore a good reputation prior to the commission of the crime of which defendant was convicted.

Defendant was a suitor of prosecutrix for a pe^ riod of twenty months prior to August 1, 1911. He frequently took her in his buggy to church and also to near-by towns. According- to the evidence of both parties, their courtship had not ripened into an engagement, and their conduct was not considered in any way unusual, except that they were sometimes out buggy-riding until a late hour at night.

About three p. m. on August 1, 1911, prosecutrix started with defendant ostensibly to drive to the town of Lawson, about eleven miles distant, to do some trading. After arriving at a road which led to Excelsior Springs, defendant decided to go to that point instead of Lawson, in order that he might telephone his mother, who was then at Kansas City. They arrived at Excelsior Springs about 6:30' p. m., after the stores had all closed, so that prosecutrix could not make the purchases she desired. While at the [528]*528Springs, defendant left prosecutrix for about three-quarters of an hour, while away on some unexplained errand.

About eight p. m. defendant and prosecutrix started for the .home of prosecutrix some thirteen miles distant. Up to this point, there is no conflict in the testimony. Prosecutrix testified that at a lonely place on the road, defendant suddenly threw his arms around her and commenced kissing her and trying to ráisé her dress. She slapped him in the face and tried to make him behave himself, but he became so persistent in his lascivious advances that she threatened to jump out of the buggy and walk home. Finally she did jump out, and defendant after hitching his team, ran after and caught her; when after a severe scuffle he succeeded in throwing her to the ground, raising her dress and touching her with his private parts. She claims to have screamed and fought the defendant by striking him in the face and pulling his hair to such an extent that after a few minutes he desisted from his attempt to have intercourse with her against her will, and began looking for his ring and pipe which he claimed to have lost in the scuffle. During the assault, defendant told prosecutrix to scream all she wanted to, that there was not a house within three miles. Prosecutrix got in the buggy and was driven home by defendant. They reached her father’s home about the hour of one a. m., and she then informed defendant she never wanted to see his face again. Prosecutrix then went to bed with her sister, and made no complaint of the assault until the following evening, when she told her sister. Other members of the family were not informed of the assault until thirteen days afterward, when this prosecution was instituted.

The report of the attempted assault spread rapidly through the neighborhood; but just how the report was first started, does not fully appear. Some [529]*529days after the crime, an old man named Newt McAdams, who* cultivated the same farm where defendant resided, asked defendant why he attempted to have intercourse with prosecutrix when she was not willing to submit to such- conduct. Defendant did not deny the criminal conduct attributed to him, but gave a vulgar answer, indicating that his acts were inspired by uncontrollable lust. In a conversation with Lawson Cox, another neighbor, regarding some witnesses summoned before the grand jury, defendant said, “If that girl tells what she knows, I will be in a pretty tight box.”

The morning after the alleged crime, the defendant seemed to be in a worried and peevish mood. He was asked by one Mabel Brown, who was living with his grandmother, why he swore at such trifles as breaking a shoestring; to which he replied that that was not what really worried him; that he was full as a goose last night and lost his ring and pipe. Witness asked defendant what he was doing the night before. To which he replied that he “done enough to put him in the penitentiary all right. If that d — d fool keeps her mouth shut, I will be all right.”

Witness did not explain who defendant referred to by this last remark; but as'he had been with no other woman except prosecutrix the night before, he undoubtedly referred to1 her. Defendant testifying in his owm behalf, denied that he made any criminal assault on prosecutrix, and also denied making the incriminatory statements testified to by witnesses Newt McAdams, Mabel Brown and Lawson Cox.

Defendant stated that on the return trip from Excelsior Springs, he had a quarrel with prosecutrix about another young man she had been keeping company with, and in effect informed her that he was going away and would not keep company with her any more.

[530]*530For reversal, defendant relies:

(1) Upon the failure to accord him a preliminary examination;

(2) Erroneous.instructions given by the court;

(3) Error of the court in refusing to give instructions prayed by defendant; and,

(4) Insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.

I. In the case of State v. Schenk, 238 Mo. 429, after an exhaustive review of the statutes of this State and the authorities, we held that parties charged with an ordinary felony, were not entitled to a preliminary examination before a committing magistrate. We still adhere to that decision.

II. The instructions given by the court were fair to defendant, and correctly defined all the issues of law necessary for the guidance of the jury in reaching their verdict.

III. All proper issues presented in defendant’s refused instructions were covered by the instructions given.

Below, we reproduce two of defendant’s refused instructions:

“The court instructs the jury that the charge with intent to commit rape, made by Ruth Oldham, against the defendant, remains uncorroborated by any evidence in the cause; if the jury shall believe from the evidence in the cause that said Ruth Oldham concealed the alleged assault to commit rape until several days after the commission of such alleged assault upon her, then the law presumes such concealment inconsistent with defendant’s guilt.

“The court instructs the jury that the law clothes the defendant with the presumption of innocence which attends and protects him until it is overcome by testi[531]

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Related

State v. Pinkard
300 S.W. 748 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)
State v. Comer
247 S.W. 179 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1922)
State v. Sinclair
157 S.W. 339 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 970, 243 Mo. 524, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pierce-mo-1912.