State v. Potter

54 N.W.2d 516, 243 Iowa 970, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 542
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 28, 1952
Docket47971
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 N.W.2d 516 (State v. Potter) 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. Potter, 54 N.W.2d 516, 243 Iowa 970, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 542 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

MulRONBY, C. J.

The defendant was indicted for the crime of assault with intent to rape Marilyn Frances Henry. He pleaded not guilty and served notice of alibi witnesses. He was found guilty as charged and sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary. Marilyn identified the defendant as her assailant. The question on the sufficiency of the evidence is whether there was sufficient testimony to corroborate Marilyn’s testimony in connecting defendant with the commission of the crime.

Seventeenyear-old Marilyn Frances Henry was returning home alone between 11 and 11:30 after an evening spent with a girl friend at a movie and at Reed’s Ice Cream place. She lived at 418 Olinda Avenue and while walking near the Van Lundgren home at 505 Olinda she met a man who grabbed hex', threw her to the ground and stifled her screams by removing his glove and putting his hand in her mouth. The man scratched the back of her throat and threatened to kill her if she would not be quiet. He forced her to get into his car and down on the floor of the front seat. Mr. and Mrs. Van Lundgren testified they were awakened by the screams and they looked out the window and saw a man and woman walking toward a car. They described the man as approximately the same height as the girl and Mr. Van Lundgren said the man had his hand over the girl’s shoulder as they walked across the street to the car and he put the girl in the front seat of the ear. He noticed the car was a two-tone color but he “couldn’t see whethex1 it was a CheAr-rolet or Pontiac or what it was.” The man drove Marilyn to a *972 near-by park where he stopped the car and took a roll of adhesive tape- from the glove compartment and put strips over her eyes and then he fastened her hands up around her neck with strips of tape. The man then took off Marilyn’s underclothes and forced her down on the front seat and tried to rape her. When she screamed again he struck her in the face and pulled her to the back seat, removed her skirt and tried for a long time to rape her. Marilyn resisted as much as she could and finally the man quit, put her clothes back on her, getting her skirt on wrong side out, and drove her part way out of the park. He stopped the car, took Marilyn to the rear of the ear and instructed her to start walking and not to turn around when he removed the tape from her eyes. Marilyn testified she had earlier seen that the car bore a license number of 23 dash and four -figures and as she walked avray she tried to turn around and see the number for sure but she was too scared to turn far enough around and the car was soon out of sight around a curve.

Marilyn ran home, a distance of about four blocks, arriving there about ten minutes to twelve. She told her parents what had occurred. They called the police and their family doctor. Her mother testified the girl was crying and nervous but able to tell what had happened. The mother testified as to the blood on her stockings and underclothes, her skirt on wrong side out, and that she was bleeding and bruised in the area of her vagina. She said she cleaned the tape marks off of'Marilyn’s face. Her father said there was blood in and around her mouth and he said the next day he went to the place, where his daughter was first attacked and found in the street a leather glove which was Exhibit C in the case. The doctor who examined her that night said a pelvic examination revealed a bruise and dried blood and ho was of the opinion her sexual organ had been penetrated.

Marilyn told the story to the two police officers who arrived about 12:20 that night. These officers testified that she gave them a description of her assailant saying “he was twenty-five to thirty years, about five-foot seven or eight, long straight hair, medium slim face, rather pinkish complexion, had on a black leather jacket, medium voice, slight, some accent, used a lot of profanity.” The officers also testified she described the car to them as near as she could, saying it had a 23 dash license number *973 but she could not be sure what the rest of the license number was. She added there was a possibility, since the plate was dirty, that it could have been 28 but she felt sure the first two figures on the plate were 23. One officer testified Marilyn said it seemed to her like there was a “2” or “98” in the .other figures. Both officers testified she said the car- was two-tone color with tan or gray bottom and what she thought was a green top, probably a coach, and she thought it could be a 1947 or ’48 ear, possibly a Chevrolet or General Motors car. Marilyn told the same story to the officers who called at nine o’clock the next morning.

Defendant was arrested at the corner of Harding Road and Hickman in the city of Des Moines about 6:30 p.m. on December 19, 1950. The minutes of testimony attached to the indictment show circumstances attending defendant’s arrest which carried the implication that he was preparing to commit another crime. The trial court sustained a motion to strike testimony of these circumstances to the extent that they showed defendant’s attempt to lure a young girl into his car by the false story of his need of a baby-sitter. However, the trial court did admit testimony of the arresting officers to the effect that when they arrested him they asked him his name and where he lived and he replied his name was Jack Smith and he lived at 2506 Euclid Avenue in Des Moines. These officers testified the Euclid address is a beer tavern. They described the car which he was driving at the time of his arrest as a two-tone green 1947 Pontiac coach with license No. 23-5258, and in the glove compartment of the car they found a partially used roll of adhesive tape, some lubricating jelly and some rags. They also found a small black toy pistol lying on the front seat of the car. The officers talked with defendant about the. November 2 attack on Marilyn and he denied any knowledge of the attack and said he did not know her. The next day Marilyn .was called to the police station and she was shown defendant with four other people and she picked out defendant as the man who attempted to rape her on November 2. She also identified his automobile as the car her assailant was driving on November 2. Marilyn also identified defendant as a man she had seen earlier in the evening on November 2 when she and her girl friend sat in Reed’s lee Cream place. She said that he sat in a booth across the aisle and “eyed” her all of the time. A high school girl friend who was a part-time employee of Reed’s *974 testified she saw defendant come into- Reed’s right after Marilyn and her girl friend arrived and that she served him.

Defendant denied being in Reed’s and said he had never seen Marilyn until he saw her in the courtroom. His story was that on November 2, 1950, his wife was out of town; that he dined that night at the home of his wife’s uncle in West Des Moines where he stajrnd until twenty minutes to nine or nine o’clock. He and Ms wife had rooms at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor and defendant said he arrived home about ten o’clock. He remembered talking with Mr. and Mrs. Taylor when the ten o’clock news came on over the radio. He told them of what a nice dinner he had and picked up some shirts Mrs. Taylor had ironed for him and went upstairs to bed and did not leave his room until seven o’clock the next morning. His story was corroborated by his wife’s uncle and aunt and by the Taylors who also said he could not have left his room without their hearing him.

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Related

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205 N.W.2d 748 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1973)
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147 N.W.2d 47 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1966)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 N.W.2d 516, 243 Iowa 970, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-potter-iowa-1952.