State v. Sipes

651 S.W.2d 659, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 3938
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 1983
Docket12873
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 651 S.W.2d 659 (State v. Sipes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sipes, 651 S.W.2d 659, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 3938 (Mo. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

PREWITT, Judge.

A jury found defendant guilty of attempted rape, § 566.030, RSMo Supp.1982, and sodomy, § 566.060, RSMo Supp.1982. *660 He was sentenced to ten years imprisonment for attempted rape and fifteen years for sodomy, the sentences to run consecutively.

We first discuss defendant’s contention that the trial court erred in denying his motion for acquittal because the prosecu-trix’s testimony was contradictory and unconvincing and there was insufficient corroboration of her testimony. The testimony of a prosecutrix is sufficient to sustain a rape or sodomy charge without other corroboration unless that testimony is so contradictory or in conflict with physical facts, surrounding circumstances, and common experience as to be unconvincing. State v. Johnson, 595 S.W.2d 774, 776 (Mo.App.1980); State v. Phillips, 585 S.W.2d 517, 520 (Mo.App.1979). Her testimony is related in the next four paragraphs.

She testified that defendant came to their house in the morning while she and her husband were still in bed. They knew defendant through their church and she and her husband had worked for him. After her husband and defendant left for awhile, they came back to the house. Defendant was drinking from a “bottle of some type of stuff.” Then she, her husband and a friend of her husband got into defendant’s pickup truck to go to a market where defendant proposed to sell a boat that he had in the back of his pickup. On the way to the market defendant stopped the truck, apparently in a rural area, and suggested that there would be a better chance of selling the boat to the owner of the market if only the prosecutrix accompanied him since she was a friend of the owner’s family. The others agreed and were left at a place called “Double Bridges”. They were to be picked up after the boat was sold.

Before they got to the market defendant turned off the road leading to it and onto a gravel road. He stopped the truck, and “using vulgar language” informed the pros-ecutrix that he wanted to have sexual intercourse with her. She opened the truck door and started to leave it when he grabbed her by the neck and pulled her over against him and tried to kiss her. When that happened she lost a button from her blouse. She was scared and crying and asked him to take her back to her husband. He told her that she was not going to see her husband or family any more. That statement made her afraid that “he was gonna kill me.” He then drove the pickup on down the road where there were trees on one side and a pond on the other and told her, “There’s dead people in that pond.” Then he told her to take her clothes off and she said she didn’t want to. She was wearing shorts and a blouse and no undergarments. He told her to look in the glove box for cigarettes and she did. There were no cigarettes, but she saw bullets. She knew that he frequently carried a gun and believed he might have one under the seat.

She took her shorts off because she was afraid of him. “Then he made me get down on the truck seat” with her head toward the passenger’s side, and “started havin’ oral sex” by putting his tongue inside her “sexual organs”. He was standing outside the truck with the door on the driver’s side open. While this occurred she was crying and he put his fist toward her face and told her, “You better shut up.” The “oral sex” went on for what “Seemed like a long time”. Then he told her, “to come”. After she replied that she could not, defendant said that if she didn’t, he would make her have oral sex with him. Then she “felt something strange go up toward my vagina” and saw it was a hammer handle in defendant’s hand. She asked him not to do that and he put it “back in the back of the truck.” Then he tried to have intercourse with her but because his penis was not erect it would not enter her vagina. He then let her get up and put her clothes back on and said, “I didn’t get you this time but I’ll get you the next time.”

While putting on her clothes she saw a tractor “across from us” and jumped out of the pickup and started running through a soybean field toward the tractor, screaming and waving so its operator would notice her. She heard the pickup and saw it was coming straight toward her. Defendant stopped the truck close to her, “gritted his *661 teeth” and told her, “Get in this truck.” She got back into the truck because she thought she was going to be shot. She said that during the incident she received bruises on her arm, her breast and on her legs. They drove to the market and when they arrived she saw three boys in a car and “jumped out of the truck real quick and ran over to the car not knowin’ ’em.” She told them she had just been raped and needed help. At her request they took her to her parents’ house which was nearby. Her parents called the police who came to the house and took a statement from her. Then her niece took her to a hospital where she was examined by a physician.

Defendant contends that the prose-cutrix’s testimony was contradictory and unconvincing but there is nothing in her testimony that convinces us that it was. Defendant contends that it is unconvincing because he testified that after letting her husband and his friend out they went straight to the market and because the physician who examined her testified he found no indication that a foreign object had been inserted in her vagina. The latter was not contrary to her testimony. The physician said that if a foreign body had passed the lips of the vagina it “ordinarily will leave abrasions or scratches or bruising of the lining of the vaginal canal” and he found none. This argument is obviously fallacious as she never testified that the hammer handle was inserted in her vagina, but that she “felt something strange go up toward my vagina.”

Defendant further contends that the prosecutrix said she saw bullets in the glove compartment and that he had a hammer in the truck and that neither was discovered in a search of the truck later that day by a highway patrolman. Defendant had time before the search to remove those items, and a file with a wooden handle found by the patrolman could have been mistaken by the prosecutrix for a hammer handle.

Defendant also contends that her version is unconvincing because she was unable to specify where the alleged incident occurred or its approximate time and because she did not go immediately to the police or to her husband after she left defendant’s pickup. She testified that she was not wearing a watch and that her awareness of the time was impaired because she was frightened and upset. Although she had lived in the area “most” of her life and knew how to get to the market, she testified that she could not drive a vehicle and did not know the roads in the area “real good”. The evidence indicated that she was not familiar with the place where the offense occurred. Living in an area a number of years does not mean that she would know and could describe where every gravel road and field was located, particularly as she did not drive.

We find nothing unusual for her to first go to her parents’ home which was nearby. Her husband was in a rural area without a vehicle. Defendant had said that he would return to get her husband and after such an incident it is unlikely she would want to go where defendant might be.

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693 S.W.2d 315 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1985)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
651 S.W.2d 659, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 3938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sipes-moctapp-1983.