State v. Spinks

125 S.W.2d 60, 344 Mo. 105, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 606
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 60 (State v. Spinks) 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. Spinks, 125 S.W.2d 60, 344 Mo. 105, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 606 (Mo. 1939).

Opinions

Appellant, defendant below, was convicted in the Circuit Court of Jackson County of the crime of rape, alleged to have been committed by having carnal knowledge of one Maxine Addington, a female child under sixteen years of age. Pursuant to the verdict of the jury he was sentenced to two years' imprisonment in the penitentiary and has appealed.

The offense is alleged to have been committed on or about June 15, 1936, in Kansas City, Jackson County, in which city the prosecutrix and defendant lived. Maxine was then about fourteen years of age. According to her testimony and that of a girl friend, Frances Marriott, then about thirteen years old, the two girls were together on the day in question, and by agreement between them Maxine telephoned defendant, whom both the girls knew, and suggested that he take them to a show. He agreed, and met them in his automobile. After getting some "hamburgers" and driving around town for a time defendant drove with the girls to a place in Kansas City spoken of as Twenty-fifth and Genesee, near an old, abandoned gas tank and stopped. Up to that time the three had been riding in the front seat of the car. Defendant suggested sexual intercourse and it seems each of the girls agreed "she would" if the other would. Defendant and Frances got in the back seat *Page 110 of the car where defendant tried to have intercourse with Frances but, she testified, "he could not." She then got back in the front seat and Maxine got in the back seat with defendant where, according to the testimony of both girls, he accomplished the sexual act with Maxine. With this brief outline of the case we shall take up the contentions urged by appellant for reversal and make such further statement of the facts as may be deemed necessary in connection with the discussion of points to which certain portions of the evidence may respectively pertain.

[1] I. Appellant urges that his demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained and a verdict of not guilty directed. This contention, as we understand appellant, is not upon the ground that the testimony of the girls was not sufficient, if true, to warrant conviction, but rather upon the ground that both girls had told different and contradictory stories before the trial and that their testimony was unworthy of belief. Throughout the trial defendant contended and attempted to show by cross-examination of Maxine and Frances that they had been claiming until a week or so before the trial that the offense had occurred near a place called Avondale, which would make the venue in Clay County, and that the situs and been changed in order to give the Jackson County Circuit Court jurisdiction. It was developed on cross-examination of both girls that they had on several occasions spoken of having gone with defendant to Avondale or to a field near there but they had not mentioned having been with defendant at Twenty-fifth and Genesee or near the old gas tank until a week or so before the trial when, they testified, they went with Juvenile Court officers and pointed out the place where the offense had occurred. They testified, however, that they had been with defendant at the place near Avondale but said it was at a time a few weeks later than the June episode involved in the trial. They gave no very satisfactory explanation of why they had failed to mention, on former occasions, the trip to the vicinity of Twenty-fifth and Genesee, the gas tank location, saying in substance that they had not discussed it or had not thought it necessary, or something to that effect, until the assistant prosecuting attorney in charge of the case had asked specifically when and where their first clandestine meeting with defendant occurred. Said assistant prosecuting attorney claimed they had informed him of the trip to the vicinity of the gas tank several months earlier and, by intimation at least, that their testimony before the grand jury showed the offense to have been committed in Jackson County. In addition to the foregoing, in August, 1937, some two months before the trial, Maxine and her grandmother were taken by defendant to the office of his attorney where she signed and swore to a statement, prepared by said attorney, that defendant had never had sexual intercourse with her. At the *Page 111 trial she admitted having made the statement but said it was not true and she had made it "because I thought maybe it would clear this thing up."

Without going further into detail as to the prior contradictory statements we deem it sufficient to say that we are convinced this matter presented a question for the jury, whose province it was to determine the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony. The testimony of these girls at the trial was direct and positive and if believed by the jury, as it was, clearly warranted conviction. There was no such impeachment, either by proof of prior inconsistent statements or otherwise, as would authorize the court to say, as matter of law, that said testimony was incredible or unworthy of belief. The demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled.

[2] II. This prosecution was by indictment, returned by the grand jury on January 8, 1937. At the same time the grand jury returned at least two other indictments against this defendant for like offenses, — "statutory rape." One charged the commission of such offense upon Frances Marriott, in Jackson County, on or about December 4, 1936, and another, Exhibit 7, a like offense alleged to have been committed on or about December 4, 1936, in Jackson County, upon Mona McGaughey, a fourteen-year-old girl. Defendant introduced in evidence the Marriott indictment. Thereupon the State, over defendant's objection, introduced the McGaughey indictment. Defendant's purpose in offering the Marriott indictment was not stated at the time it was offered. When the offer was made, Mr. Gorman, for the State, said, "I have no objection" and the indictment was read to the jury. Mr. Gorman then remarked, "I don't know the purpose of that one," to which defendant's counsel replied, "You will find out when we argue the case." Mr. Gorman said, "Then I am going to offer the other two. I will do a little arguing too, myself." He then had the reporter mark for identification two exhibits, 7 and 8, and, as above stated, introduced and read to the jury Exhibit 7, the McGaughey indictment. Exhibit 8 seems not to have been introduced. From his printed argument in this court it seems defendant's counsel, in offering the Marriott indictment, thought it might tend to contradict and impeach Miss Marriott as a witness and perhaps also explain away the damaging effect of a statement which Mr. Gorman had made in the hearing of the jury earlier in the trial, that "There is two indictments on file now and Mr. Latshaw knows that." The court had denied defendant's motion to discharge the jury because of that statement and thus the jury was left with the information — and no admonition to disregard it — that defendant stood charged with another offense besides the one on trial. Defendant may have reasoned that since the jury had been informed *Page 112 that there were two indictments and they might have supposed that one of them was for an assault upon Frances Marriott it could make his case no worse to introduce that one, and it did tend to contradict Frances' testimony. The indictment charged that defendant had had sexual intercourse with her, in Jackson County, on or about December 4, 1936. She did not testify at the trial to any such occurrence. She testified to being with Maxine when the assault upon the latter was made in June, 1936, but both girls testified definitely that that occurred about June 15th, not in December.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 60, 344 Mo. 105, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-spinks-mo-1939.