State v. Sykes

89 S.W. 851, 191 Mo. 62, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 89 S.W. 851 (State v. Sykes) 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. Sykes, 89 S.W. 851, 191 Mo. 62, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 188 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

BURGESS, P. J.

On the 21st day of June,. 1904, the defendant was convicted of rape upon the person of one Alice J. Wood, and his punishment fixed at twelve years’ imprisonment in the State penitentiary, under an information theretofore filed by the prosecuting attorney of Lewis county with the clerk of the circuit court of said county, charging that defendant, in said county, on the 28th day of June, 1903, in and upon one Alice J. Wood, unlawfully, violently and feloniously did make an assault, and her, the said Alice J. Wood, then and there unlawfully, forcibly and against her will, feloniously did ravish and carnally know, against the peace and dignity of the State.

[68]*68After unavailing motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, defendant appealed.

The facts are substantially as follows:

On Saturday evening, June 27, 1903, there was a festival at Salem schoolhouse in Lewis county. The night was dark, but light enough to see a short distance. Ben Byers attended said festival in an old buggy with a dark red running-gear, drawn by a sorrel horse. He took two small children with him, a nephew and niece, to the festival early that evening, returning with them to his mother’s house, and then, about eight o’clock, went back to the festival. What time he afterwards returned home is not shown by the evidence, but his mother did not call him till dinner-time on Sunday, when he came downstairs from his bedroom, accompanied by the defendant. The schoolhouse alluded to was distant some two miles from the Byers home.

The defendant attended said festival in a two-horse buggy. About eleven o’clock Ben Byers made an engagement to take Miss Anna Wilson home from the festival, but afterwards asked to be excused for the reason, as he stated, that defendant was going home with him to stay all night; and besides Miss Wilson had decided to go to another place, which láy in another direction from the schoolhouse. The prosecuting witness was at said festival and met the defendant there. 'She had only met him once before, in January, 1903, at a ball in Lewiston. Miss Wood attended the festival in company with her cousin, John Browning, arriving at the schoolhouse about nine o’clock. Defendant, who was then nineteen years old, asked the prosecutrix for her company home at about eleven o’clock. She declined, saying that she had come there with her cousin. Defendant replied, ‘‘He don’t care; we will see him.” He then took her out to supper and on the way met her cousin. She asked her cousin if he cared whether defendant took her home, and he replied that he did not. Defendant and the prosecutrix had supper and then [69]*69started together toward her home, riding in a one-horse buggy. On the way defendant made attempts to put his arm around her and kiss her, she objecting all the time. Defendant insisted that she did not care if he caressed her, and she insisted that she did. As they neared Mr. Pishback’s defendant discontinued his efforts, and did not again molest her till they had passed that residence and were near what was called the “troublesome bridge,’’.about four miles from the schoolhouse in Lewis county. Defendant looked back two or three times and then pulled up her dress and felt of her leg. She objected, jumped out of the buggy and commenced running away from him. After going a little distance she looked back and saw defendant and another man following her. They overtook her, the defendant taking hold of her left arm and the stranger of her right arm. She commenced screaming, and this other person told her to hush. Defendant shook a handkerchief in her face a time or two. The other man tripped her and threw her down, pulled up her clothes and ravished her. Defendant was on the ground close to her feet, and when called upon by the prosecutrix to help her, the stranger told him to stand back or he would shoot him. After this unknown man had accomplished his fiendish work, he left and the prosecutrix tried to get up; but the defendant grabbed her, pushed her back on the ground, pried her legs apart and got on her person, and she felt his private parts touch her private parts. She then and there became unconscious. This other man, who was doubtless Ben Byers, and who was described by her as a broad-shouldered man with thick arms and hands, had come up from behind the prosecutrix-on the road and was driving a two-horse buggy. "When the prosecutrix regained consciousness she was in the buggy with defendant, and the buggy went into a ditch. This aroused her, and she jumped out of the buggy and ran in the direction of where she heard some1 dogs barking, and presently came to the house of Mr. [70]*70McGovern. As she ran she heard the defendant say that the bnggy was broken all to hell. At Mr. McGovern’s house she asked Sherman McGovern to gO‘ with her to hunt her cape and to go home with her, which he did. As soon as she reached home she told her mother what had occurred, and on the next day (Monday) she and her father made complaint to the prosecuting attorney. The drawers, underskirt and waist of the prosecutrix were offered in evidence. The waist was torn in the back and sleeve, and the buttonholes of the skirt torn apart and the garment otherwise injured: All of said garments were covered with mud and the drawers and underskirts had blood on them. Prosecutrix testified that she resisted the defendant and the other man and fought them as well as she could.

Sherman McGovern testified that he saw the prosecutrix after midnight that night at his father’s house; that her hair hung down around her shoulders; that the back of her dress was stained with dirt and her dress torn at the waist; that she looked scared, was crying and asked for some one to take her home. She stated that she had been to Salem schoolhouse to a supper and was going home with the defendant and that the buggy ran into a ditch and upset. On the way home with her, this witness noticed a two-horse buggy standing in the road. As soon as prosecutrix saw the buggy she said, "There he is again," and stepped behind the witness and started to run. After leaving her at her home, this witness went down to where she said the buggy had run into the ditch. There he found a lady’s handkerchief, which belonged to the prosecutrix; also a lap robe, a buggy whip and a piece of a buggy step. Witness examined the ground and saw buggy tracks leading into the ditch and noticed where they turned around and came back. He found another buggy track and followed it up to near the said “troublesome bridge,” where it led up close to a fence by the side of the road. The track was a fresh one, and the buggy had been drawn by two horses. [71]*71There was timber growing on either side of the road near this bridge. Some fifty or sixty yards from the bridge witness saw a place that “looked like it had been wallered in by humans.” While the prosecutrix made no accusation against any one in the presence of witness, still he thought she had been mistreated some way. The “wallered” place was west of the bridge, and the buggy tracks which he found by the side of the fence were west of that.

Mr. Pishback testified that he and his family attended this festival and returned home between twelve and one o ’clock. WThile he was unhitching his team he heard some one hollow down near the bridge; it was a rather fine voice.

Mrs. Wood, mother of the prosecutrix, testified that her daughter attended the festival in a one-horse buggy in company with her cousin, John Browning, her brother going with them, but riding a pony. The two boys returned about midnight, but her daughter came back with Sherman McGovern at two o’clock.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W. 851, 191 Mo. 62, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sykes-mo-1905.