State v. Trego

138 P. 1124, 25 Idaho 625, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 19
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 138 P. 1124 (State v. Trego) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Trego, 138 P. 1124, 25 Idaho 625, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 19 (Idaho 1914).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, J.

The defendant, who is appellant here, was informed against upon a charge of statutory rape and convicted and sentenced to a term in the state penitentiary from five to twenty-five years. A motion for a new trial was overruled and this appeal is from the judgment and from the order denying a new trial. The specifications of error go to the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, the admission and rejection of certain evidence and the refusal to give a certain instruction.

The following facts appear from the record: The prosecutrix at the time said crime is alleged to have been committed was in her 16th year of age and would have been sixteen on the following 15th of April, and was in her 17th year at the time of the trial in June, 1913. In 1910 the prosecutrix was living with her mother and sister in Boise, her father being dead. They were occupying a small house with another family consisting of the husband and wife and three children. It came to the knowledge of the probation officers that the [629]*629place where the prosecutrix was living was not a proper place in which to bring up children, and the prosecutrix was taken before the probate judge of Ada county, and upon the showing made there was remanded by Probate Judge Brown to the custody and care of the Children’s Home Finding Society in Boise. This occurred in 1910, about three months before the prosecutrix became thirteen years of age.

The defendant and his wife, who lived in Blackfoot, Idaho, having no children, were desirous of having a young person in their home for whom they could care and educate, and they concluded to apply to the Children’s Home Finding and Aid Society of Idaho (which will hereafter be referred to as the Children’s Home) to see if they could find a young girl to take into their home for the purposes above mentioned. Some correspondence or communications were had between them and the persons in charge of the Home which ultimately resulted in the defendant’s going to the Home, and after looking the children over he concluded that the prosecutrix would be a proper person for him to take to his home and care for and educate. He returned to his home in Blackfoot and discussed the matter with his wife, with the result that they concluded to take her into their family and rear and educate her. At that time the prosecutrix was in poor health, having a spinal disease which affected her head, and at times had very severe headaches. At the time the defendant was at the Children’s Home, above referred to, the disease with which the girl was afflicted was discussed by the superintendent of the Home and the defendant, and the conclusion reached by them was that with proper care she would recover from said disease and become strong and healthy. After the defendant had gone over the matter with his wife in regard to taking the girl into their home, they so notified those in charge of the Children’s Home, and about the last week in April, 1910, an attendant from said Home took the girl to Pocatello, or Blackfoot, and delivered her to the Tregos and she entered their home.

The record shows that owing to the physical condition of the girl and the spells of sickness that she was having, the [630]*630Tregos prepared a cot or bed in the room in which they slept for the girl, and that during the first year she was with them she frequently had severe attacks of the headache, which occasioned the Tregos some worry and considerable' care. The girl continued to sleep in the bedroom occupied by the defendant and his wife for about one year, or until April, 1911, about the time she became fourteen years of age, when a separate room was prepared for her, in which she slept thereafter.

The Tregos during this time cared for the girl, clothed her, sent her to school, had her given music lessons, and cared for her generally as they would have their own child. This condition of things continued up until 1912, when the girl was in her fifteenth year. The record shows that she became restive of the authority exercised over her by the Tregos and went to public dances and other places about town contrary to the wishes and requests of the Tregos, and sometime in 1912 the defendant went to a publie dance where the girl had gone against their directions and took her home. This apparently incensed the girl very much and the Tregos were worried about her conduct and finally came to the conclusion that she was a disappointment to them, in that she would not obey them and was not inclined to take the musical and other education which they so much desired to give her. They concluded finally that.they would have the authorities at said Children’s Home take charge of the girl and relieve them of any further responsibility in that regard, and the superintendent of the Home visited them and the matter was placed before him. The Tregos informed him that the girl had not made good and that they would have to be relieved of her. One of the attendants of the Children’s Home, the placing agent, also visited the Tregos and went over the matter with them. This occurred in March, 1913, and the conclusion was reached by said attendant and the Tregos that they would keep the girl until the school year of 1913 closed and then the authorities of the Children’s Home should take charge of her.

[631]*631It appears that said attendant from the Home also went over the matter with the girl, who promised to change her conduct.

Said attendant first visited the Trego home on March 11, 1913, and on the trial testified as follows: “On my first visit to the Trego home, we talked about Nellie not fitting into the Trego home, and perhaps at some indefinite time in the future we might move her. I was there at Mr. Trego’s, and had a conversation with Mr. Trego chiefly, in which we decided, he decided, that Nellie should — that I should take Nellie away at such time as we would agree upon.” This witness again visited the Trego home on the 17th of April, 1913, and again on the 19th of the same month. It was finally concluded that the girl could not remain until the close -of the school year of 1913, and on the 23d of April, 1913, the defendant wired the Children’s Home at Boise to send someone to take her away, and on the 28th she was returned to the Children’s Home at Boise.

It appears from the record that said attendant had remonstrated with the prosecutrix in regard to her conduct and that she promised to do better, and on the visit of April 19th had a conversation with the girl, concerning which she testified as follows: “I persisted in asking Nellie why she didn’t carry out the line of conduct she and I had agreed upon the previous visit and why she was disinterested in her work, and after persisting she said she didn’t like Mr. Trego. I insisted upon knowing, since I understood that Mr. and Mrs. Trego had been very kind to her, .... and after long questioning she told me that he touched her improperly and where. After stating that he had touched her in a manner that was not proper, I asked her if he had had intercourse. She said he had tried. I insisted upon knowing whether there had been intercourse, and she persisted always in saying he had tried but she prevented him .... and after all of that she still insisted that it was true of the attempts but that he had attempted only when she would be in his room. ’ ’

The evidence clearly shows that the prosecutrix had admitted to the witness that she had not been doing as she ought [632]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 P. 1124, 25 Idaho 625, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-trego-idaho-1914.