State v. Wamsley

156 S.E. 75, 109 W. Va. 570, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 119
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1930
Docket6742
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 156 S.E. 75 (State v. Wamsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Wamsley, 156 S.E. 75, 109 W. Va. 570, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 119 (W. Va. 1930).

Opinion

Woods, Judge :

Having been adjudged guilty of the crime of rape and sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary, the defendant brings error.

' From the viewpoint of the State, the evidence is as follows: Nina Paugh, the prosecutrix, was sixteen years of age on the 18th day of April, 1929. On the afternoon of August 16,1929, the prosecutrix, who lived with her father on a farm about seven miles from Elkins, was working with the family in the hayfield, which was near the house. About five o’clock her father and step-mother went to Elkins with their trade. A few minutes thereafter Nina left the smaller children and went to the house to get supper. No other member of the family was there. While at the house, she heard a car approaching and on going out into the yard found Mrs. Leslie Roy and John Corley, who had stopped to return a bucket that Mrs. Roy had borrowed that morning to use picking berries on the mountainside. While she was talking to them, the defendant and his co-indictee, Olaf Martin, drove by in an automobile. After driving on a short distance, they backed their car in front of the gate at the Paugh home just as Mrs. Roy and John Corley were leaving. The defendant spoke to Miss Paugh saying, “You know me, don’t you? ” He then told her he had worked at Caplingers, and Nina remarked, “You’re not the Coberly boy that worked there. ’ ’ He stated he was. He then got out of the ear and asked Miss Paugh to take a car ride. She refused. She then went into the house, and was followed by defendant and the Martin boy. Martin was introduced as Jackson. De *572 fendant sat down, as did Miss Paugh, and Martin stood up. The Martin boy stepped on the outside of the door where he apparently could observe traffic and the approach of any one. Defendant grabbed prosecutrix, threw her on the bed, drew her bloomers “down by her knees,” and forced her to have intercourse with him. She screamed and resisted and fought as best she could. She was frightened with the two' men, one watching for passing traffic, and the other committing the assault. After defendant had accomplished his purpose, prose-cutrix, in an attempt to get from the house and call to those in the field for help, made an excuse to look at the potatoes which were cooking. As she started out of the house, Martin, who was standing by the door grabbed her and started to take her back into the house. Some cars were passing at that time and Wamsley cried, “wait a minute.” This was the last prosecutrix knew for the time being. When she came to herself a few moments later, she was lying on the floor with her head under a chair, with her bloomers stripped from one of her legs and hanging on the other. She staggered out into the yard, vomiting and screaming, and in about five minutes time had notified her cousin, Madge Caplinger, what had oc-cured.

Wamsley and Martin admitted practically all of the statements of Nina, except those relating to the culpable action complained of by her. To this they entered a stout denial. They admitted that they gave assumed names, but sought to place the onus of this on Nina for mistaking Wamsley, early in the meeting at the yard fence, for the Coberly boy “who had worked at Caplinger’s, ’ ’ whom she had known. The boys had been at the Caplinger home a few minutes before they made their appearance at the Paugh home, to see Virginia Vandervort and Mary Harper, two girls who were visiting there, and asked them to attend a carnival in the neighborhood, or go riding with them, but they refused. They said that they went into a house with Nina because she had made an excuse to go in “to look after her supper,” inviting them in, and the boys laughingly replied that they “were hungry,” and followed her in the house; and after sitting there talking with her awhile (a very few minutes), they left. The Caplingers, who *573 were related to Paugh’s, lived about an eighth of a mile from the Paugh home. Madge Caplinger, 22 years old, saw Nina at the creek near her home shortly after the occurrence, in a highly excited and nervous condition and screaming. She ran down to the creek, and Nina, who was crying, threw her arms around her neck. After she told what had happened, Madge asked her if she wanted to go back to her father’s house or go home with her, and she said she would do the latter. She was taken to the Caplinger home and put to bed, where she remained until Wednesday, after which she was taken to Elkins and placed in the hospital where she remained until Sunday. She was examined by Dr. Harper on Friday evening, a few hours after the alleged offense. He found her in a very nervous condition, complaining of a pain in the side of her head and injury to one of her fingers. He found a drop of blood inside of the vaginal orifice. The side of her head and her finger seemed very tender and susceptible to pain. Dr. Perry examined Nina on Monday at the instance of Martin for the purpose of ascertaining whether she was able to attend the preliminary trial of the boys who had been arrested. After taking her temperature and blood pressure, the physician pronounced her unable to attend.

The assignments of error are three: (1) failure to strike out the evidence of the state because it was a joint indictment against defendant and another, charging them with the commission of the crime of rape, which from its nature could not in fact have been committed by but one, and no conspiracy charged therein; (2) the giving of state’s instruction number two; and (3) the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict because the same was not justified by the evidence.

The first point of error raises a question that is novel. No demurrer was made to the indictment. The question was raised at the conclusion of the state’s evidence by a motion to strike it from the consideration of the jury. At common law persons present aiding and abetting, where rape is a felony, are principals equal in guilt with the direct perpetrator. Bish. Crim. Law (9th Ed.) see. 1135. Mr. Bishop further says in Crim. Proc., see. 6(a) •. “It is not ill to charge the principal of the second degree with what he cannot do alone, where he *574 can incur the legal guilt by aiding the principal of the first degree; as, that a man and woman, two defendants, ravished another woman. Yet practically it would be better to put the allegation, in a case of this sort, according to the outward fact, not the legal; since then certainly the jury would not be perplexed.” But in the case at bar it is possible for either one of the parties charged to be guilty of the act charged. All persons who were present aiding and abetting the commission of the fact are principals in the second degree at common law and may be charged in the indictment as having done the act. 1 Russel on Crimes, pp. 26-29. The same author says in the 7th English edition, at page 114: “Where several are present and abet a fact, an indictment may lay it generally as done by all, or specially, as done by one and abetted by the rest. Or if the punishment for principals in the first and second degrees is the same, all may be indicted as principals in the first degree. ’ ’ Our statute makes provision for the punishment of the principal of the second degree the same as if he were principal in the first degree. Code, chapter 152, section 6.

The Supreme Court of Missouri was met with a ease, such as we have here, in State v. Harris, 150 Mo. 56. In that case three defendants were indicted jointly for rape.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 S.E. 75, 109 W. Va. 570, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wamsley-wva-1930.