State v. Whittinghill

163 P.2d 342, 109 Utah 48, 1945 Utah LEXIS 159
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1945
DocketNo. 6793.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 163 P.2d 342 (State v. Whittinghill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Whittinghill, 163 P.2d 342, 109 Utah 48, 1945 Utah LEXIS 159 (Utah 1945).

Opinions

TURNER, Justice.

Appellant was charged and convicted of the crime of assault with intent to commit rape. Utah Code 1943, 103-7-7. This is an appeal from the judgment pronounced after the return of the verdict. The appeal is based upon alleged errors of the trial court in refusing to grant a motion for dismissal and a motion for a new trial. The primary contention of appellant is that the evidence in support of the charge is insufficient; that for want of sufficient evidence to prove intent to rape, the case should have been dismissed.

The following statutory grounds were set forth in appellant’s motion for a new trial: That the court misdirected the jury in matters of law and erred in decisions of law arising during the course of the trial; that it committed and allowed acts to be committed in the cause prejudicial to the substantial rights of the defendant; and that the *49 verdict is contrary to law and the evidence adduced at the trial.

In order to pass upon the problems 1 of this appeal, we shall examine the record to determine whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment and we shall also decide whether, in the light of the entire record, the defendant was given a fair and impartial trial.

The facts are substantially as follows with quoted excerpts from pertinent testimony: The prosecutrix at the time of the alleged assault was employed as a stenographer at Hill Field, which is located a few miles south of Ogden, Utah. On the morning of the alleged offense, the young woman overslept and missed her ride to work. She rushed to the business center of Ogden to catch a regular bus but arrived too late. She then stood in front of the Ben Lomond Hotel and while there saw the defendant in his cab. He spoke to her and she told him she wanted to go to Hill Field but did not have the money for a cab. At this time two army officers asked the defendant to drive them in his taxicab to the Union Station and defendant invited the young woman to go with him, stating that he might pick up a fare there for Hill Field. The young woman got into the front seat and rode with the defendant. At the depot she left the taxi to mail some letters and, at defendant’s request, purchased some cigarettes for him.

After she returned'to the cab, the two engaged in conversation. The prosecutrix testified that she then told defendant that she had $2 which she would give him, that she gave him her address and promised to pay him the balance on payday. The defendant left the cab for a moment and telephoned, re-entered the cab and then drove in the direction of Hill Field. When they arrived at the top of the hill, defendant drove off the highway where there were some trees and stopped the cab. She then testified that he asked her to come over and started to get rough:

“He pulled up my dresses and started to feeling around and everything — and when he found I wasn’t well he swore terrible, and started the car and went home. But I guess that is all that saved me.”

*50 She was asked:

“Where were your legs bruised and that? A. Well right here on my knee — and along up here — and then I had grease all over my dress, and it was a sight.”

The defendant, in returning to Ogden, stopped along the highway at a taxi telephone and then drove to Washington Terrace where he picked up a man passenger. He then drove to the Union Depot, the prosecutrix remaining with him in the front seat. She testified in substance that she knew he would go back into town and as it was not yet nine o’clock she could catch the next bus for Hill Field. Defendant and the prosecutrix engaged in conversation after taking the man passenger to the depot. She left the cab at 23rd Street, walking over to 25th Street where she took the bus for Hill Field. After arriving at Hill Field, she told her supervisor her story and about a half hour later she was driven to Ogden by a Mr. Bray and at Ogden made her complaint against the defendant.

On cross-examination the young woman, testified that when they were stopped at the top of the hill the defendant asked her to slide over and that he then started putting his arms around her; that she got out of the cab a couple of times but that defendant got out on the other side of the car, came around and put her back in. She admitted that he never struck her.

After the examination of the prosecutrix by the district attorney, the trial judge conducted a lengthy examination of the witness and solicited some additional testimony. The judge asked:

“Did he do anything with reference to his trousers?”

She answered:

“Well, I think he unbuttoned his pants but I am not sure of anything else.”

Other phases of this examination by the trial judge will be discussed later in this opinion.

*51 Mr. Bray, who drove prosecutrix from Hill Field to Ogden, testfied that she was nervous and had bruises and scratches on her left leg; that he saw nothing out of the way with her dress.

The defendant testified in his own behalf. His testimony is much the same as that of the prosecutrix, except as to conversations and actions relative to the alleged assault and matters going to prove or disprove criminal intent. Regarding these he testified in substance that after first going to the depot the young woman said she did not have any money but she could be nice to him if she wanted to and that he replied:

“Alright, let’s go.”

He said:

“I figured she would do it, so out by the Apollo Club I pulled off the road”

and there he started to put his arm around her and she said she would make plenty of trouble for him if he did not take her back to town right then; that he started back to town and at Riverdale used the taxi ’phone and then drove from there to Washington Terrace; that she continued to ride with him and rode several miles away from Ogden; that at Washington Terrace he picked up a man and drove him to the Union Depot in Ogden; that he then drove to Pingree Street; that she was keeping the score sheet for him during this time; that when he stopped at Pingree Street she got out and in a friendly way told him she thought she would like to drive cab; that from where she left him it was just two blocks to the bus depot.

The defendant, in substance, testified that prosecutrix never made any attempt to get out of his cab until she got out there in Ogden; that when they were stopped out on the hill he told her if that was the way she thought she was going to get a free trip she could go back to Ogden. He testified that he did not attempt to have sexual intercourse with her, but that he had intended to have sexual inter *52 course with her if she had been willing and had given her consent.

The crime of “assault with intent to commit rape” is a serious offense and warrants an indictment or information only after a careful investigation of the facts by an enforcement officer and proper consideration by the prosecutor.

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Bluebook (online)
163 P.2d 342, 109 Utah 48, 1945 Utah LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-whittinghill-utah-1945.