State v. Williams

103 P. 250, 36 Utah 273, 1909 Utah LEXIS 69
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1909
DocketNo. 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 103 P. 250 (State v. Williams) 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. Williams, 103 P. 250, 36 Utah 273, 1909 Utah LEXIS 69 (Utah 1909).

Opinion

McCAETY, J.

The defendant was informed against in the Fourth Judicial District Court, sitting at Provo, Utah, for the crime of rape alleged to have been committed on a female child under thirteen years of age. The defendant was tried, found guilty of an assault with intent to commit rape, and sentenced to serve a term of seven years in the state prison. To reverse the judgment of conviction, the defendant has appealed to- this court.

The record shows that the crime was committed, if committed at all, at defendant’s residence in Provo City, Utah, about the middle of August, 1905. The child on whom the alleged assault was committed first made complaint of [275]*275tbe outrage about tbe first of tbe year 1908, nearly three years after it occurred. Tbe defendant at tbe time of tbe alleged assault was seventy years of age, and bad lived in Provo for more than fifty years. He was a man of good character, and up' to tbe time of this trouble bis reputation for chastity and virtue was good. He owned and lived in a bouse of two rooms in tbe residence district of Provo City, and in close proximity of homes and residences of other people. He was a widower; bis' wife having died about three years prior to tbe alleged assault. He lived alone in one room and did bis own housework. Tbe other room be rented to university students during tbe school seasons. Sometimes it was occupied by lady students and at other times by male students. At tbe time of tbe alleged assault school was closed for tbe season, and this extra room was unoccupied. Tbe principal witnesses against tbe defendant were tbe prosecutrix, who, at tbe time tbe alleged crime was committed, was ten years of age, and another little girl who was twelve years of age. They testified that they went to tbe defendant’s home at about two o’clock p. m. on tbe afternoon of tbe day on which it was claimed that tbe crime was committed, and "were admitted into tbe bouse by defendant; that, on entering tbe room/in which defendant was living, they went and sat down on tbe side of tbe bed, and tbe defendant asked tbe prosecutrix if be “could play with her,” and, on receiving an affirmative answer, be pushed her over on tbe bed, and bad sexual intercourse with her; that be was about five minutes completing tbe act; that the other little girl got off tbe bed and sat in a chair until defendant got through with bis criminal assault on the-complaining witness; that then defendant bad criminal relations with tbe other little girl also; that be then gave each of them a small sum of money, one ten -and tbe other twenty-five cents, and they immediately thereafter left tbe bouse; that they were at defendant’s bouse about twenty-five minutes on that occasion. Tbe prosecutrix also testified that this was the first time she had ever met defendant and tbe first time she was ever at bis home. She further [276]*276testified that defendant’s sexual organ penetrated her, but not far enough to> cause her any pain. On cross-examination she testified that at the preliminary examination in which defendant was bound over to answer to' the district court she was called as a witness, and testified that there was no penetration and in answer to the following question, “While Mr. Williams was laying on you in the manner you described, what, if anything did you feel on your legs and upon your private parts,” said, “I didn’t feel anything.” She also testified that at the preliminary hearing questions were put to her and she answered as follows: “Q. But you are sure that the old gentleman never had his private parts in your private parts ? A. Yes, sir. Q. You are sure of that — you never felt it, did you? A. No, sir. Q. You are sure of that? A. Yes, sir.” The other girl testified that her mother on several occasions prior to the alleged assault had sent her to defendant’s home with bread, and that the only time “anything happened” was when she went to defendant’s home with the prosecutrix on the occasion referred to. In reply to the question, “You only went there once that anything happened,” she answered, “Yes, sir. I went there once or twice after that. He gave us money, but nothing happened.” Her testimony was also impeached by showing that before the trial she had stated to parties that no such occurrence — criminal conduct on the part of the defendant — such as she testified to at the trial had ever taken place. She, however, endeavored to reconcile her testimony and her former statements by saying that she meant that nothing of the kind had taken place within the two years next preceding the time of the filing of the information upon which defendant was tried. She also admitted that in the year 1904, a year prior to the alleged assault, she falsely stated to a party whom she met on the street that she had just come from defendant’s home, and that he had murdered a little girl — a friend of hers — and rolled the body up in some bedding. Several physicians and surgeons of high professional standing were called as witnesses, and testified that it would be impossible for a man [277]*277of mature years to have sexual relations, or attempt to bave such relations, with a female child of the age of ten years or under (in the manner in which the evidence introduced by the state shows the crime in question was accomplished), “without causing great physical pain and injury to the sexual ^organs of such female.”

From the record it appears that while the prosecutrix was upon the witness stand, and after she had testified to the facts and circumstances leading up to and surrounding 1 the alleged assault upon her by the defendant and to what he said and did immediately thereafter, questions were ashed by the district attorney and answered by the witness as follows: “Q. Did he say anything about any other girl? A. Why, he said that there were some girls from the First ward came up that he would do the same thing. Q. Said what? A. Said there were soma girls from the First ward that came up quite a bit, and he would do the same thing to them that he done to - (naming the girl who was with the complaining witness at the time of the assault) and I.” Timely objections were made by the defense to this evidence on the grounds that it was immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent. We think the admission of this testimony was error. At the time it is claimed this statement was made by defendant concerning his alleged criminal relations with other girls the crime for which he was on trial had been committed, and there was nothing left to be done on his part to complete it. The statement that he had committed like crimes with other girls in no way tended to elucidate or explain the alleged assault upon the complaining witness. It was a narrative or recital of transactions which were neither directly nor remotely connected with the crime under consideration. The crimes thus sought to be proved were committed on other parties at other times, and were entirely distinct and separate from the specific crime charged in the information, and formed no link in the chain of events leading up to and surrounding the offense, and did not tend in the remotest degree to prove [278]*278any fact whatever material to the issue. In fact, it iá not claimed that there was any logical connection between the crime charged and those sought to be proved by this alleged-statement of defendant, nor that proof of these other crimes tended to establish the one for which he was on trial. We can conceive of no- purpose for which this evidence was introduced, unless it was to show a general disposition on the part of defendant to commit crimes of that character, and thereby increase the probability that he committed the one charged in this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 P. 250, 36 Utah 273, 1909 Utah LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-utah-1909.