Territory v. Edie

6 N.M. 555, 6 Gild. 555
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1892
DocketNo. 482
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 6 N.M. 555 (Territory v. Edie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory v. Edie, 6 N.M. 555, 6 Gild. 555 (N.M. 1892).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

V. P. Edie was indicted for rape at the March term, 1891, of the district court for Bernalillo county; pleaded not guilty; was tried, convicted, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the period of five years. A motion for a new trial was made and denied, and the defendant appealed from the judgment. The indictment was drawn under the provisions of section 1, chapter 24, Laws, 1887, and contains two counts. The first count charges that the crime was committed by forcibly overcoming the resistance of the prosecutrix; and the second that it was committed by administering wine, an intoxicating narcotic, whereby, from stupor and weakness, the victim was prevented from resisting the force used by the defendant to accomplish his purpose. The section of the statute upon which the indictment is founded reads: “Section 1. That a person perpetrating rape upon, or an act of sexual intercourse with, a female, when the female is under the age of fourteen years, or, when over fourteen years of age, through idiocy, imbecility, or any unsoundness of mind, either temporary or permanent, she is incapable of giving consent, or when her resistance is prevented by stupor or by weakness produced by an intoxicating narcotic or anesthetic agent administered by or with the privity of the. defendant, is punishable by imprisonment for not less than five years, nor more than twenty years.” The grounds of error upon which appellant relies for a reversal are — First, misdirections given by the court to the jury; second, the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict; third, irregularities committed by jury in allowing a court bailiff to draw their verdict.

rape: evidence: instructions. 1. There was no evidence received during the trial tending to show that the prosecuting witness, “through idiocy, imbecility, or unsoundness 0£ min(^ either temporary or permanent,” was incapable of giving consent. The court, in its instructions, read the entire section above set out to the jury. This appellant claims was erroneous, as it had a tendency to impress upon the minds of the jurors the idea that it was their provincé to determine, from the mere appearance of the prosecuting witness upon the stand, whether she was, “through idiocy, imbecility,” etc., incapable of giving consent, in the absence of any evidence favoring the existence of such a state of facts. The contention óf the appellant would be meritorious if the section read embraced several distinct offenses; but it does not. It merely defines the various means by which the same offense may be committed. Besides, the court afterward fully explained to the jury the law governing the commission of the crime as defined in the section. And in such case it is not error for the court to read to the jury all the section of the statute in pursuance of which the indictment is drawn. Hobbs v. State, 7 Tex. App. 117.

Evidence: instructions. Appellant further insists that the court' erred in permitting the case to be submitted to the jury upon the second count, over his objection, because he contends there was a total failure of proof to support that count. There was evidence that the defendant had importuned the prosecutrix to drink wine a short time before the commission of the alleged offense, and that she had taken the wine three or four times. She also testified that it made her dizzy: “It made me dizzy; for three or four days I was out of my head.” To what extent the prosecutrix, a girl of fifteen years of age, was affected by the use of the wine, was a question of fact to be determined by the jury, from all the evidence before them; and we see no error in the court’s submitting that count to them upon such evidence, and in instructing them upon the degree of stupor, or the extent of the weakness, essential for the territory to prove, in order to warrant a conviction under that count.

Indictment: evidence: instructions. The defendant insists that the court erred in giving instructions to the jury in reference to threats of personal violence, on the ground that there was no evidence of such threats being used before the commis-, sion of the act; “and. that the idea embodied in the charge was calculated to lead the jury to believe that threats of personal violence, made subsequent to the act of intercourse, would be sufficient to excuse the prosecutrix from making the utmost resistance at the time the act was committed.” The court’s charge upon this point is, omitting the name of the female, as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the de- * , , fendant had sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix, although she did not make the utmost physical resistance of which she was capable to prevent such intercourse, provided the jury believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant threatened to use force and do her great bodily injury in case she did not submit, and that she did submit to sexual intercourse through fear that the defendant would do her great bodily injury.” The prosecutrix had testified: “When he got to his place, I wanted to go home; but he would not let me go home. He just pulled me in. He says, ‘I have to go in;’ arid I told him that I did not want to go in. I told him I wanted to go home. He says, ‘No; you won’t.’ He says, ‘I won’t let you go home.’ Then he pulled me in, and locked the doors, and would not let me go out.” The indictment in neither count contains any charge of threats, but the first count distinctly charges that the defendant violently and feloniously made an assault upon the prosecutrix, “and her, the said -, then and there violently, and against her will, and by forcibly overcoming her resistance, feloniously did ravish and carnally know.” Threats may be an element of force, and may be express or implied, and are a matter of proof not always necessary to be pleaded. In the light of all the evidence in this case, it appears impossible to see how this instruction could have injured the defendant.

The chief question for determination under the first count was, did the defendant forcibly overcome the resistance of the prosecutrix. The substance of the testimony upon this point is simple and direct: On the twenty-seventh of November, 1890, at Albuquerque, about 3 o’clock in the afternoon, the defendant took the prosecutrix into hi§ buggy, and drove about from place to place, stopping at several places where he obtained wine, which he gave the girl to drink. About dark he drove up to his place of business, which contained his private bedroom. Upon getting out of the buggy, he took her by the arm, and pulled her into the bedroom, locked the door, threw her upon the bed, and, by superior force, ravished her. That thereafter he left the room, locked the door behind him, and, after a short absence, returned with oysters and wine, which he gave her to eat and drink. After this the defendant undressed and went to bed, and asked the girl to do likewise. She refused, and he then pulled a pistol, and, saying he would kill her, fired and shot her through the hand. He kept her in his room all night, and in the early morning turned her out, and, giving her $1.20, told her to go over to old town on the street car, and that if anyone asked her any questions to say that a Mexican had shot her, and that if she told anyone what he had done to her he would kill her. She further testified that similar threats had been used at different times during the' evening, before this shooting took place.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 N.M. 555, 6 Gild. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-edie-nm-1892.