The People v. Olroyd

166 N.E. 461, 335 Ill. 61
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1929
DocketNo. 18639. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 166 N.E. 461 (The People v. Olroyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Olroyd, 166 N.E. 461, 335 Ill. 61 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Clifford Olroyd, plaintiff in error, was found guilty of rape by a jury in the circuit court of Cass county and his punishment was fixed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of eleven years. Judgment and sentence were entered on the verdict, and he has sued out this writ of error for a review of the record.

The indictment contains six counts. The first four counts charge that plaintiff in error forcibly raped Marion Baldwin, naming the date. The charging part of the fifth count is that “one Clifford Olroyd, a male person over the age of seventeen years, late of said county and State aforesaid, then and there did feloniously and unlawfully carnally know and abuse the said Marion Baldwin, and the said Marion Baldwin not his wife and then and there an unmarried female under the age of sixteen years,” etc. The sixth count charges that Clifford Olroyd, “a male person over the age of seventeen years, late of said county and State aforesaid, without force, then and there did feloniously and unlawfully have carnal knowledge of the person of the said Marion Baldwin, not his wife, then and there an unmarried female under the age of sixteen years, to-wit, of the age of thirteen years,” etc. At the conclusion of the evidence for the People the State’s attorney entered a nolle prosequi as to the first four counts, and by their verdict the jury found plaintiff in error guilty as charged in the fifth and sixth counts of the indictment. It is contended by plaintiff in error that these counts are defective. The contention is that these last two counts do not allege in positive language that plaintiff in error was over the age of seventeen years and that complaining witness was not his wife and was a female person under the age of sixteen years.

The statute defining statutory rape is in this language: “Every male person of the age of seventeen years and upwards who shall have carnal knowledge of any female person under the age of sixteen years and not his wife, either with or without her consent, shall be adjudged to be guilty of the crime of rape: Provided, that in case the said parties shall be legally married to each other before conviction, any legal proceedings shall abate.” (Laws of 1905, p. 193.)

An indictment for rape containing substantially the same character of defects and framed under the law of 1887 was held good and sufficient in the case of Johnson v. People, 202 Ill. 53. Since the indictment in this case states the offense substantially in the language of the statute of 1905, which is now in force, and the defendant was thereby informed of the nature of the charge against him, the objection to the indictment cannot be sustained. Johnson v. People, supra; People v. Westerdahl, 316 Ill. 86.

For the prosecution Marion Baldwin testified substantially as follows: At the time the offense against her was committed she lived with her parents in Cass county, about five miles south of the city of Virginia, on a farm adjoining the one on which plaintiff in error resided with his grandmother, Elizabeth Olroyd. She was thirteen years old on July 9, 1926. On the evening of July 19, 1926, she met plaintiff in error about 9 :oo o’clock at “the corner” by his previous request and rode with him in his automobile to the home of his grandmother, where he lived. His home is about a mile from her home. It took about ten minutes to drive to his home and there was no one else there when they arrived. After they had spent some time in the living room, talking and looking at pictures, they went into the bed-room and there had sexual intercourse about 10:30 o’clock P. M. After that happened she rode with plaintiff in error to the home of Matt Spicer to get plaintiff in error’s grandmother and Mary Elliott. She and plaintiff in error did not go into the Spicer home. When they got to Spicer’s place they called Mrs. Olroyd and Mary Elliott by blowing the horn and they came out and got into the car. They then immediately drove to Mrs. Olroyd’s home. Plaintiff in error then took her (witness) to the “corner” and she got home about 1 :oo o’clock. Her parents did not know that she was away from home that night. She got away from home that night by going through the back door. The only persons that she saw at Spicer’s home on that night was plaintiff in error’s grandmother and Mary Elliott. The only time that she ever had sexual intercourse with plaintiff in error occurred on that night. She was with him a couple of times before that night and once afterwards. She never had sexual intercourse with any other man. She was not the wife of plaintiff in error and was not married to anyone. The act of intercourse with plaintiff in error occurred in the county of Cass and State of Illinois, and she is positive that it occurred on Monday, July 19, 1926. Clifford Olroyd will be twenty-one years old October 2, 1927, according to the information he gave her.

The testimony of Everett E. Bacon, for the State, is in substance the following: He lived about two and one-half or three miles from the Olroyds and Baldwins in 1927. He had been acquainted with Clifford Olroyd about thirteen years and is also acquainted with Marion Baldwin. He had a conversation with plaintiff in error at the post-office in the spring of 1927, in which he told the witness that he had sexual intercourse with Marion and that he had been with her several times in the last year before that happened. He told the witness that he was willing to do his part. He would take the girl and marry her, and that was all he would do. Witness could not tell exactly when this conversation with plaintiff in error occurred, but that it was on Saturday night, while Marion was in the hospital after the child was born.

Myrtle E. Baldwin, mother of the prosecuting witness, testified that on the afternoon of July 19, 1926, she, her husband and two daughters were going home. They had been at a neighbor’s house, where there was a threshing machine, and they stopped at plaintiff in error’s home. While there she talked to Mrs. Olroyd, and plaintiff in error stood on the running-board of the car and talked to them all. There was no whispered conversation between him and Marion, her daughter. They left Olroyd’s for home, did the housework and went to bed. Marion went to bed and witness did not see her again that night. If Marion left the house that night witness did not know it. There was nothing unusual about Marion’s actions and she seemed to be in good health. Plaintiff in error had been at her home, but she would not call his coming there any manifestation that he was visiting Marion. She did not know that Marion was in the habit of meeting him. She never gave her consent for Marion to meet him. She further testified that Marion’s baby was born in Springfield, at the hospital, on May 15, 1927, and that the child is still living.

Floyd Baldwin, father of Marion, testified that he did not know whether his daughter left the house on the night of July 19, 1926. He could not recall that date or any events that occurred on that date.

Plaintiff in error did not testify. Four witnesses, Freda Moss, grand-daughter of Elizabeth Olroyd, Rose Elliott, mother of Mary Elliott, Elizabeth Olroyd, grandmother of plaintiff in error, and Mary Elliott, testified that they and plaintiff in error were in Jacksonville, Illinois, on the evening of July 19, 1926. They left there about midnight and got back to the Olroyd place about 11 :oo o’clock on the morning of July 20, 1926.

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Bluebook (online)
166 N.E. 461, 335 Ill. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-olroyd-ill-1929.