Thomas v. State

91 S.E. 247, 19 Ga. App. 104, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 23, 1917
Docket6188
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 S.E. 247 (Thomas v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. State, 91 S.E. 247, 19 Ga. App. 104, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 2 (Ga. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Wade, C. J.

It is unnecessary to discuss any ground of the motion for a new trial except the particular ground upon which the lower court is reversed; and no extended discussion of that ground is required, in view of the ruling made by the Supreme Court upon the abstract question decided by that court in this case, and left for application by the Court of Appeals.

The precise question submitted to the Supreme Court, with the answer made thereto by a majority of that court, was as follows: "In the trial of a case of seduction, was the following charge to the jury error because it tended to discredit in the minds of the jury the defense interposed by the prisoner that the woman he was charged with seducing was not a virtuous female, or because it contained an intimation by the court that the facts sought to be proved by the defendant constituted no lawful defense, .but amounted only to an effort on his part to Tlaeken and blackball the character of his alleged victim;’ or was this language of the [107]*107court calculated to raise in the minds of the jury such a prejudice against the defendant and his defense as to require the setting aside of the verdict of guilty: ‘The proof of lascivious indulgences and wanton dalliances, with other evidence short of direct proof of the overt act, may authorize the jury to infer actual guilt' of the illicit act; but it is not a lawful defense for the accused to blacken or blackball the character of his alleged victim by proving loose declarations or showing imprudent or immodest conduct on the part of the woman he is accused of seducing’? The Court of Appeals is instructed that the excerpt from the charge quoted in the above question is erroneous for the reasons stated; but whether the error was cured or the evidence was such as to avoid the necessity of a new trial depends upon an entire review of the case, which can be done only by the Court of Appeals.”

It will appear, from an examination of the foregoing question and answer, that the Supreme Court ruled upon the abstract point involved, and held definitely “that the excerpt from the charge quoted in the above question is erroneous for the reasons stated,” which includes all the reasons stated or suggested in the question; but left it open for this court to determine whether or not the error was cured elsewhere in the charge, or whether the evidence as a whole was such as to avoid the necessity of a new trial on account of this error—or in other words, whether under a review of the entire case the error was harmful to the accused.

Elsewhere the court charged the -jury as follows: “A virtuous unmarried female in the meaning of the law is one who at the time of the alleged seduction has never previously had unlawful sexual intercourse with a man. An unmarried female who is a virgin is virtuous, but if she with her consent unlawfully parted with her virginity she is not virtuous. The test by which a jury are to determine whether the female alleged to have been seduced was virtuous at the time of the alleged seduction is physical purity and.not moral chastity. In the present case you are to consider and determine whether or not Euby Green [the woman alleged to have been seduced] had parted with her virginity, that is, whether she had had sexual intercourse with any man prior to the alleged seduction.” The court further charged that “The presumption of the law in this case is that Euby Green prior to the date of the alleged seduction by the defendant was a virtuous woman. The [108]*108presumption may be overcome by evidence, either direct or circumstantial. In determining whether or not the prosecutrix, Miss Euby Green, was or was not virtuous prior to the date of the alleged seduction, you may consider any evidence, direct or circumstantial, which shows the want of previous chastity, either mental or physical, a debauched mind, lewd or lascivious conduct anterior to the date of the alleged seduction, if such be shown by the evidence.”

While the above-quoted excerpts in a general" way authorized the jury to consider any evidence showing immodest, lewd, or lascivious conduct on the part of the prosecutrix in determining whether or not she was in fact, at the time of the alleged seduction, a physically chaste woman, the court followed up these general references to the circumstantial evidence which the jury might consider in arriving at such a conclusion (in the absence of direct proof of physical unchastity on her part before the time of the alleged seduction), with the following specific instruction directly relating to what was virtually the only defense interposed by the accused, to wit: “The proof of lascivious indulgences and wanton dalliances with other evidence short of direct proof of the overt act may authorize the jury to infer actual guilt of the illicit act, but it is not a lawful defense for the accused to Macicen or blaclcball the character of his alleged victim by proving loose declarations or showing impi'udent or immodest conduct on the part of the woman he is accused of seducing. [Italics ours.] He must go further and prove that she had lost her personal chastity prior to his alleged seduction of her, or he must prove such facts as, under the law, would raise a violent [italics ours] presumption that she had done so; such facts as would, under the law, authorize the jury to find that she had had sexual intercourse with a man before the alleged seduction.”

The previous references by the court to evidence which might tend to show immodest, lewd, or lascivious conduct on the part of the prosecutrix anterior to the date of the alleged seduction were general in their nature, as was also the particular instruction quoted above, that “proof of' lascivious indulgences and wanton dalliances with other evidence short of direct proof of the overt act may authorize the jury to infer actual guilt of the illicit act;” whereas the further instruction, that “it is not a lawful defense for [109]*109the accused to blacken or blackball the character of his alleged victim by proving alleged loose declarations on the part of the woman he is accused of seducing,” tended to impress upon the jury that all the evidence offered by the accused for the purpose of showing by inference that the prosecutrix was, prior to the date of the alleged seduction, a woman of lewd character, constituted no defense which would itself authorize the jury to acquit the accused, even should they arrive at the conclusion, from any evidence of immodest or lascivious conduct, that she was not physically chaste when the alleged crime was committed. Not only did the charge as a whole fail to correct the error contained in this excerpt, but in the same connection the court further said that the defendant "must go further and prove that she had lost her personal chastity prior to his alleged seduction of her, or he must prove such facts as, under the law, would raise a violent presumption that she had done so; such facts as would under the law authorize the jury to find that she had had sexual intercourse with a man before the alleged seduction.” The jury were not only advised in effect that none of the evidence introduced by the accused, to sustain the real defense interposed by him (that the woman was not at the time of the alleged seduction a virtuous unmarried female, because of behavior on her part which, measured by the ordinary rules of human conduct and experience, definitely authorized the contrary inference), made out a lawful defense,

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Kiser v. State
153 S.E. 620 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1930)
Jones v. Bank of Powder Springs
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Miller v. State
107 S.E. 784 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1921)
Ledford v. State
91 S.E. 924 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.E. 247, 19 Ga. App. 104, 1917 Ga. App. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-state-gactapp-1917.