Thompson v. State

86 So. 871, 124 Miss. 463
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1920
DocketNo. 21516
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 86 So. 871 (Thompson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. State, 86 So. 871, 124 Miss. 463 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was indicted and convicted of an assault upon an Assyrian girl., a female of previous chaste character, with'the willful and felonious intention to. ravish and carnally know the said female, and was convicted and sentenced to the pen for the term of his natural life, from Avliich sentence this appeal is prosecuted.'

It is assigned for error that the court erred in refusing a peremptory instruction for the appellant because the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict. Second, it is assigned for error that the court erred in instructing the jury orally as to their verdict, and also that the judgment rendered is insufficient and void.

[470]*470The prosecutrix was living with her father in the suburbs of the city of Meridian. She had only been in the United States about three months and could not speak the English language with any degree of proficiency, and her evidence was taken by the aid of an interpreter. She testified that on the morning of the day in question her father and the rest of the family left the home between 9 and 10 o’clock in the morning to attend a service at a church; that in going they passed the house of the appellant, which was on the road between the home of the prosecutrix and the church, and shortly after the family left the appellant came to the house and bought some milk, which was delivered to him and for which he paid and then took his departure; that she was alone at home from that time until the assault and sat upon the front gallery facing the public road in a swing. That some time betAveen 11 and 12 o’clock in the morning she heard a knocking or tapping on the wall inside the house and Avent into the house to ascertain what it was, but saw nothing; that she continued to hear a tapping noise in the house at intervals until ■about thirty minutes after the first tapping when she heard a loud noise as though a Bucket had turned over; that she then went through the house to the dining room, passing through a bedroom on the AAray, and Avhen she got into the dining room she saw the appellant in the cook room behind the door with something over his face; that she became frightened and started to back into the bedroom, when the appellant approached her, seized her by the throat, and placed his other hand over her mouth, and Was backing her toward the wall of the house; that she exerted all her strength and pushed his hand from her mouth and screamed, and when she screamed the appellant left her and ran and jumped out of the dining room window. She screamed several times and went to the front gallery and attracted the attention of a neighbor.

The prosecutrix further testified that the doors on the back side of the house Avere locked, and that the appellant entered the dining room through a window on the south [471]*471side thereof from which the screen had been torn away, the screen having been nailed to the window. She further testified that there was food in the dining room, which was entered, and that nothing was disturbed or stolen therefrom.

The neighbor, Mrs. Hyde, testified that she lived across the road from the east side of the house of the prosecutrix, and that when she first heard the scream she was in her cook room, and when she came through her dining room she heard the second scream, and she went out in front of her house and saw the girl come out on her front gallery, and then she, Mrs. Hyde, went on over to the girl and found her greatly excited, and that she had a scratch on the side of her throat, and that the girl related the occurrence to her.

The sheriff was notified and came out to the place and made an examination of the premises and of the dining room window, and interrogated the girl and- her people about the matter and started to locate the party whom the witness, the prosecutrix., described to him, but another officer had already arrested the accused.

When the accused was first arrested he denied having been to this place and told the officer that he was at the residente of a negro woman whom he named.^ He ivas placed in jail and the negro woman named ivas sent for and denied that the appellant had been to her house or that she had seen him, and stated that she was not at home. After this the appellant stated to the sheriff that he did enter the home of the assaulted girl, but that he went there for the purpose of stealing. The father of the girl testified that the appellant had seen the girl around his store; that his store was attached to the front part of his residence, having an opening from the dining room to the store and also one from a bedroom to the store. There were three bedrooms, a hall, a back gallery, and a' cook room, dining room, and store. A map or drawing of . the store and residence is placed in the record.

[472]*472The prosecutrix identified the appellant, and when the state closed its case the appellant made a motion to strike the evidence and for a peremptory instruction, which motion was overruled and exception taken. Thereupon the appellant took the stand and testified in his own behalf, ■and testified that he entered the house for the purpose of stealing something. Being asked what lie intended to steal, he said anything he could find, money or anything. I-Ie stated that he thought the girl had gone with her family to church, and that he went to the house, approaching it from the back side, which was to the west, and knocked on an outside Avail to see if any one Avas in the house, and that he waited two or three minutes and then tore away the screen and entered the house; that he had barely entered the house when the girl came hack into the house, and that he then ran into the cook room and placed something over his head to keep her from seeing him; that she saw him; and that when he saw the girl had seen him he ran for the window of the dining room, which was the only place that he could get out of the house. He stated he did not touch the girl.

It will be seen from this statement that there is a material conflict between the appellant’s evidence and that of the assaulted girl, especially as to the time the appellant Avas in the house and whether or not he seized the girl as she testified. In determining the sufficiency of the evidence Ave must look to the state’s evidence, especially so far as it is' not unreasonable or sufficiently explained by the other eAddence. Taking the evidence of the girl and her father and the officers together, we think it was sufficient to support a verdict of guilty.

It is insisted by the appellant that the evidence of the state does not contradict the evidence of the appellant as to the crime intended, which appellant contends was theft. If the appellant had entered the house for the purpose of theft, it would appear that something would have been taken. If lie entered the room for the purpose of theft and remained thirty minutes or more Avithout find[473]*473ing anything to steal, when, according to his own evidence, his purpose was to steal anything, it would he a little remarkable. There is no attempt to show by himself, nor does it appear anywhere in the evidence that he entered the store or made any attempt to enter it, but, on the contrary, all of the facts support the inference that he entered the house for the purpose of assaulting the girl. The whole case supports this theory and is inconsistent with the other theory.

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Bluebook (online)
86 So. 871, 124 Miss. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-state-miss-1920.