Vogel v. State

119 N.W. 190, 138 Wis. 315, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 42
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 119 N.W. 190 (Vogel v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogel v. State, 119 N.W. 190, 138 Wis. 315, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 42 (Wis. 1909).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed January 5, 1909:

Barnes, J.

We are urged with much earnestness to bold that tbe evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty, ■and that therefore tbe judgment of conviction should be reversed and tbe defendants discharged. Many considerations are called to our attention to support this view, and some of them are not wanting in force and persuasive power. The ■credibility of tbe testimony of the alleged victim, as well as that of the principal witnesses tending to corroborate her ■story, is vigorously assailed. It is asserted that tbe condition ■of tbe clothing of tbe girl, Anna Engelbretson, after tbe commission of the alleged crime or crimes, and tbe condition of her body, demonstrated that she was not tbe victim of a series ■of criminal assaults. Her failure to promptly acquaint her [320]*320parents, or other relatives, of the outrage, her alleged failure-to make such outcries as might, and probably would, attract assistance, and the inherent improbability of at least a portion of her testimony, are said to furnish proof conclusive that the lesser offense of fornication only was committed.. These, as well as other considerations, are forcefully pressed upon us with undoubted sincerity.

The abhorrent nature of the crime of rape so shocks every sensibility of manhood that a party even charged therewith has much to overcome where his defense is that the offense-amounted to fornication only and not to the more heinous, crime. As was said in Brown v. State, 127 Wis. 193, 199, 106 N. W. 536, "the proneness of woman, when she finds the fact, of her disgrace discovered or likely of discovery, to minimize-her fault by asserting vis major ” coupled with the impossibility of defense except by direct denial, has led the courts to-a very strict rule of proof in such cases.

Eiv'e defendants were convicted on the trial of this case- and are now under sentence for ten years each. Tfye import as well as the importance of the case is such as to invite the-closest scrutiny of the record, to the end that the court may satisfy itself therefrom, as far it can, whether the defendants were convicted of a crime they did not commit.

It is easy to perceive that the real issue in the case might readily have been lost sight of by the jury. The testimony of the defendants is less repulsive than that of their victim, because the element of force is denied; but, taking their testimony as they gave it, a person not learned in the refinements of the law might well feel inclined to say that a prison, was the proper place in which to restrain their activities. The evidence given on the trial certainly makes a revolting-if not an unique page in the annals of criminal law.

We fail to see where any detailed discussion of the evidence would be useful, except for the purpose of convincing-counsel that it was carefully read and considered by the-[321]*321court, and except, perhaps, to gratify the appetites of morbid minds for salacious reading matter. Neither reason is sufficient, and we must decline to unnecessarily soil the pages of our reports by narrating the evidence in detail.

“Ordinarily the decision of the trial judge upon the question of granting a new trial on the ground that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict is held conclusive upon this court; and this rule is adhered to in a criminal case where the record contains evidence from which the guilt of the accused can be fairly deduced.” Williams v. State, 61 Wis. 281, 289, 21 N. W. 56; Jambor v. State, 75 Wis. 664, 673, 44 N. W. 963.

Having in mind the foregoing rule of law as to the weight that should be given to the verdict of a jury in a criminal case, and also to the refusal of the trial court to set it aside as not supported by the evidence, it is the judgment of every member of the court, reached after mature deliberation, that the verdict should not be set a'side as unsupported by the testimony.

The jury found that at the time of the commission of the offense Anna Engelbretson was not a common prostitute. Upon the evidence it was entirely justified in so doing. With one exception the only witnesses who testified to former misconduct on her part, or to evil reputation, were three of the defendants, and a portion at least of their evidence was almost too fantastic for belief. The evidence of the witness Edward Wensel is improbable, though perhaps not incredible, but was in direct conflict with statements deliberately made by him to the district attorney and sheriff. He was evidently a companion of Mattie Vogel’s, having worked with him' in the woods, and, according to his own story, accompanied him on at least one of his amatory peregrinations. The evidence referred to was important only as bearing upon the credibility of the witness Anna Engelbretson. It is the settled law of this state that a conviction for rape may be had upon the uncorroborated evidence of the female assaulted. [322]*322Brown v. State, 127 Wis. 193, 200, 106 N. W. 536; Lanphere v. State, 114 Wis. 193, 202, 89 N. W. 128; Osgood v. State, 64 Wis. 472, 474, 25 N. W. 529. It is not seriously contended, if the testimony of snob female in this case is taken to be true, that she does not testify to facts which establish the commission of the crime. But it is asserted that her evidence bears upon its face the stamp of unreliability, and that therefore, under the rule in Hofer v. State, 130 Wis. 576, 586, 110 N. W. 391; O’Boyle v. State, 100 Wis. 296, 300, 75 N. W. 989; and Brown v. State, supra, the principal facts must be corroborated by other testimony.

So much of the evidence of the prosecutrix as relates how she was taken by the defendant Mattie Vogel from near the Lempke house to where the first act of intercourse took place hardly seems credible. Considering the close proximity of a number of other persons, no good reason is apparent why she might not by her cries have attracted assistance if she apprehended that a criminal assault was about to be committed upon her. The improbability of the story related by the prosecutrix, in the foregoing and some other particulars, detracts from the weight that should otherwise be given to her evidence. But, whatever was the purpose of the prosecutrix in leaving the dance with Vogel, or whether she went voluntarily or forcibly, does not argue that the acts of intercourse testified to with tire other defendants, or acts with Vogel after they arrived, were voluntary on her part, and there is certainly no inherent improbability in her assertion that they were accomplished by force and against her will. Neither is there any improbability in her statement to the effect that during the time the last acts of intercourse took place she was physically exhausted and in a semi-unconscious condition and incapable alike of resistance or consent.

But it seems to us that the evidence of the prosecutrix was corroborated. The defendants, except Peter Christman, admitted acts of intercourse. As to him, the proof of sexual [323]*323intercourse was almost conclusive. So- tbe only material circumstance upon wbicb corroboration was necessary was whether she offered that degree of resistance that was imperative in order to make the crime that of rape.

The house of William Catlin was about 150 feet from the point where the first acts of intercourse took place. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.W. 190, 138 Wis. 315, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogel-v-state-wis-1909.