Walling v. Commonwealth

276 S.W. 1071, 211 Ky. 49, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 808
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 1071 (Walling v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walling v. Commonwealth, 276 S.W. 1071, 211 Ky. 49, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 808 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*50 Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

The appellant, Grant Walling, following his indictment in the court below for the seduction, under promise of marriage, of Bernice Hughes, an unmarried female under the age of 21 years, was on his trial in that court by verdict of a jury found guilty of the crime, and his punishment fixed at confinement for one year in the penitentiary. He complains of the judgment of the trial court approving that verdict, and by this appeal seeks its reversal.

The grounds chiefly relied on by the appellant in the court below in support of his motion for a new trial, and now urged by him for the- reversal of that court’s judgment are, that error was committed (by the trial court: (1) In failing to properly instruct the jury as to all the law -of the -case. (2) In overruling his motion, made at the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence, and, again, at the conclusion of all the evidence, for an instruction peremptorily directing his acquittal of the crime charged by a verdict of the jury. (3) That the verdict was -contrary to law and flagrantly against the evidence.

As the kinship of the appellant’s second and third contentions is obvious, they will be considered together and first disposed of.

We find from our reading of the evidence, that the appellant, Grant Walling, and Bernice Hughes, the prosecutrix and only witness for the Commonwealth, had been intimately acquainted from their childhood. In the matter of age she was nearly three years his senior; and at the time of his trial, which -occurred in May, 1925, was over twenty years -old and became twenty-one in August following. He was then barely eighteen. At the time of the alleged occurrence of the seduction of which he was convicted, she was nineteen and he seventeen years old. Their intimacy did not include visits from him to her home, as her mother objected to his attentions to the daughter. But there were frequent meetings between them, usually prearranged, which took place at church or at the homes of her neighbors; and from these meetings he would escort her to, or near, her home. On one occasion he accompanied her by automobile to Cincinnati, Ohio, on a visit to her father, where she was left by the appellant, who on the same day returned to his home in Kentucky. ■ The intimacy thus shown to have existed *51 between the appellant and prosecutrix continued several years, certainly not less than three or four; and perhaps for as much as two years of that time was attended byi frequent acts of sexual intercourse between them, which resulted in her pregnancy, the birth of the child, and his indictment for and conviction of the crime of seduction.

There is no contrariety of evidence as to the facts thus far stated. Indeed, they were and are freely admitted both by the prosecutrix and the appellant.

The evidence, however, fails to definitely disclose when or where the act of sexual intercourse necessary to complete the crime of seduction charged took place. The prosecutrix, near the close of her examination in chief, in reply to a leading question from counsel for the Commonwealth, asking “if it did occur in Estill county,” answered that it did. But from her testimony on the cross-examination it is fairly inferable that it occurred elsewhere and while she and appellant were on their way to' Cincinnati. If the crime was committed on the way to Cincinnati, in the absence of a showing that it was committed before the parties left Estill county, it would seem that the Estill circuit court did not have jurisdiction of the prosecution. However, as the appellant made no objection to the jurisdiction of the trial court, this feature of the evidence is only mentioned as one of the several examples found in the record of the indefinite character of the testimony furnished by the prosecutrix.

The prosecutrix, in further testifying, substantially stated that the appellant repeatedly promised to marry her and that they frequently had sexual intercourse; that none of his repeated promises of marriage were accepted or assented to by her, but that upon becoming aware of her pregnancy, she was willing to marry him and so informed him, and that he then refused to marry her, and shortly thereafter married another woman. And although on her re-examination she did in a single instance state, in reply to a leading question by counsel for the Commonwealth asking if she did not in yielding to sexual intercourse with the appellant rely upon his promise or assurance of marriage, give an- affirmative answer, it is by no means clear that either the question, or answer, referred to the act of sexual intercourse by which her seduction was alleged to have been accomplished.

She wholly failed to testify in chief, on her cross-examination or re-examination, that her first or any act *52 of sexual intercourse with the appellant, though all were claimed to have been preceded by a promise to marry her made by him, was preceded or attended by any promise or assurance on her part that she would marry him. On the contrary, she positively testified, and her testimony, as a whole can fairly 'be given no other meaning, that each and all of the several promises or offers of marriage made her by the appellant were made before she discovered her pregnancy; that these promises or offers were all rejected by her, and that she was never willing to marry him until she discovered her pregnancy. Indeed, she stated on cross-examination that in making promises or offers of marriage to her the appellant “went on with so much foolishness I didn’t know what he meant, whether he meant he would or wouldn’t have me.”'

That the appellant greatly admired the prosecutrix and repeatedly proposed marriage to her and offered to •marry her, both before and after the acts of sexual intercourse in which they indulged, was frankly admitted by him when testifying in his own behalf. It was, however, also substantially testified by him, that each and every offer or promise of marriage made by him to the prosecutrix was rejected by her; and that neither the first nor any other act of sexual intercourse between them was immediately preceded by any promise or offer of marriage on his part, nor was she induced by any such promise or offer to assent or yield to such intercourse with him.

As we view the testimony of the 'prosecutrix it presents little vital contradiction of that of the appellant and in many material respects corroborates it. Indeed, the only positive or material contradiction of the appellant’s testimony made by that of the prosecutrix is contained in her denial of a conversation he claimed to have had with her at the residence of his sister, Mrs. Martha Tipton, in the latter’s presence and that of a half-sister, Ada Berger, shortly before the marriage of the appellant and about two months before the birth of the child of the prosecutrix, in which he, the sister and half-sister each testified that in a conversation that then occurred between the prosecutrix and the appellant with respect to their past relations, her then condition and his reported contemplated marriage to another woman, he told her he was willing to marry her and offered to do so, in reply to which she said she would not marry Turn and *53 advised him to marry the woman to whom he was soon thereafter married.

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Related

Walling v. Commonwealth
292 S.W. 848 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 1071, 211 Ky. 49, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walling-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1925.