Washington v. State

1956 OK CR 8, 293 P.2d 370, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 18, 1956
DocketNo. A-12240
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1956 OK CR 8 (Washington v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington v. State, 1956 OK CR 8, 293 P.2d 370, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142 (Okla. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

BRETT, Judge.

The plaintiff in error, Carl Washington, defendant below, was charged by information in the District Court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, of having committed the crime of rape upon the person of Marion Joyce Bell, a female person not his wife, by means of force and fear. He was tried by jury, convicted, and found guilty. The jury’s verdict fixed his punishment at thirty years in the state penitentiary. Judgment and sentence was entered in accordance with the verdict, from which this appeal has been perfected.

The first contention of the plaintiff in error is that the judgment and sentence is contrary to law and the evidence. This objection to the judgment and sentence is inclusive of the proposition urged by the defendant that there was not sufficient" corroborative evidence of the prosecutrix’ story to prove the defendant was guilty of rape. To resolve these issues, it is essential that we give a brief statement of the evidence.

Marion Joyce Bell, twenty years of age, the prosecutrix herein, lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma. For three years, she had known Marsha Cooper, a man twenty-three years of age and a grand larceny probationer. The record discloses she was not aware of the fact that though she had been keeping company with him, he had been married since November, 1954, and that he was the father of a child, a girl. On December 14, 1954, Cooper, at 7:15 in the evening, came by her house and asked her to go out with him. They left, ostensibly, to go get some barbecue.- When she left her house, she did. not know any one else was with Cooper until she approached the automobile and saw the" defendant, Carl Washington, sitting in Cooper’s automobile. She asked Cooper who he was and why he was there. She was informed he was going to pick up his girl friend. She got into the automobile and later observed two men in the back seat; Eugene Jackson, sixteen years of age, and Raymond Ferguson, eighteen ‘years of age. They left in the automobile ■but did not go anywhere for the barbecue, according to the prosecutrix, or to get anything else or anybody else. They iin-mediately drove to West Tulsa and five miles west on a Tulsa County road.- The prosecutrix said she repeatedly asked them to take her home but Cooper refused, as did the defendant, Washington. Instead, they proceeded to engage in drinking the contents of a fifth of wine and upon- its being consumed, they threw it out the window. The prosecutrix asked Carl Washington to take her home, since he was driving. He said, no (the language herein after used is not the language of the defendant arid his cohorts, it is unprintable), he wanted to have intercourse with her. Cooper also said he wanted to do the same thing and the prosecutrix said, let’s get out of the car. (Subsequent events discloses the reason for her suggestion.) So the car was stopped and Cooper held her tight and she testified she told him to turn her loose. Washington, believing Cooper was having some difficulty, got out of the car. The evidence discloses the Bell girl said, “Let’s walk down the road,” and Cooper turned her loose and she started running [372]*372and lost a shoe and her'cigarettes. Washington overtook her, caught her, and ■brought her back. Washington threw her around and she almost fell, Cooper got in the automobile, backed it up to where she and Washington were, and Washington threw her in the automobile. Then they went ■ down the road and found .her shoe. She denied that at any time- that night did they have a flat tire. . At this point she testified Ferguson said, “Let’s take the ‘bitch’ up the hill.” While this was being done, she observed a light up the road and asked Cooper to drive in that direction. (It is apparent her object in wanting to go by that house was to possibly make an outcry. Her situation was such that an out-, cry would have done no good, unless someone could have heard it.) The complainant then testified Cooper grabbed her and told her to open up her legs and he got on her and had intercourse with her. Then, she related that Washington, in substance, said, “That’s enough, let me do it to the ‘bitch’.” Before Washington started in, he said he could not do it in the front seat,.so Cooper and the two men in the back seat lifted her over the front seat and threw her in the back seat and then Washington did it to her a long time and then he would start in again. He got off and Ferguson did it and then Washington did it again and Jackson did it also. When Washington was 'in operation, she testified, Jackson, Cooper, and Ferguson held her left leg-over the front seat. Ferguson struck a match and said, “I am going to burn the ‘bitch’s’ hairs off.” She recounted.. she fought and kicked and the match went out. The record discloses that all the time .she was giving this testimony, she was overcome with grief and crying and at times her voice would fade out. She recounted another match was struck and held close and Ferguson said, “Look at her.” They pulled her legs apart further and Ferguson spat in her and then Washington got on her and began again. The Bell girl said she kicked so he couldnff do it and he told her, “If you don’t lay down, I’ll break your neck.” She tried to raise up again and he told her to lay down and she did. She related that Washington penetrated her during these operations. This . round of intercourse continued until all the boys did it several times. All during the proceeding, the record shows, she asked to be taken home. As a ruse.to get away and escape further abuse, the prosecutrix testified she suggested they go back to town and get a room in a hotel and she would stay with them. This suggestion met with ready response and they returned to Tulsa. One of them went into the Miller Hotel and rented a room. The plan was that they would then take her in and go in one at a time to allay suspicion. When Raymond Ferguson took her into the hotel, Mr. Miller, the proprietor, was standing behind the desk. She said to Mr. Miller, “Please don’t let these boys bother me, they have been raping me all , night.” When she said that the boy ran out and Mr. Miller called her father for her and told her she could stay at the hotel until her father came. She positively denied that she had given Washington or any of these boys her consent to have intercourse with her. She related she had never been married and had never had intercourse before, with anybody. She did not know that the defendant, Washington, or Cooper were married. She testified positively the only reason she had intercourse with Washington was because he made her.

Dr. Mary Edna Sippel, a graduate of Kansas University Medical School and duly licensed practicing physician in Oklahoma, testified that the prosecutrix had been a patient of hers and that she examined the girl on December 6, 1954. This examination, she testified, was both external and internal of the genital organs, that the hymen was in place, that the Bell girl had never had intercourse at that time, and that' she was a virgin. She further testified that on December 18, 1954, she again examined the Bell girl both externally and internally and she found she had had sexual intercourse. Miss Bell was bruised on the external parts of her privates and she bore scratches and the surface was as though it had been scraped off like an ulcer. The hymen was broken and there were raw, unhealed edges on the broken parts.

[373]*373The defendant denied having intercourse •with the Bell girl but Cooper said he did. They all testified that the Bell girl gladly accompanied them, that they drove around and tried to find some other girls, and that the Bell girl wanted to find some whiskey. They testified they stopped and ,got some corn whiskey and a fifth of wine.

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Related

Fox v. State
1958 OK CR 100 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK CR 8, 293 P.2d 370, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-state-oklacrimapp-1956.