Williams v. Collins

167 S.W. 1189, 180 Mo. App. 146, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 229
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 167 S.W. 1189 (Williams v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Collins, 167 S.W. 1189, 180 Mo. App. 146, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 229 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

JOHNSON, J.

This is an action to recover actual and punitive damages for the alleged rape of plaintiff: by defendant on the night of October 15,1910. The petition was filed in the circuit court of Holt county March 24, 1911, and a mistrial occurred at the August term. The cause then was. sent to Andrew county on a change of venue and a trial in that county resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for three thousand dollars actual and two thousand dollars punitive damages. Defendant appealed.

Plaintiff, a spinster forty-six years of age, lived with her elder sister, a widow, in Fairfax and assisted her in keeping a small boarding house. Defendant, a wealthy farmer fifty-five years old, had been a widower two years and after the death of his wife, had lived at the boarding house until he sold his land near Fairfax and bought a farm near Mound City, to which he removed. After his removal he made visits to Fairfax and on such occasions boarded with plaintiff’s sister whose deceased husband was the uncle of his deceased wife. Plaintiff and her sister had known defendant many years and were on the most friendly terms with him. The sister in writing to him called herself his .aunt and on two occasions, before the break in their friendly relations, plaintiff had sent him picture cards on which she addressed him in a familiar tone and called herself his “baby friend.” In explanation of her use of this diminutive, she states it was a pet name he sometimes applied to her in the presence of her sister and the boarders. Further she states that she and her sister cherished a sisterly affection for him which she often manifested in the performance of such intimate feminine offices as buttoning his collar and mending his clothes. Defendant’s description of his relations to them places them in a more selfish and sordid [148]*148light. He states that shortly after the death of his wife plaintiff proposed marriage to him, and that she and her sister joined in a matrimonial campaign against him, and finding it unsuccessful, endeavored at different times and in various ways, to induce him to employ them as his housekeepers.

This testimony is contradicted by the sisters and its imputation of unworthy conduct and motives is not in harmony with the character of plaintiff as portrayed in the testimony of neighbors and friends who knew her intimately, some of them from childhood. In their description she and her sister appear as modest, industrious women of irreproachable character and reputation. Defendant lays no charge of immorality against her. He denies having had carnal knowledge of her and pictures himself as the unresponsive object of her marked matrimonial advances which, it should be noted were not so vigorous and distasteful as to deter him from giving the boarding house his patronage or from accepting her sisterly ministrations.

The sisters had four or five regular boarders — a young woman school teacher, a doctor and a hardware merchant and his wife — and quoting from the testimony of one of them, they “were a jolly crowd.’’ Generally defendant slept in a room on the first floor opening into the kitchen; plaintiff and her sister occupied a bed in another room on that floor, while the regular boarders had rooms on the second floor. On the night in question the sister of plaintiff was in a neighboring town and plaintiff became the bed-fellow of the teacher but not until after the commission of the alleged offense which, plaintiff states, occurred in the room occupied by defendant who arrived late that afternoon on a train from Mound City. After supper he called on the neighbor who lived across the street and the other boarders dispersed, leaving plaintiff alone in the house. The doctor went to his practice, the merchant to his business and his wife and the teacher to a pic[149]*149ture show. The wife of the neighbor visited by defendant testified that he introduced his leave-taking by remarking, “I better be going, Nannie (plaintiff) is by herself.”

He returned to the boarding house between eight and nine o ’clock, conversed with plaintiff sometime and then asked her to prepare his bed as he wished to retire. Plaintiff states, “I went on in the bedroom to fix his bed, left him sitting by the table, and when I got the bed almost made up> just putting the pillows on, why I turned around to leave the bed — I was between the bed and the wall, folding-bed, I had no way to get out, and he grabbed me. I asked him to let me loose and he wouldn’t do it, so I tried to get away from him but he held me and wouldn’t let me loose; he threw me down on the bed and then he commenced pulling my clothes up; I jerked one hand up and tried to put my clothes down and he says, “No, you shan’t put them down,” and he grabbed my hands and held them that way, and I couldn’t get loose from him and had to be tortured to death; he paid no attention to my words; he kept on until he got through with me, and when I was bleeding and torn so I couldn’t get up he told me to get up from there. I says, “I can’t,” I says, “You have tortured me, you will have to finish me up.” He took hold of me and jerked me off the bed and shoved me away and I hurt so bad I was almost ready to faint and couldn’t do nothing at all, I was frightened so I didn’t know what to do with myself, and I begged him then to kill me. I throwed my hands up and I told him to disgrace me as he had done was worse than death at any time, to be treated in that shape, and he stood there and laughed at me. Q. What was the expression of his face at that time? A. He looked like a lion if I could tell it — I never saw such a look on a man’s face.”

Plaintiff is five feet one inch tall, weighed 110 pounds and though small was strong and in good health. Defendant is five feet, ten inches tall, weighed [150]*150about 170 pounds and was strong and vigorous. The fierce struggle which plaintiff says ended in her defeat and which defendant asserts did not occur at all, was attended, so she says, by the wounding of her sexual organs so severely as to cause profuse hemorrhage and to lacerate and bruise certain muscular tissues to the extent of producing a continuous condition of injury which only a surgical operation can possibly cure. According to the evidence of plaintiff the crime had hardly ended before the return of the merchant’s wife and the teacher. Defendant had just passed from the bedroom into the kitchen when they surprised him there. The merchant’s wife testified that they stopped abruptly at the kitchen door on observing the spectacle he presented. “His trousers were undone and he didn’t have any coat or vest on, his suspenders were off his shoulders, he sat down in a chair as we entered, put his foot in his lap and commenced to untie his shoes.” Of this incident defendant says he went into the kitchen and began taking off his shoes while plaintiff was in the other room making his bed, and that he had not otherwise undressed when the woman appeared at the -door. Observing their hesitation, he called out “Come on in, girls,” and they entered the room and remained a moment or two. The merchant’s wife did not encounter plaintiff until twenty minutes later. She observed nothing unusual in her appearance except that “her face was red, as red as it could be, like she had cooked for harvest hands over a red hot stove.”

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State v. Cook
673 S.W.2d 469 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)
State ex rel. Wilkins ex rel. Wilkins v. Markway
353 S.W.2d 727 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1962)
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Bluebook (online)
167 S.W. 1189, 180 Mo. App. 146, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-collins-moctapp-1914.