Withers v. State

523 S.W.2d 364, 1975 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 294
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 24, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 523 S.W.2d 364 (Withers v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Withers v. State, 523 S.W.2d 364, 1975 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 294 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

MITCHELL, Judge.

The defendant John D. Withers was indigent and represented at the trial by Assistant Public Defenders Honorable John C. Hough and Honorable Edward G. Draper. On appeal the defendant was represented by the Shelby County Public Defender Honorable Walker Gwinn. The defendant was tried in two separate cases on two separate indictments, one charging rape, and the other charging robbery by the use of a deadly weapon, upon the same person on the same date. The two cases were consolidated for trial and on October 25, 1973, the defendant was convicted in the Criminal Court of Shelby County of rape with a 25 year sentence imposed, and simple robbery with a 5 year consecutive sentence imposed.

After the Trial Judge Honorable Perry H. Sellers heard and overruled the new trial motion the defendant appealed and assigned errors.

We here summarize the facts from testimony of the State’s witnesses which was accepted by the jury.

The victim of this brutal assault, rape and robbery was Miss Sheila Langston age 23. She had completed two years in college and was at the time employed in respiratory therapy at Methodist Hospital in Memphis. Her working hours were from 7:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. Miss Langston arose early on February 6, 1972, and about 6:30 A.M., was walking from her rooming house alone to the hospital which was about three or four blocks. As she neared the hospital she had crossed the street and was walking in the parking lot toward the dormitory of the Methodist Hospital. A car turned in front of her and shined the lights in her face but she continued walking. A man jumped out of the car and attacked her and started beating her with a hard object. She tried to defend herself and ward off the blows, but with no success. He kept beating her and forced her into the front part of the car and told her to get on the floor board. Then the man got into the car and started driving.

Miss Langston had a small cylinder of sheriff’s mace which she took from her pocket and tried to spray her abductor but it was not effective. The man took the mace from her and started beating her again. He drove the car about two blocks from the hospital and stopped.

He pulled her over on the driver’s side, showed her a pistol that looked like a .22 caliber, black with white handles, and said he ought to kill her. He then opened the back door of the car, forced her into the back seat, pulled her pants down, compelled her to lay down and put her coat over her head. He forced her to put her legs up but she resisted and he started beating her again.

From the description she gave of what took place the defendant had unlawful carnal knowledge of her forcibly and against her will. Then the defendant suggested a loathsome perverted sex act which she refused to do.

The defendant got up and got out of the car and told her to get out. The defendant then searched in her purse but found no [367]*367money. He compelled her to give him $7.00 and before she could get out of the car he seized her arm and took her Timex skindivers black wrist watch. The dial of the watch was worn and there was a bad crack in the crystal. He warned her she had better not tell the police and as he drove off she got his car license number which she later gave to the police.

Two L.P.N. student nurses then drove up and took Miss Langston in their car to the hospital emergency room. Two policemen were already there to whom Miss Langston reported the rape and robbery. The nurses took her to a room where the police and a detective talked to her. She gave the police a full description of the defendant and his car and the license numbers. Then her brother came and talked to her.

The next day Miss Langston went to the police station and gave a statement. Miss Langston testified that during the attack and during this ordeal there were times when she got a good look at the man who raped and robbed her, particularly when they were fighting, then when he showed her the pistol and threatened her and when he was searching through her purse. Those instances she said the light was sufficient for her to get a good look at .him.

That on March 18, 1972 she attended a line-up conducted by the police when she recognized and identified the defendant as the man who had committed these crimes against her.

Miss Langston in the Courtroom positively identified the defendant John Withers as the man who raped and robbed her.

The proof showed that the victim Miss Sheila Langston was a pure and chaste'virgin prior to the attack made on her by the defendant.

Miss Langston identified her watch which was made an exhibit in the case. After the rape and robbery the watch was found in the possession of the defendant John Withers. The proof showed the defendant told a friend that he got the watch from a woman he had a bust with meaning sexual relations.

Dr. George William Jenkins M.D., who was on duty in the emergency room at the hospital when Miss Langston was brought in treated her for lacerations about her head and face. He also found abrasions, mud and dirt on her legs and neck. There was bleeding at the opening of the vagina with blood in the vault with live sperm. From his examination Dr. Jenkins determined the man who committed the assault was infected with gonorrhea. Dr. Jenkins gave Miss Langston medication to guard against pregnancy and gonorrhea.

It was Dr. Jenkins’ opinion that Miss Langston had never had sexual relations prior to the morning of the assault.

According to the testimony of Patrick L. Harper, 10 year veteran of the Memphis Police Department, in the early hours of February 6, 1972, he was at Methodist Hospital in Memphis. Miss Sheila Langs-ton gave him information that the license number of the vehicle used in the assault was Tennessee T-23669. Harper recognized that this was an impossible number because of the County prefix. Logical deduction produced the correct number 1-Z3669.

Harper and his partner then followed up on this deduction and found that the license number was registered to one Rena Langston (No relation to the victim), who was a patient in Methodist Hospital on the day of the assault. The automobile was found at 1912 Lamar, Rena Langston’s home address. A considerable quantity of blood was on the right front seat as reflected in the photograph exhibit 5.

Rena Langston testified that she left the automobile locked before entering the hospital, and she had in her possession the only two known sets of keys to her automobile. She had given no one permission to drive the automobile and it did not have [368]*368blood on the front seat when she last saw it prior to entering the hospital. The car was a Buick ’64 or ’65 which had a white top and tan body with light tan seat covers or upholstery.

At the time of his arrest on March 17, 1972, the defendant was seen to drop or throw down a screw driver and a bunch of keys which were recovered by the officers.

It developed that among those keys there were 8 that fit the ignition of the Buick and one key fit the door lock of the Rena Langston tan Buick with a white top, with blood on the front seat, which was identified by the victim Miss Langston as the car in which the crime was committed.

The defendant John D. Withers took the witness stand and testified in his own behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
523 S.W.2d 364, 1975 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withers-v-state-tenncrimapp-1975.