Yates v. Commonwealth

277 S.W. 995, 211 Ky. 629, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 936
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 4, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 995 (Yates 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
Yates v. Commonwealth, 277 S.W. 995, 211 Ky. 629, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 936 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*630 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The trial of the appellant, Marshall Yates, in the Boyle circuit court under an indictment charging him with the crime of wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously having carnal knowledge of and sexual intercourse with Lillian Toombs, “a female under the age of eighteen years, not his wife, with her consent,” resulted in a verdict of the jury finding him guilty and fixing his punishment at confinement for two years in the penitentiary. He was refused a new trial and the verdict approved by the judgment of the court, and from that judgment he prosecutes this appeal.

The grounds relied on for the reversal of the judgment are that error was committed by the trial court (1) In rejecting competent evidence offered by the appellant. (2) In instructing the jury and refusing instructions offered by appellant. (3) In refusing an instruction directing a verdict of acquittal.

According to the testimony of the prosecutrix the appellant had sexual intercourse with her on a Sunday night late in April, or early in May, 1923, in an automobile at a point on the turnpike near Shelby city, to. which place they rode from a church in Junction City, where she and her sister, who was then Miss Affie L. Toombs, but later, by marriage, became Mrs. Affie L. Leigh, had •been carried by the appellant and Russell Yates, his brother, in the automobile from their home to attend church services; the sister and brother having been left by the witness and appellant at the church. She also testified that she was seventeen years of age at the time of her sexual intercourse with the appellant; that she was induced to consent and submit to the intercourse because of a promise of marriage then made her by. the appellant, and that immediately following the act she and the appellant returned to Junction City, where, finding the services still in progress, they entered the church and remained until the congregation was dismissed, after which she and her sister were carried in the automobile by the appellant and his brother back to, and left at, their home. It was further, in substance, testified by the prosecutrix •that at the time of, and for a year or more prior to, his commission of the crime charged in the indictment, the appellant’s attitude toward her was, and had been, that of a lover; and on cross-examination she admitted that *631 his act of sexual intercourse with her constituting the crime charged, -caused her to become pregnant, and on January 29, 1924, give birth to a child.

The testimony of the prosecutrix that she and her sister were carried in an automobile by the appellant and his brother from their home to the Junction City church on the occasion in question, and were later the same night returned to their home by the latter; likewise her testimony as to the appellant’s attentions to her as a lover, and the date of the birth of her child, was corroborated by her mother, Mrs. Ida Toombs, and sister, Mrs. Leigh, in addition to which, her testimony as to the automobile ride taken by her with the appellant alone from the church and their subsequent return to the church before the dismissal of the congregation, was also corroborated by the sister. The appellant did not himself testify on the trial, but his brother, Bussell Tates, upon being introduced as a witness in his behalf, denied that on the occasion mentioned by the prosecutrix her mother and sister, or at. any other time, he and the appellant carried the prosecutrix and her sister from their home to a church in Junction City, from which the appellant and the prosecutrix took an automobile ride elsewhere, or that following their return from such automobile ride, the appellant and witness carried prosecutrix and her sister back to their home.

Following these denials, however, the witness stated that in .March, 1923, and but a short time before the alleged commission of the crime charged in the indictment, he and the appellant while on a Saturday afternoon visit to Danville encountered the prosecutrix and her sister, Mrs. Leigh, then Miss Affie L. Toombs, both of whom they carried by automobile to their home in the country, leaving Danville about 8:30 p. m. and arriving at the Toombs home without a stop on the way, from which place the witness and appellant, without delay, proceeded on their way to their own home about three miles distant.

It was, in substance, further testified by Bussell Tates that the automobile ride from Danville to the Toombs residence was' unattended by any immoral or improper conduct on the part of either of the Toombs -girls, the appellant or the witness.

On his cross-examination the witness admitted that he had repeatedly seen his brother, the appellant, with the prosecutrix before the automobile ride from Danville *632 to the home of the latter referred to; and when asked to state the age of the appellant, his reply was that he (witness) was 27, and the appellant about, or nearly three years younger, which approximately fixed the age of the latter at 23 or 24 years, as previously testified by Charles Williams and O. B. Toombs, witnesses for the Commonwealth. So, notwithstanding the rigid cross-examination of these two witnesses by his counsel in an .attempt to show that the appellant was under 21 years of age at the time of his alleged commission of the crime charged, there is no contrariety of evidence as to the fact that he was then, at least, 23 yeans of age. However, had it been conclusively established by the evidence that the appellant was then under 21 years of age, under the statute and cases applying its provisions, that fact would not have excused the crime, if committed, nor could it have been relied on as a defense in this prosecution.

The only other evidence introduced by the appellant was furnished by the testimony of L. IT. McAuly and Charles Anderson, each of whom testified as to the general reputation of the prosecutrix, stating that it was known to them and was bad. But in what particular it was bad they failed to indicate. Two witnesses were introduced by the Commonwealth in rebuttal, viz., W. E. McAuly and A. Harmon. McAuly testified that he had known the prosecutrix, Lilliam Toombs, all her life, and was acquainted with her reputation, which was good, and had never been questioned prior to the birth of her child. Harmon’s testimony was substantially the same as that of W. E. McAuly, and equally as strong, except that his acquaintance with the prosecutrix and her reputation did not, like that of the latter, begin with her infancy and continue through the subsequently passing years, but was confined to the period covered 'by the five years next preceding the trial of the case at bar.

Deeming what has been said of the evidence sufficient-to give an understanding of its bearing on the grounds urged by the appellant for the reversal of the judgment appealed from, those grounds will now be considered. The first ground, as previously indicated, presents á complaint of the ruling of the trial court in the matter of excluding certain evidence offered by the appellant. The evidence in question is contained in an affidavit of the appellant filed in support of his motion for a continuance of the case, made at the January term, 11925, of the *633

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 995, 211 Ky. 629, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1925.