Yoder v. United States

71 F.2d 85, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3025
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1934
Docket947
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 71 F.2d 85 (Yoder v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yoder v. United States, 71 F.2d 85, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3025 (10th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

Appellant was tried, convicted and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary and to pay a fine of $1,000 on an indictment which charged that on September 28, 1981, he transported Sammy Lee Young in an automobile from Shawnee, Oklahoma, to Chicago, Illinois, with intent that they would have sexual intercourse within the state of Illinois. The case is here on alleged errors in the trial proceedings.

Both parties were married at the time in question. Mrs. Young testified that she was born January 16, 1911. She- was therefore twenty years and eight months old in September, 1931, although she testified that at that time she was eighteen years old. The defendant was thirty-two.

Both parties were impeached as witnesses during the trial. The defendant was convicted of stealing a gun when he was twenty-two years old and served a term in a reformatory. He also served a term in the California penitentiary for joy riding. By her own testimony Mrs. Young committed perjury.

Mrs. Young testified that she lived in Oklahoma City; she met defendant in his garage at Shawnee, Oklahoma; that she met him, and liked him, and was not satisfied with her husband, and had sexual intercourse with him a week or more later, and that continued until they started to Chicago; that they arranged to go to Chicago together, “We were going to Chicago to try to buy a garage”; that they were going up there to live together; that the first night after leaving Shawnee they slept together in Joplin (Missouri).

The defendant testified that the first time he met Mrs. Young was in liis garage two or three weeks before they went to Chicago; that she came there to have some work done; that she came in again to have her ear washed, *86 and he told her she would have to wait until the next day; that she then asked him if he knew where she could find a reliable man to go with her and her husband to Chicago to look over a garage; that they were going into the garage business in Chicago; that he told her she would not have any trouble finding men, there were many out of work, and she asked him if he would consider going, and he told her he might; that he asked her what she was willing to pay; she left that to him, and he replied that he would consider $5.00 a day and expenses, and she said, “I will see my husband and let you know tomorrow;” she drove into the garage next day and said to him, “I talked with my husband about paying you $5.00 a day and expenses to go to Chicago to look over a garage and help us buy one,” and it would be all right; that he then asked her when she planned on leaving, and she said in a couple of days, if he could get off; she came back in her car on the following Monday and said she was ready to start; he asked her where her husband was, and she replied, “He will meet us in Joplin.”

Defendant got ready, and they left that day. Defendant testified they got to Joplin at 9:00 or 10:00 o’clock P. M.; she said she would have to go to the Western Union and find out where her husband would be; that she went in and when she came out she said he left word he had gone on to Chicago and for them to meet him in the Washington hotel in Chicago; that he expected her husband would meet them at Joplin, and he had no thought of having sexual intercourse with her until he learned her husband was not there; that they occupied a room together that night, also the next night in St. Louis, the third night at Pontjae, Illinois, and reached Chicago the next day; that she went to the Washington, hotel to inquire of her husband and reported he had not arrived; that they spent two or three days in or near Chicago with some of his friends; that while in Chicago Mrs. Young lost her purse, he did not know what was in it and never got any of her money, and .had to pawn his diamond ring on return to St. Louis; that he began asking her why her husband had not arrived in Chicago, and she finally said, “Well, I am just going to tell you the truth about it, he is not coming;” on further inquiry about that she said, “My aunt and I planned to get you to bring me over here, so he didn’t have anything to do with it;” that she was supposed to bring him and then if his dad did not pay them some money thfey could have him arrested for violating the White Slave law; that thereupon they got their things and started back to Oklahoma. They arrived in Oklahoma the third or fourth of October. The trip was made in Mrs. Young’s ear.

The defendant called an attorney, who lives in Shawnee, as a witness. He testified that between the fifteenth and twentieth of September, 1931, his ear had a loose bumper, and he drove into defendant’s garage to have the bolt tightened; that while he was waiting Mrs. Young drove in, and he heard a conversation between her and the defendant in which she said, “I was talking to my husband about going to Chicago, and he is willing to pay you $5.00 a day and your expenses, if you will go along.”

Defendant also called John Blize, a resident of Texas who was visiting his daughter near Shawnee in September, 1931. He testified that he went to defendant’s garage to get a spring put on his ear; he had not met defendant; there was another man present trying to sell defendant insurance; Mrs. Young drove into the garage; he had never met her, but he recognized her at the trial and was positive it was she; she wanted defendant to wash her car; he told her to return the next morning; he heard her ask the defendant where she could get a reliable man to go to Chicago; that she and her husband were going to buy a garage; that they knew nothing about the garage business and wanted someone to go with them; he told her there were plenty of men around wanting work, and she asked him if he would consider going; he asked her what they would pay, and she said she didn’t know; he told her he would charge $5.00 a day and expenses, and she said, “Well, I will let you know in the morning, if it is all right with my husband it is all light with me.” This witness was in Oklahoma from the fifteenth to the twenty-fifth of September and returned to Texas.

L. L. Haekett, who had been in the insurance business at Shawnee for eighteen years, testified that in September, 1931, he wont to defendant’s garage to talk with him about health and accident insurance; that while he was talking to defendant Mrs. Young drove in in a ear and asked defendant if he could wash it; he said they were busy, but he could wash it the next morning; she then asked him where she could get a mechanic to go with her and her husband to Chicago; that they were going down there to buy a garage; that neither knew anything about a garage, and defendant told her there were many idle men, and she could get plenty of them; then *87 she asked him if he would consider going and what he would charge; he told her he would go for $5.00 a day and expenses; she replied, “I will see my husband and see yon later.”

Another witness, who lived in Shawnee and worked for the Rock Island Railroad in its boiler shop, testified that he was in defendant’s garage sometime in September; his ear was there being overhauled; while he was there he sa.w Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 F.2d 85, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoder-v-united-states-ca10-1934.