State v. Steele , 280 Mo. 63 ( 1919 )


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  • Upon an information charging him with the crime of "felony of abortion," defendant was tried in the Circuit Court of Audrain County, found guilty, and his punishment assessed at one year in jail and a fine of one thousand dollars. Defendant has duly perfected an appeal. *Page 67

    Upon the part of the State the evidence tends to establish the following facts:

    The crime occurred about the fifteenth of February, 1917, in Mexico, Missouri, At this time and for some six months prior thereto the defendant and prosecutrix resided as neighbors in Clarksville, Pike County, Missouri. Defendant, who was then over thirty years of age, resided with his mother, and the prosecutrix, who was then about nineteen years of age, resided with her mother. Prosecutrix was a student in the Clarksville high school, and defendant was interested more or less in farming. The two families were quite friendly. Defendant and prosecutrix were in each others company frequently, became engaged to be married and from about the middle of December, 1916, until the middle of the following February, frequently indulged in acts of sexual intercourse. Most of the acts of sexual intercourse occurred at the barn on the rear of the lot where defendant lived.

    In January, 1917, prosecutrix missed her monthly period of illness. She communicated this fact to defendant. He told her that he thought it was due to the fact that she had had a cold and that he thought she would be alright in a short time. One week went by with no change in the condition, and appellant procured some medicine from a local physician. This medicine failed to produce any results. More medicine was procured from the local doctor, but without results. Several days afterwards appellant procured medicine from a physician in Louisiana, Missouri, but this likewise failed to bring about the menstruation.

    Defendant then requested prosecutrix to tell her mother about her condition, stating to her that if her mother would consent a local physician would perform an operation upon her. Prosecutrix, however, did not tell her mother at that time. Later appellant informed prosecutrix that a local physician wanted to see her mother and requested her mother to come to his office that afternoon. The prosecutrix's mother went to see *Page 68 the doctor and refused to give her consent to an operation, and thereupon the doctor refused to perform the operation.

    The mother of the prosecutrix requested defendant to marry prosecutrix, but defendant told her that he could not, because he did not want to lose his own mother.

    Defendant stated that he would go to Louisiana the next day and find a doctor who would perform the operation. A day or so later defendant told prosecutrix that he had found a doctor at Louisiana who would perform the operation. Defendant gave prosecutrix twenty-three cents for railroad fare to Louisiana, and the next morning defendant and prosecutrix boarded a train for Louisiana, but the defendant, stating that he did not wish to be seen with prosecutrix, rode in a different coach. Upon arriving in Louisiana defendant gave prosecutrix fifty cents with which to buy her dinner, and then informed her for the first time that he was going to take her to Mexico for an operation.

    Later that day they went by railroad to Mexico. Upon arriving there defendant went out to inquire the way to Doctor Hawkins' office, and shortly thereafter came back to the depot and accompanied prosecutrix to the office of Doctor Hawkins, a duly registered physician.

    When they arrived at the doctor's office he was alone. Defendant said to the doctor, "Here is the little girl, Doctor; she is a mighty fine little girl." The doctor replied saying, "I would think that if you had not told me; I think well of all the girls." After getting warm prosecutrix went into the back room of the doctor's office. Defendant at the request of prosecutrix remained in the front office.

    In the private room the doctor placed the prosecutrix in an operating chair. Prosecutrix told the doctor that she was two months advanced in pregnancy. The doctor by means of instruments performed an operation upon her for the purpose of producing an abortion. *Page 69 Defendant paid the doctor twenty-five dollars for performing the operation. Prosecutrix became nervous and sick at her stomach, and rested upon a bed in the doctor's office until train time.

    On the train going to Louisiana that evening prosecutrix became quite sick and had to be helped from the train at Louisiana. There she lay on the floor of the depot while defendant went to get an automobile to take them to Clarksville. They arrived at Clarksville about ten o'clock that night.

    The next morning prosecutrix, according to the doctor's directions, removed the packing from her sexual organs. About nine o'clock that morning a foetus passed from her. The next morning prosecutrix suffered severe cramping spells and a local physician was called to give her some medicine. This local physician was shown the foetus and said, "Well, that's it alright."

    Prosecutrix was in good health when she went to the doctor's office in Mexico, and she had not been advised by any physician that it was necessary to her health or the health of an unborn child that she have the operation performed. The trip to Mexico was made on Thursday and prosecutrix testifies that on the following Wednesday she was back in school.

    The evidence upon the part of the defendant tended to prove the following facts:

    The prosecutrix returned to school the Tuesday following the operation and remained at school the balance of the week. Defendant offered evidence tending to show that the reputation of defendant for "peace, quietude, truth and morality in general standing in the neighborhood was good," and that the reputation of the prosecutrix for "virtue, chastity, morality and veracity" was bad, and that the reputation of the prosecutrix's mother along the lines above mentioned was not very good.

    I. It is contended by appellant that the court erred in permitting the State to prove that defendant had at one time been a drunkard and had taken the *Page 70 whiskey cure. It will be necessary to explain how this question arises upon the record in order to fully understandReputation. its significance.

    Upon the trial the appellant produced as a witness Berkely Wells, who, over the State's objection, was permitted to testify as to the reputation of the appellant "for morality, peace, quietude, truthfulness and general standing in the community." The witness upon his direct examination testified that appellant's reputation in the above behalf was good: Thereupon the State's attorney, in cross-examining witness Wells, asked the witness if he hadn't heard that the appellant used to be a drunkard and at one time had taken the whiskey cure. The witness answered in the affirmative.

    The above mentioned cross-examination of defendant's character witness was entirely permissable as a proper inquiry into the source and the kind of information which the witness had on the subject about which he had testified in his direct examination. [State v. Crow, 107 Mo. 341, l.c. 345, et seq.; State v. Thornhill, 174 Mo. 364, l.c. 370; State v. Brown, 181 Mo. 192, l.c. 213.] We therefore rule the above point against appellant's contention.

    II. It is further contended that the court erred in overruling appellant's application for a continuance.

    Appellant asked for a continuance on the ground that Dr. E.M. Bartlett, an important witness, was in the military service of the United States and was unable to be present to testify upon the trial. The application stated that if presentContinuance. this witness would testify in substance that the prosecutrix did not pass a foetus as claimed by her the day after the operation was performed upon her but that he made an examination of the alleged foetus at the request of the mother of prosecutrix and found it to be merely a blood clot, superinduced by a cold and delayed menstruation, and that he so informed prosecutrix and her mother. *Page 71

    It was not essential to a conviction in this case that the pregnancy of prosecutrix be established. [See Sec. 4458, R.S. 1909.]

    The first count of the information did not charge that the prosecutrix was pregnant. The second count of the information did charge the pregnancy of the prosecutrix. But the jury acquitted appellant under the second count and found him guilty under the first count. It is therefore evident that the jury found that the prosecutrix was not pregnant. This being true it is difficult to see how appellant could have been injured by the absence of this witness whose testimony would merely corroborate the finding which the jury in fact made in the case.

    Aside then from the question of the lack of diligence shown by defendant in procuring the testimony of this witness in deposition form before he was inducted into the army, which in and of itself may have justified the ruling below (a point not necessary here to determine), we are of the opinion that the action of the court in overruling the application for a continuance did not in any manner result in injury to the appellant.

    III. Appellant's next contention, as we understand it, is that the court erred in failing to instruct the jury that evidence as to the other offense (viz.: the procuring byFailure to appellant of medicine from other physicians for theInstruct. use of prosecutrix) should be considered by them as bearing only on the question of intent.

    Concerning this point it is sufficient to say that the failure to give such an instruction is in no manner assigned as ground of error in the motion for a new trial. Nor is the point in any manner preserved in the bill of exceptions. Under such circumstances the point is not saved for appellate review. [State v. Wansong, 271 Mo. 50, l.c. 58, and cases therein cited.]

    IV. During the argument before the jury the attorney for the State said:

    "Why gentlemen of the jury, every fact and circumstance stands absolutely uncontradicted. The only *Page 72 means by which they endeavor to indirectly contradict the fact of this charge is to bring witnesses in here to lie and vilify the character of this girl. That is not bringing testimony here which says there was no trip to Mexico, there wasn't intercourse, there wasn't any use of instruments."

    Appellant contends that the foregoing statement was a comment on the failure of the appellant to testify in the case, and for that reason the judgment should be reversed.

    We are unable to agree with this contention. Only by a strained construction could it be said that this language referred to appellant's failure to take the stand. Very similar statements have been before this court and have been held not to be subject to the objection now made. [State v. Hughes, 258 Mo. 264, l.c. 271; State v. Gordon, 253 Mo. 510, l.c. 518.]

    Further complaints are made concerning the arguments and conduct of the prosecuting attorney. We have carefully examined all of the voluminous matter of which complaint is made but find no matter in that regard which would justify a reversal of the judgment.

    The judgment is affirmed. All concur.