State v. Williams
State v. Williams
Opinion of the Court
The defendant, appellant, was convicted and condemned to life imprisonment for the crime of rape.
The objections were: First, that the question was leading; second, that the indictment did not show with sufficient certainty whom the defendant was accused of having ravished; and, third, that the answer might accuse the defendant of the commission of a crime on another date than that stated in the indictment, perhaps more than a year before.
The question did not suggest any particular answer, and was therefore not a leading question. If it could be considered suggestive of a particular answer, it would not he objectionable under the circumstances. The witness was less than 12 years of age; and the rule forbidding leading questions is not so rigid that it should not yield somewhat to the discretion of the trial judge in the examination of a very young or timid witness.
There was no merit whatever in the second objection, because the indictment gave the three names of the alleged victim of the crime, and described her as a female under the age of 12 years.
The statements per curiam show that all of the evidence introduced referred to only one crime, and fixed the date either on the 28th of November or on the 1st of December, 1917. The witnesses were not certain or exact about the date of the crime, but fixed it
We have not found any error in the rulings or proceedings complained of.
The verdict and sentence appealed from are affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE v. WILLIAMS
- Cited By
- 8 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by the Court.) 1. Witnesses The rule of evidence forbidding leading questions must yield to the discretion of the trial judge in the examination of a very young or timid witness. 2. Indictment and Information &wkey;>87(2) — Sufficiency — Date of Offense. An indictment should not be held invalid or insufficient for stating incorrectly the date of the alleged crime, if the date or time be not of the essence of the offense. 3. Indictment and Information Authority to amend an indictment, where amendment is permissible, is not confined to the grand jury. The trial judge may order an indictment amended during the trial, in the 'particulars mentioned in the Revised Statutes, on motion of the district attorney. (Additional Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 4. Criminal Law A bill of exception to the overruling of defendant’s objection that the district attorney’s question to the prosecuting witness was leading was without merit, where the bill did not show that the witness answered. 5. Witnesses >&wkey;270(3) — Cross-Examination — Scope. Objections to the district attorney’s cross-examination of defendant’s witness were without merit, where it was as to a matter as to which he had testified for the defense.