Case Name: Crawford v. State
Court: Mississippi Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Mississippi
Decision Date: 1927-05-16
Citations: 146 Miss. 540
Docket Number: No. 26399
Parties: Crawford v. State.
Judges: 
Reporter: Mississippi Reports
Volume: 146
Pages: 540–547

Head Matter:
Crawford v. State.
(Division B.
May 16, 1927.)
[112 So. 681.
No. 26399.]
J. A. Cunningham and Friday & Windham, for appellant.
Rufn,s Creekmore, Special Assistant Attorney-General, for the state.
J. E. Berry, also, for the state.
Corpus Juris-Cyc References: Assault and Battery, 5CJ, p. 788, n. 2; p. 790, n. 14; Criminal Law, 17CJ, p. 254, n. 51; p. 257, n. 68; p. 261, n. 69; p. 267, n. 99; p. 360, n. 65; Indictment and Information, 31CJ, p. 745, n. 96, 98.

Opinion:
Holden, P. J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
C. A. Crawford appeals from a conviction on a charge of indecent assault upon the person of Miss Jennie Moore, and a sentence to pay a fine of fifty dollars and serve a term of thirty days in the county jail.
The testimony offered for the state shows that the alleged indecent assault occurred at a circus where the appellant and the prosecutrix were seated next to each other, under the tent, while the performance was going on; that they had been neighbors for a number of years, and accidentally met and sat together that day at the circus ; that there were some children with the prosecutrix; and that people sat above and below her and appellant on the seats as they are generally arranged in a circus tent.
What happened may be best told by quoting the testimony of Miss Moore, the prosecutrix. She testified, among other things:
"And he just placed his arm upon my back, and I just knocked it hack and moved; next minute he put his hand under my leg this way [indicating] and touched me on my leg.
"Q. Where did he touch you on the leg? A. Just above the knee; and I got between my two little sisters; and he said, 'I beg your pardon;' and I said, 'There is no pardon to it; ' and I walked down to where papa was; and he said, he asked me was I ready to go home; and I told Leo Robinson about that right after the show."
The substance of her testimony is that she was assaulted by the appellant in the manner stated; that the assault (and battery) was against her will, and was also indecent. The case was tried on the theory of an "indecent assault" upon the person of the prosecutrix. The instruction given by the court for the state was upon the theory of an "indecent assault," but the instruction followed the language of the indictment. The appellant denied the assault, and no one else saw it.
The indictment, leaving out the formal parts, is as follows:
". . . Present that Claude Crawford late of the county aforesaid, on the 11th day of February, 1924, with force and arms in the county aforesaid, and within the jurisdiction of this court, he being then and there an adult male person, in and upon the person of one Jennie Moore, a female child of the age of sixteen years and of chaste character, did then and there willfully and unlawfully make an indecent assault by then and there unlawfully and willfully taking improper liberties with the person of the said female child and by then and there willfully and unlawfully putting his hands upon the private person of the said female child in a lewd and lascivious manner, all of which things were then and there without the consent and against the will of the said female child."
The appellant contends that the judgment of the lower court should be .reversed, because: First, the demurrer to the indictment should have been sustained for the reason that there is no such crime, either at the common law or under the statutes of this state, as " indecent assault," and that the instruction to the jury based upon the indictment was error, and that the motion to exclude the testimony supporting the indictment should have been sustained, because there is no such criminal offense under the laws of our state; and, second, that the proof offered by the state was insufficient to sustain the charge of "indecent assault," and that it was not sufficient to sustain any other kindred offense.
On the opposite side, the state argues that, while there is no statute making an "indecent assault" a crime in this state, and also that no such crime is prescribed by one common law, yet the conviction should be sustained upon the ground that the indictment sufficiently charges an assault and battery, and that the "indecent" element charged was a surplusage, and resulted in putting a greater burden upon the state in proving the charge of assault and battery than it would otherwise have had in proving simple assault and battery, and that, therefore, the judgment should be affirmed as a conviction of assault and battery, since the punishment imposed was not in excess State. Martin v. City of Laurel, 106 Miss. 357, 63 So. 670; Blakenship v. State, 130 Miss. 725, 95 So. 81; Hussey v. State, 114 380, 109 So. 871.
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