Court Opinion

ID: 1314581
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 05:26:39.631441+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:02:27.541717
License: Public Domain

61 S.E.2d 107 (1950)
232 N.C. 374
STATE
v.
BOWMAN.
No. 4.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
September 20, 1950.
*108 Attorney-General Harry McMullan and Assistant Attorney-General Hughes J. Rhodes for the State.
J. H. Folger and Fred Folger, Mount Airy, for defendant.
ERVIN, Justice.
The statutory felony of obtaining carnal knowledge of virtuous girls between twelve and sixteen years old is created by the following portion of the statute now codified as G.S. § 14-26: "If any male person shall carnally know or abuse any female child, over twelve and under sixteen years of age, who has never before had sexual intercourse with any person, he shall be guilty of a felony and shall be fined or imprisoned in the discretion of the court". This enactment is designed to protect chaste girls between the specified ages from predatory males who would rob them of their virtue.
Three essential ingredients must coexist to render a male person guilty of the statutory felony of obtaining carnal knowledge of a virtuous girl between the specified ages. They are: (1) The male person must have carnal knowledge of the girl; (2) the girl must be over twelve and under sixteen years of age; and (3) the girl must never before have had sexual intercourse with any person. State v. Swindell, 189 N.C. 151, 126 S.E. 417. The terms "carnal knowledge" and "sexual intercourse" are synonymous. There is "carnal knowledge" or "sexual intercourse" in a legal sense if there is the slightest penetration of the sexual organ of the female by the sexual organ of the male. It is not necessary that the vagina be entered or that the hymen be ruptured; the entering of the vulva or labia is sufficient. G.S. § 14-23; State v. Monds, 130 N.C. 697, 41 S.E. 789; State v. Hargrave, 65 N.C. 466; State v. Storkey, 63 N.C. 7; Burdick: Law of Crime, section 477; 44 Am.Jur., Rape, section 3; 52 C.J.Rape, sections 23, 24.
The defendant puts chief reliance upon his assignment of error based on the refusal of the trial court to grant his motion for judgment of nonsuit, which was interposed when the State rested its case and renewed after all the evidence was concluded. G.S. § 15-173. His position on this phase of the controversy is two-fold.
He asserts initially that his motion to nonsuit the action should have been allowed for want of evidence of sexual penetration. This contention is insupportable. The law did not require the complaining witness to use any particular form of words in stating that the defendant had carnal knowledge of her. State v. Hodges, 61 N.C. 231. Her testimony that the defendant had "intercourse" with her and "raped" her under the circumstances delineated by her was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that there was penetration of her private parts by the phallus of the defendant. Ballew v. State, 23 Ala. App. 274, 124 So. 123; State v. Bailly, 29 S.D. 588, 137 N.W. 352. This being so, there was evidence in behalf of the prosecution tending to establish the coexistence of the three essential ingredients of the charge. State v. Bryant, 228 N.C. 641, 46 S.E.2d 847; State v. Trippe, 222 N.C. 600, 24 S.E.2d 340; State v. Wyont, 218 N.C. 505, 11 S.E.2d 473; State v. Houpe, 207 N.C. 377, 177 S.E. 20.
The defendant insists secondarily, however, that the testimony of the State tending to show his guilt was incredible in character, and that the trial court ought to have nonsuited the action on the ground that the witnesses giving it were unworthy of belief. This argument misconceives the *109 office of the statutory motion for a judgment of nonsuit in a criminal action. In ruling on such motion, the court does not pass upon the credibility of the witnesses for the prosecution, or take into account any evidence contradicting them offered by the defense. The court merely considers the testimony favorable to the State, assumes it to be true, and determines its legal sufficiency to sustain the allegations of the indictment. Whether the testimony is true or false, and what it proves if it be true are matters for the jury. State v. McLeod, 196 N.C. 542, 146 S.E. 409.
It necessarily follows that the ruling on the motion for judgment of nonsuit was correct.
None of the remaining assignments of error justify the award of a new trial. It was not competent for the defendant to impeach the veracity of the State's witness Leona Dodson by evidence tending to show specific acts of misconduct by her. Hence, the testimony of the defendant's witnesses, C. T. Barber and Mrs. Syble Long, was properly excluded. State v. Shinn, 209 N.C. 22, 182 S.E. 721. When the instructions to the jury are construed as a whole, they do not merit the criticism that the court gave undue prominence to the contentions of the State. State v. Wilcox, 213 N.C. 665, 197 S.E. 156.
There is in law
No error.