The questions raised by the errors assigned so far as insisted upon, will he treated in detail and in the order of their presentation in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error.
I. Did the court err in taking the case off the calendar November 21, 1902 ? That is predicated on these circumstances : Previous to the call of the ease for trial it had been placed upoii the day calendar for that purpose. There was-a rule of the trial court to the effect that a case thus placed should not be continued beyond the time when regularly reached, in response to an application therefor by either party, unless for a cause not known to such party when the-calendar was made up, or arising thereafter. Upon the trial day, the prosecuting officer made the application in question,, giving as a reason that he had been unable to procure the attendance of the state’s witnesses. Testimony was taken in open court in support of the application, showing that subpoenas for witnesses had been regularly issued and placed in the hands of an officer to be executed, and that he had made quite extensive efforts to do so and failed. The showing being satisfactory to the court the application was granted, the attorney for the accused objecting thereto. It is said that the ruling was in violation of the rule above mentioned, and of Circuit Court Rule XX. The latter plainly applies to-continuances for the term, not such as the one in question. *119The rule of the trial court, as the judge thereof held, was fairly complied with. We see no reason to override that decision. It was made in the due administration of the court’s own rule, which it had authority to violate if it saw fit, saving the rights of adverse parties from serious prejudice. There was, however, no purpose to ignore the rule. On the contrary the court enforced it to the extent which justice seemed to require. Such a rule is one of procedure merely, made by the court for the conduct of its own business. A violation of it could not properly he considered reversible error under any circumstance, in the absence of the most clear and satisfactory showing that the objecting party was substantially prejudiced thereby. There is no showing at all in that regard appearing in the record.
2. Did the court, in the presence of persons called to serve as jurors, when they were examined as to their competency, make remarks prejudicial to the accused ? These are the remarks calling for consideration under that proposition:
“There may be cause for a man to be arrested a great many times when there is no reason why he should be convicted.”
“It is always supposed that0there is sufficient reason for a man to be before the jury when he is charged with an offense, or otherwise he would not be there, but that is no reason to be considered by the jury at all.”
The record does not disclose the cause for making such remarks. The occasion seems to have been the excusing of a juror for cause. The examination of the juror was not preserved in the record. The circumstances suggest that such juror, on his examination, probably expressed some leaning against the accused from the mere fact that he had been arrested and placed on trial upon a serious charge. In any event, the reasonable meaning of the language of the court seems to be that a man may be charged with being guilty of a criminal offense, constituting a legitimate ground for arrest*120ing and placing Rim on trial, yet there "be no reason whatever for his conviction because of his innocence -of the charge; therefore that the mere circumstance that an accused person, in the due course of the administration of justice, is compelled to submit to a trial on a criminal charge, should not have any influence whatever, upon the jury called to decide the matter, unfavorable to him. In that sense what the court said is not subject to criticism. It is proper to so inform a jury in submitting a case to them for final determination, or when being examined upon the voir dire. It cannot, when said at any stage of a case, be reasonably considered otherwise than as favorable to the accused.
3. Did the court err in receiving testimony against the objection of counsel for the accused ?
At the commencement of the trial the court exercised its discretionary authority in accordance with the wishes of the accused, to exclude witnesses from the courtroom except as they were called to testify, yet subsequently witnesses were allowed to testify who had violated, innocently or otherwise, the order in that regard. The practice of putting witnesses under a rule during the trial, so that one shall not be affected in his testimony by that of another, and so that, so far as possible, concert between witnesses may be prevented, is as old as the history of trials in English courts. It is doubtless a very valuable means to the end to be attained, the discovery of truth. The use thereof is rarely ever refused when applied for by a party; while a careful court will sometimes discover situations where such means should be adopted, and act accordingly, without the application of counsel upon either side. Nevertheless, neither the exclusion of witnesses while others are testifying, nor the separation of witnesses till they shall have given their testimony, is a matter that can be insisted upon as a right. It is a subject wholly under the control of the court, limited only by the boundaries of sound judicial discretion. Roberts v. State, 122 Ala. 47, 25 *121South. 238; Comm. v. Knapp, 9 Pick. 496; U. S. v. White, 5 Cranch, C. C. 38, Fed. Cas. No. 16,675; Hey v. Comm. 32 Grat. 946; Rooks v. State, 65 Ga. 330; Jemmison v. Gray, 29 Iowa, 537; People v. Hall, 48 Mich. 482, 12 N. W. 665; People v. Garnett, 29 Cal. 625; People v. McCarty, 117 Cal. 65, 48 Pac. 984; Rainwater v. Elmore, 1 Heisk. 363. Being a discretionary matter, it falls within the famliar rule that the decision of the trial court in respect thereto is not subject to review except for a manifest abuse of power. That, obviously, involves a pretty clear showing-in any case that the person objecting was prejudiced by the ruling. True, there is no want of authority that a party to a judicial trial is entitled as a matter of right to have witnesses put under a rule as to their presence in court during the examination of other witnesses, and as to their conduct -during the trial of a cause before giving testimony. Watts v. Holland, 56 Tex. 60; Smith v. State, 4 Lea, 428. But the .great weight of authority is the other way, and the judicial policy of this state is in harmony with such weight. Testing the complaint of the plaintiff in error on this subject by fhe foregoing, no reason is perceived' for holding that reversible error was committed in allowing the witnesses to testify. There is no indication, that we can discover, that the accused was prejudiced by the court’s, ruling. However, if there were such prejudice, the doctrine supported by the weight of authority is that the violation’ of the court’s order >does not go to the competency of the violator as a witness unless the party calling him is a guilty participant therein. Bulliner v. People, 95 Ill. 394; People v. Boscovitch, 20 Cal. 436; Rooks v. State, supra; Davis v. Byrd, 94 Ind. 525. That is just. An innocent party should not be deprived of the testimony of one of his witnesses because of the latter’s transgression of which such party is innocent. Such transgression may well bear on the credibility of the witness’ testimony, as has often been held, many of the cases cited being *122examples of that, but the direct punishment for the offense-should be visited upon the offender himself, as for a contempt of court; and such is the rule laid down in many of' the cited cases.
Complaint is made because the girl upon whom the offense-was alleged to have been committed testified as to her own age. That was proper by a well-settled rule of evidence. Any one, after arriving at the age of discretion so as to be-competent to testify as a witness at all, may give evidence as-to his own age. 2 Jones, Ev. § 303, and cases cited. And that applies though the witness has no other knowledge in respect to the subject except that which was told him by his-parents. Hart v. Stickney, 41 Wis. 630.
The father of the alleged abused child was permitted to-testify as to her age. Objection was raised to that because-the witness indicated that he relied in part, in giving his testimony, upon a memorandum made by him at the time of the child’s birth, which memorandum was not produced in court. We are unable to discover any error in that. The witness testified to the effect that he was present at such birth, that he made the memorandum, and knew at the time thereof that he made it correctly. One may refer to a memorandum made by himself for the purpose of preparing to give testimony in regard to the fact involved, even if he has no present recollection independent thereof, so long as he knows that, when he-made it, it was in accordance with the truth. Bourda v. Jones, 110 Wis. 56, 85 N. W. 671; Nehrling v. Herold Co. 112 Wis. 558, 568, 88 N. W. 614. The mere fact that the memorandum is not produced in court at the time the witness’ testimony is given may go to the credibility of such testimony, but does not go to the competency thereof or justify the court in rejecting it unless the witness unreasonably refuses to comply with the order of the court to produce the memorandum. The idea suggested by counsel that the memorandum made by the witness in this case, which appears to *123bave been an ordinary family record, was tbe best evidence,, cannot find favor. No mere private memorandum has that dignity, ordinarily. Generally speaking, its only proper use-in a judicial investigation involving the matter to which it refers is to refresh the memory of the witness who made it or who at somó time knew that it was correct, or as evidence-in connection with the verbal testimony and as a part of the-witness’ evidence.
4. Did the court err in refusing to direct a verdict in favor-of the accused ?
The claim is made in support.of the affirmative of that-proposition that, since the charge was laid under sec. 4382,. Stats. 1898, i. e., that the accused did'wilfully and carnally know and abuse the female child mentioned, she being under-the age of fourteen years, the calls of the statute were for some element of actual violence, or some actual force and' subjection of the female’s will; that carnal knowledge of the-girl by her consent and co-operation' does not satisfy the statute, nor a mere attempt in that regard, she consenting thereto, constitute an offense within the meaning of sec. 4383, Id., under which the accused was convicted; that if he was guilty of any offense it was that of fornication under sec. 4580, Stats. 1898, or of taking indecent liberties with the girl, not-intending to commit rape upon her, under sec. 4588a; or else that secs. 4382 and 4383 are void for uncertainty, in view of the other sections referred to, under the reasoning in State v. Wentler, 16 Wis. 89, 44 N. W. 841, 45 N. W. 816.
We do not deem it necessary at this time to go into a very lengthy examination, analysis and discussion of the statutes referred to and others that might be mentioned, since the significant element in sec. 4381, placed there by the act of 1887, which mainly led to the condemnation thereof in State v-Wentler, was subsequently eliminated therefrom, and later, in Proper v. State, 85 Wis. 615, 55 N. W. 1035, and Lanphere v. State, 114 Wis. 193, 89 N. W. 128, secs. 4382 and *1244383, and tbe whole code of laws so severely criticised in the former case, were in effect approved. The circumstances in Proper v. State were quite similar to those here. The accused was charged in one count under sec. 4382 and in another under sec. 4383. He was convicted under the latter. A correct understanding of the decision requires one to keep in mind that in Fizell v. State, 25 Wis. 364, the court held that the offense mentioned in sec. 4383, as regards females under the age of consent, is an attempt to commit the offense mentioned in sec. 4382, therefore that the latter necessarily includes the former. Counsel for the plaintiff in error argued, in Proper v. State, the same as counsel does now, that consent on the part of the female, though under the age of legal consent, is inconsistent with the crime of rape or assault with intent to commit such crime, supporting such views with sub•stantially the same reasoning as counsel for plaintiff in error now indulges in. That does not clearly appear by the report' of the case as published, but this quotation from the counsel’s brief shows it very plainly:
“While the common form of an attempt to commit the ordinary rape is by assault with such intent and on an indictment for rape there may be conviction of assault if no technical rule prevents in matter of principle and by the bettor .judicial determinations there cannot be under the common-law rules, an assault with intent to have carnal knowledge of a girl with her consent: because by the common law violence consented to is not an assault and the statute which makes her consent immaterial in defense of the carnal knowledge does not extend to the assault.”
. The court disposed of the argument, both as to the validity of the statute and as to the calls thereof being for some act of actual violence and being inconsistent with consent of the female, very briefly, using language to this effect: *125edge of a female under the statutory age of consent is-hy force of the statute necessarily -against her consent and forcible. There is no ground for -saying that the statute-under which the defendant was prosecuted is void for uncertainty.”
*124“The prosecutrix, being under the age of consent, was conclusively incapable of legally consenting to the offense charged. It was therefore neither necessary to allege nor to .prove want of consent. Any attempt to have carnal knowl-
*125The law of this state is so well settled along those lines, that were it not for the contrary doctrine being forcibly urged upon our attention at this time wO should not feel warranted' in discussing the matter. The very clear statement of the-law in Fizell v. State was never, 'after-being there promulgated, seriously questioned here for .some twenty years. The-occasion of it then was the radical change in the statutes, making it possible that a person might he charged with the crime of rape based upon an act committed upon a consenting female who had arrived at the age of puberty and was a-common prostitute, an act punishable possibly under either-of several other statutes, and under sec. 4382, for a time, by-life imprisonment, and after 1889, in effect, for that period. Such legislation was deemed so drastic by some that every possible effort that could he made was resorted to by ingenious-counsel to avoid the literal effect thereof. However, in the-very thorough analysis of all the statutes having any hearing-on the subject, the court said, in State v. Wentler, 76 Wis. 89, 44 1ST. W. 841, 45 N. W. 816, in respect to sec. 4382:
“The offense punishable under this provision is established when it is satisfactorily proven that, the person charged with such offense has in fact had sexual intercourse with the female named jn the information, and that she was under the-age of fourteen years; and the mqans used for the purpose-of accomplishing such intercourse are wholly immaterial. It may be brought about by persuasion, force or fraud. Still the offense has been committed if the intercourse takes place,, and it is as clearly applicable to a ease of fornication, adultery, seduction, or incest as it is to a case of ravishment by force or fraud.”
Taking that in connection with the very plain language of Fizell v. State to the same effect, of which it is merely af-*126firmatory, notwithstanding the changes in the statutes to which we have referred, it will he appreciated how useless it is to consider the proposition counsel for plaintiff in error now urges upon our attention, unless we are prepared at least to seriously face the probability that it would be well and proper to overrule the decisions on this subject that have stood as the law of the state for twenty-five years. We are not so prepared. On the contrary, if it were an original question it does not seem that any different conclusion could reasonably be reached than that which was early declared.
As before indicated, while all the criticisms of the statutes found in State v. Wentler have been remedied or rendered by subsequent decisions unimportant, — since some of them have not been specially referred to in any subsequent decision, yet the general condition of our statutes which gave rise thereto has not been changed, the change made going only to the matters held in that case to be fatal; and we have •evidence here that those things which brought out the other suggestions unfavorable to the laws still remain therein, and such suggestions are liable to be troublesome to trial courts and give false hopes to convicted persons for relief here, as is the case now, — we will go over the subject in response to counsel’s argument.
In State v. Wentler the court pointed out these then seeming inconsistent and unreasonable features in the statutes punishing the various phases of unlawful intercourse between the sexes: (a) The ravishment of a female over ten and under fourteen years of age by force and against her will, under •sec. 4381, is punishable with less severity than the ravishment of a female of the same age by her consent under •sec. 4382, rendering the two provisions clearly in conflict, {b) Under sec. 4381 the circumstance that the female is a •common prostitute mitigates the offense, though the criminal act he perpetrated by force and against her will, while the same act under sec. 4382 is punishable regardless of circum*127stances, by imprisonment of tbe male offender for life, (c) Under tbe various sections of tbe statutes circumstances might exist, as to an act of unlawful intercourse, sucb that the male participant therein might be prosecuted for incest, adultery, fornication, seduction or rape, (d) The result of holding that all of the several sections of the statutes are valid would be in effect to hold that they clothe the district attorney with authority to decide as to an act of a particular species of crime, under wTdch of the .various sections referred to the offender shall be charged, (e) The statute permitting punishment, as it may for an act of sexual intercourse with a common prostitute might fall under the constitutional condemnation of cruel and unusual punishments, and in any event that it is such an outrage upon justice as to suggest that the legislature did not intend to make such a law and to lead to the conclusion, upon comparing it with other statutes, that it is fatally repugnant to some of them providing for a more humane punishment, and is void. No suggestion was made that it was not within the power of the legislature to make laws with the features mentioned in “b,” “c” and Td.” The peculiar and unreasonable character thereof was merely referred to, under a familiar rule for judicial construction, as giving rise to ambiguity when the laws were considered with regard to the purposes thereof and compared with each other, requiring the court to determine the legislative purpose, if possible, otherwise than by looking at the letter of each statute by itself. The cause then under consideration, as indicated, arose under the statutes as they existed in 1888. It involved, directly, only the validity of the amendment to sec. 4382 contained in ch. 193, Laws of 1887, raising the age of consent from ten to fourteen years, leaving the punishment the same as before,' and creating the repug-nancy between such section and sec. 4381. Such difficulty was discovered and brought to the attention of the legislature at its session in 1889, before the court had spoken on *128the subject. In an attempt to remedy the same, ch. 368, Laws of 1889, was passed.. The defect subsequently said by the court to be fatal to the law of 1887, and the one strongly suggested as probably so, was sought to be cured by so amending sec. 4381 as to change the age limit therein to twelve years, the unfortunate mistake being made, however, of using the word “under” instead of the word “over,” making the statute apply to offenses upon females under the age of twelve years instead of over that age, as was manifestly the legislative intent; and by so amending sec. 4382 as to change the age of nonconsent from fourteen to twelve years in harmony with the intended change in sec. 4381, and to make the punishment which theretofore was life imprisonment in all cases imprisonment for not more than thirty-five years nor less than five years. In 1891, at the first opportunity for dealing with the matter, after the mischief created by the mistake mentioned was discovered, and after the decision in State v. Wentler was known, the subject was again considered by the lawmaking power in the light of the judicial criticisms upon its previous work; and in what resulted, ch. 350, Laws of 1891, it must be presumed that the legislature intended to remedy all defects judicially discovered, so far as existing laws on the subject were in excess of legislative authority, and so far otherwise as in its judgment a remedy should be applied. Sec. 4381 .was amended merely by correcting the mistake referred to. No other change was then made therein or in any other law on any kindred subject. The matter was again before the legislature in 1895, resulting in ch. 370, Laws of that year, whereby the age limit in secs. 4381 and 4382 was changed to fourteen years.
Thus, in the light of the severe criticisms made in State v. Wentler, of the laws on the subject of unlawful commerce between the sexes as such laws existed at that time, the legislature has twice specially considered the matter and generally considered the same in the late revision of the statutes, with*129out making anj change except to eliminate the one feature said to he fatal to the law of 18 8 Y and the one suggested as probably so, — those we have designated as “a” and “e.” The conclusion from that seems irresistible that the legislature bowed to the authority of the court, so far as it was held that it had previously acted in excess of its power, and that otherwise it concluded to adhere to its own judgment as to the best public policy, as it had a right to do. In that, the features thereof mentioned in “b, - “c” and “d,” now pointed to upon the authority of State v. Wentler as either rendering secs. 4382 and 4383 fatally defective or leading to the conclusion that the offense of which the plaintiff in error was charged does not fall under the former, nor the offense of which he was found guilty under the latter, were indorsed by the lawmaking power, with the expressed opinion of this court that it was probably within its power to do so.
Surveying the statutes as a whole, from all that has gone before, features “b,” “c,” and “d,-” aforesaid, that once seemed to the court highly unreasonable under the circumstances then existing, do not have-- such appearance now. Doubtless in making the radical innovation of raising the age of consent from ten to fourteen years the legislature had. in mind the construction of the statutes in Fizell v. State, and fully appreciated that cases were likely to arise falling-within the letter of sec. 4382 where it would be monstrous, to charge the offender with being guilty of a crime that might, send him to the state’s prison in effect for life. The offender might be a mere boy; the female a common prostitute, and there be a concurrence of minds with no very great difference as to the leading spirit. It doubtless was seen by the-lawmakers, and they acted having regard for the fact, that, cases were liable to arise falling within the letter of such section, where justice would be fully satisfied, or at least-punishment would be much more certainly visited upon the-offender, and so far as practicable justice would be satisfied: *130if not fully so, by charging him under the statute on the subject of' fornication, or some other statute covering his offense, than by attempting to secure his conviction of the heinous crime of rape. Such attempt, it could be foreseen, under some circumstances might lead to the infliction of a too harsh punishment,' — one the very contemplation of which might likely, in view of that supreme equity in the law that puts so much power in trial juries in criminal cases, result in the offender going entirely unpunished. It was also doubtless appreciated that it was impracticable to differentiate as regards the circumstances respecting all cases that might possibly arise, dividing them with some degree of accuracy into classes, and framing acts so that an offense as to one class would not fall under the statute designed to reach another. Raising the age of consent from ten to fourteen years, regardless of circumstances, so as to apply to common prostitutes upon the one hand and mere boys upon the other, — all classes regardless of means used to accomplish the unlawful purpose, — was fraught with many difficulties of a most serious character, among them, as indicated, being the danger that the very severity of the law might in many cases be a stumbling block to the infliction of,any punishment in cases calling loudly therefor, unless existing statutes were left undisturbed, with administrative authority lodged somewhere as to which statute was best calculated to cover the given case. Pacing those situations, the legislature, presumably with full - knowledge of all this court had said on the subject, in its own and superior wisdom has spoken intending to leave the prosecuting officer to exercise the administrative authority mentioned, since this court has held that such must be the result of leaving the statutes in regard to the matter as they were in 1888. They have been so left. That authority is doubtless not unlimited. It cannot be arbitrarily exercised. 'The trial court must necessarily have supervisory control -over it so as to prevent any manifest abuse thereof. With*131•out tlie features referred to, it would still "be doubtful whether sec. 4382, providing as it does for a maximum punishment of thirty-five years in the state’s prison, and a minimum of five years’ imprisonment, would not offend against the constitutional provision condemning cruel and. unusual punishments, extended, as it is, so as to include the sexual act between a mere boy and possibly a common prostitute. In this the wisdom of retaining sec. 4580 unchanged, in connection with the amended sec. 4382, is apparent. In some instances falling under the latter, if the charge were so laid, jurors, holding to their own ideas of duty, in extreme cases would not convict. ' '
If anything were needed to re-enforce what has been said as to the legislative attitude, as to a mere attempt, in the sense of physical effort, to have commerce with a female child under the age of consent, regardless of attending circumstances, being an assault to commit the crime of rape, it is furnished by the act of the legislature, sec. 4588a. It provides for punishing a person severely, the maximum being imprisonment in the state’s prison for a term of two years, for taking indecent liberties with a female under the age of fourteen years, with or without her consent, there, being no intent at the time to coonmit upon her the crime of rape. That was further supplemented in 189Y by sec. 4591a.
The conclusion must be the legislature supposed that the intent to commit the crime of rapé, added to the act made so highly criminal by its last utterance, should satisfy the calls of sec. 4388; and with the former statutes to which we have referred, secs. 4382, 4383, 4580, 4588a, and 4591a, and •other laws incidentally referred to, all standing together, and with the effect we have indicated, would prevent or punish, so far as practicable, abuse or corruption of female children.
5. Did the court err in refusing to give instructions requested by counsel for the accused? Six or more distinct requests made by counsel were refused, all bearing on the *132subject of early complaint by tbe abused female in case of rape, of tbe offense committed upon ber. Snob requests were framed upon tbe theory that actual violence of a hostile character is an essential ingredient of rape upon a female under tbe age of fourteen, under tbe statute, and that the usual rule-in respect to rape committed upon a female having legal capacity to consent to tbe sexual act applies to a case like this, where tbe evidence is undisputed that tbe girl was an actual participant in tbe offense. Tbe mere statement of tbe proposition is sufficient to show its utter absurdity. Such rule has no application whatever to tbe facts here. Tbe requests were properly refused. Such rule springs from tbe fact that a female upon whom tbe crime of rape has been by actual violence committed, will naturally, at tbe first opportunity, complain thereof to those in her confidence. Ordinary common sense would suggest that where tbe act of intercourse constitutes rape regardless of consent upon tbe part of tbe female because of ber statutory disability in that respect, and she not only fails to object or resist, but consents and co-operates, tbe natural bent of ber mind thereafter would be to enable her immoral associate to escape tbe consequences of bis criminal act, — to shield rather than to aid in punishing him. To-apply tbe general rule to such a case would be unreasonable in tbe highest degree. Tbe trial court very properly instructed tbe jury to that effect.
6. A female witness who testified to having discovered the-accused and tbe girl while in tbe act of committing tbe offense charged, did not disclose ber information in regard to-tbe matter for nearly a month. As to ber evidence tbe court was requested to specially instruct tbe jury that tbe delay strongly suggested that ber evidence given in court was untruthful. Such instruction was properly refused. It would have been plain error to have so instructed. Tbe witness gave a very good explanation of’ ber delay, — one that was consistent with her' being a modest",' honest woman. We need *133not go into the details of her evidence leading to that conclusion. Suffice it to say that, after a careful consideration .thereof, it seems her conduct in not promptly informing against the accused was not a.circumstance which warranted the court in giving special significance thereto as tending to impeach her. In any event, it woxild not have been proper to instruct the jury that the delay, of itself, raised a strong presumption of the falsity of her testimony. The most that would have been proper to state under any circumstances, is that the delay was a matter for consideration, with all the other circumstances hearing on the question, in determining the credibility of the witness’s evidence. There is no rule that required the court, upon request or otherwise, to do even that. The doctrine as to an early disclosure by a prosecutrix, •of the crime of rape committed upon her by force, had no application to the witness. Moreover, it is not the duty of the -court, in any case, upon request or otherwise, to single out the evidence of any particular witness and instruct the jury in regard thereto, as to how they should or should not view the same.
Two requests to instruct were refused, which werevto the effect that the jury should view the evidence of the girl with .great care, having regard for her condition of mind as an injured person, and guard themselves against being moved by sympathy in her behalf, to give undue weight to the evidence •against the accused. Here again, counsel’s attitude was that the same rule should apply where the female, though competent, is not conscious of jhaving been wronged, where she is really a participant in the unlawful act, which applies in case of the crime of rape committed by actual violence. Obviously the requested instructions were not good law.
Several instructions were refused which were framed upon the theory that although the girl was. under the age of legal •consent, the accused could not be convicted of the full offense •charged, nor with assault with intent to commit such offense, *134nor of assault, in the absence of evidence of actual violence toward the girl and subjection of her will. From wbat bas been said no further discussion is necessary to demonstrate that such requests were properly refused.
Complaint is made because the court refused to specially instruct the jury as follows:
“The defendant is entitled to have the evidence against him carefully and closely considered, and can only be convicted if, after such scrutiny, you can say upon your oaths that the evidence leaves upon your minds no reasonable doubt as to his guilt.”
We are unable to see how error can be predicated on that, since the court fully instructed the jury that it was their duty to acquit the defendant unless satisfied beyond every reasonable doubt of his guilt in respect to some criminal offense charged against him in the information, and to acquit him of any offense so charged of which they were not from the evidence so satisfied.
1. Numerous instructions were given by the trial court in harmony with the rules of law heretofore discussed, requiring the rejection of counsel’s requests for instructions, to the. effect that the crime of rape, or assault to commit the crime of rape, cannot be committed upon *a female actually consenting thereto, and that the evidentiary rule- as to early disclosure by the abused female, of the offense committed upon her, does not apply to one whose consent to the act does not militate against its criminal character by force of the statute. Obviously the court gave the law in that regard to the jury correctly.
The foregoing covers all the propositions urged upon our attention. No reason is perceived why the judgment should be disturbed. It must be affirmed.
By the Gourt.- — So ordered.