City of Seattle v. Demos

154 P.2d 597, 22 Wash. 2d 89, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 387
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1944
DocketNo. 29364.
StatusPublished

This text of 154 P.2d 597 (City of Seattle v. Demos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Seattle v. Demos, 154 P.2d 597, 22 Wash. 2d 89, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 387 (Wash. 1944).

Opinions

Robinson, J.

J. — The appellant, Jim Demos, was convicted in the Seattle municipal court of violating a Seattle ordinance. The charge, omitting formal parts, was worded as follows:

“Then and there being the said defendant did wilfully and unlawfully possess and sell alcoholic liquor on the premises at 67t£ Yesler Way, all of which is contrary to Ordinance No. 69284, of . the City of Seattle, entitled ‘An Ordinance controlling the sale, manufacture, possession of alcoholic liquor in the City of Seattle, contrary to the State Liquor Act.’ ”

The defendant appealed to the superior court of King county, and the cause was heard by that court sitting without a jury. At the close of the trial de novo, the defendant was again found guilty. The post-trial motions having been made and denied, the judgment and sentence appealed from was entered, requiring the defendant to pay a fine of one hundred fifty dollars and costs and to serve thirty days in the city jail.

Ordinance No. 69284 is very inclusive. It not only makes it a misdemeanor to possess or sell, as therein defined, but also to possess and sell, “except as authorized or permitted by the provisions of” the Washington state liquor act (Laws of 1933, Ex. Ses., chapter 62, p. 173). It further provides that the description of any offense under the ordinance shall be sufficient in law if made in the language of the ordinance. There is a similar provision in the state liquor act.

For the most part, the errors assigned relate to factual matters. Assignment No. 5 seems to raise the question of law chiefly relied on. It is therein assigned that: “The Court erred in holding that an offense was charged in the complaint.”

. The court held that the offense was charged in the language of the ordinance, but the appellant contends that, even so,

“Certainly, this complaint did not apprise the appellant *91 of the nature of his charge, and could only confound and confuse a defendant charged in such complaint.”

We are not able to find that the appellant was thus prejudiced. If, as we think most unlikely, he went to trial in the municipal court uncertain and confused as to the charge, his uncertainty and confusion must have then and there been thoroughly dissipated. From his experience in that court, he undoubtedly knew just what to expect in the de novo trial in the superior court. In ruling upon the assignment, we think it sufficient to quote from the opinion in State v. Vane, 105 Wash. 170, 174, 177 Pac. 728:

“ . . . it may be that the information would not meet the tests of the common law, but we have endeavored to relax the rigidity of those rules. When fair trials were the exception rather than the rule, it was but natural that judges, having a sense of right and humanity, should hold the state to strict pleading and to a stricter proof; but in these times, when those charged with crime are protected by every constitutional and statutory guaranty of a fair trial that a sense of humanity can suggest, and by a general sentiment that no innocent man shall be convicted of crime — when education is general, and understanding of written words is common to all classes, there is no sound reason why the rigorous rule of the common law should be adhered to as a rule of construction in criminal pleadings.”

(For an earlier statement by this court to the same effect, see the opinion in State v. Wright, 9 Wash. 96, 37 Pac. 313.)

The only substantial question presented by the remaining assignments is whether the evidence warrants the conviction. All of the state’s witnesses were members of the Seattle police force. The substance of their testimony will be given. Sergeant Tembreull testified that, the department having reason to believe that liquor was being sold at 67% Yesler Way, he was assigned to investigate the matter, but the outer door was always locked. He hung around the Yesler Tavern just across the alley in an endeavor to make the acquaintance of someone having an entree. Having found such a man in the person of Jim *92 Buck, he made his acquaintance, and, while drinking beer with him, expressed his distaste for that beverage and asked Buck if he could get him some whiskey. Buck said he could. Tembreull gave Buck two one-dollar bills which Sergeant Richardson had previously furnished him. He watched Buck cross the alley and enter the Baranoff. After some ten or fifteen minutes, Buck came out of the hotel and returned to the tavern with a Coca Cola bottle. The officer took it to the men’s room to determine whether it contained whiskey and found that it did.

While this was going on, four other officers, Sergeant Richardson, who had furnished the bills and kept a record of their serial numbers, Sergeant Jordan, Sergeant West-man, and Officer McCain, were observing from shadowed points directly across the street. Three of these officers testified in the case. Two of the three testified that they could see into the Yesler Tavern and saw Tembreull talking to Buck. The other was doing something about the car at the time. These two testified that they saw Buck go to the Baranoff and shortly after return to the tavern. All three testified that Tembreull came out shortly after and walked up the street, and that, before he was out of sight, the defendant came out of the Baranoff and went in the same direction. Officer McCain arrested him.

All three officers testified that he denied any wrongdoing and invited them to come up to his room. They accepted the invitation. The stairway landing thereto was closed by a locked door which Demos opened with a key. It was later found that, when one pressed the button at that door, it activated a bell in the defendant’s room. There was a large closet in the room itself, containing a table and three chairs. There was a whiskey bottle in the room, nearly empty, and scattered about were a number of mixer bottles, most of them empty. After looking around, the officers exhibited a search warrant and asked Demos to open the drawer of a dresser which had a slot cut in the top immediately above the drawer. He did so, revealing a considerable amount of bills and silver. On top of the heap were two twice-folded bills. They were unfolded, and their *93 serial numbers compared with the record which Richardson had of the bills furnished to Tembreull. The serial numbers were identical. The testimony of the officers vary as to what Demos replied when asked to explain how the bills got there. One says he shrugged his shoulders and said: “They must have dropped from the sky.” Another said, “from the roof,” and the third, “from the ceiling.”

It was further testified that two keys on a ring hung on the doorjamb. When asked about them, Demos said they were his and belonged to a room which he had upstairs. Three of the officers found the landlady on that floor who showed them all the rooms but one. They unlocked that one with one of the keys taken from the defendant’s room, and found therein an old padlocked trunk which they unlocked with the other. It contained fifty-four pints of whiskey, fourteen bottles of rum, and some brandy. The officers took the liquor and the padlock, but left the trunk itself in the room.

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Related

State v. Vane
177 P. 728 (Washington Supreme Court, 1919)
State v. Wright
37 P. 313 (Washington Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 597, 22 Wash. 2d 89, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-seattle-v-demos-wash-1944.