Lee v. Severyns

276 P. 94, 151 Wash. 403, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 821
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1929
DocketNo. 20792. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 276 P. 94 (Lee v. Severyns) 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
Lee v. Severyns, 276 P. 94, 151 Wash. 403, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 821 (Wash. 1929).

Opinions

Tolman, J.

Appellant, as plaintiff, brought this action by serving and filing a simple complaint for money had and received in the amount of $13,500. The defendants answered with denials and an affirmative defense. The state intervened. The case was tried to the court, sitting without a jury, resulting in a judgment denying any relief to the plaintiff or to the intervener, and both have appealed.

The case was submitted to the trial court upon certain stipulated facts as follows:

“Mr. Vanderveer: It is admitted by the defendants, I understand, that we have demanded the return of the money and they refused to give it back and it is in the registry of the court? Mr. Burgunder: *404 Yes. Mr. Dumett: Yes. Mr. Vanderveer: It is stipulated that on the 31st day of December, 1925, Mr. Colvin, the prosecuting attorney of King county, accompanied by certain constables, entered a certain room in the city of Seattle and there arrested, while engaged in conducting gambling, the nine men whose names appear on the three receipts which have been admitted in evidence as plaintiff’s exhibit “A”; that thereafter they took them in custody to the police station in this city, where, at the request of Mr, Colvin and the constables, the chief of police placed them in custody in the city jail; that thereafter the chief of police, at the request of the prosecuting attorney, fixed bail for the appearance of each of said persons to answer to a state charge of being common gamblers in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars; that thereafter the plaintiff Frank Lee deposited in cash with the chief of police, the defendant here, the sum of $13,500 as bail for said persons; that at the time there was no charge of any kind filed against any of said persons, but thereafter the prosecuting attorney filed in this court an information charging each of them with the crime of conducting gambling; that search has been made for them and none of them have been found and their whereabouts are unknown; that before the filing of said charge plaintiff demanded the return of his money'3 from the defendants, and they refused to return the same or any part thereof, and have since paid it into the registry of this court, where it now is awaiting the outcome of this action; that this action was started before the filing of any charge against any of the persons so arrested. Mr. Dumett: I will stipulate to whatever Mr. Burgunder does. Mr. Burgunder: I think those are the facts.”

It will be seen that we have to do here with cash bail deposited, not by the arrested person, but by another for him, with a chief of police or police officers, not with a justice of the peace or committing magistrate, under Bern. Comp. Stat., § 1957%, and not “with the clerk of the court to which he is held to answer,” as provided in Bern. Comp. Stat., § 2089.

*405 The plaintiff relies upon Kellogg v. Witte, 107 Wash. 691, 182 Pac. 570, as being decisive of the whole controversy. This case does seem to resemble, very closely, that case, and except that there are defenses raised here which were not raised there, it is difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish one from the other. There was, in the Kellogg case, however, no appearance here for the respondent, and as an ex parte presentation may have led us astray, it seems wise to re-examine the question to some extent.

It is admitted that we have no statute authorizing police officers to accept cash bail, and that police officers stand in the same position now as did justices of the peace and committing magistrates prior to the enactment of Rem. Comp. Stat., § 1957%, in 1919, and therefore the defendant officers had no authority in law to accept cash bail.

But while it is admitted that the officers had no right or authority to accept the money, and release the persons under lawful arrest, in whose behalf it was deposited, yet it is contended that the depositor may not recover it back, because he has induced the police to do an unlawful thing in permitting persons under lawful arrest to go at large, or escape, and has himself violated, or is particeps criminis in the violation of Rem. Comp. Stat., § 2344, which reads:

“Every person who shall allow a prisoner lawfully in his custody to escape, or shall connive at or assist such escape, or shall omit any act or duty by reason of which omission such escape is occasioned, contributed to or assisted, shall, if he connive at or assist such escape, be guilty of a felony; and in any other case, of a gross misdemeanor.” ,

It was on this theory that the trial court decided the case.

There is considerable authority for that rule, when the bail money is deposited by the party under arrest. *406 The case of Sauskelonis v. Herting, 89 Conn. 298, 94 Atl. 368, fairly exemplifies this line of authority. It was there said:

“But it does not follow that the plaintiff can recover the cash bail he deposited upon his own request in order to obtain his release from a just confinement upon a lawful' arrest. The plaintiff requested the sergeant to do an unlawful act, to fix his bail and release him from confinement, when the sergeant was without authority to do either. The sergeant complied with the unlawful request, and in violation of law released the plaintiff and thereby obstructed justice. Both plaintiff and sergeant have participated in an illegal act. The law presumes the plaintiff knew that he was soliciting and engaged in an unlawful act. The giving of the cash bail was the moving consideration for the unlawful release.
“We are now asked to relieve the plaintiff from the effects of his unlawful act, which has contributed to the breach of the law in obstructing justice through the procuring of his release from a lawful confinement. The plaintiff was in pari delicto with the officer of the city. The law will leave him where he placed himself, and our courts will not aid him to recover the cash bail which was the moving cause of Ms illegal release. ’ ’

There are also many cases cited where the money was deposited by one not under arrest, for the purpose of securing the release of another who was under arrest. In some of these cases, there is no discussion of the doctrine of particeps criminis, that question apparently not having been raised, and they clearly hold that the officer, in the absence of an authorizing statute, was not empowered to accept money and release the person under arrest, and that the money so accepted was recoverable by the depositor.

Brasfield v. Town of Milan, 127 Tenn. 561, 155 S. W. 926; McNamara v. Wallace, 97 App. Div. 76. 89 N. Y. *407 Supp. 591; Eagan v. Stevens, 39 Hun 311. See, also, 3 R. C. L. 28.

The defense of particeps criminis or pari delicto, raised here, has, whenever raised elsewhere, been held to bar recovery by the depositor. In State v. Reiss, 12 La. Ann. 166, a short opinion was rendered which we quote in full:

“Merrick, C. J.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P. 94, 151 Wash. 403, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-severyns-wash-1929.