State v. Baker

272 P. 80, 150 Wash. 82, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 965
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1928
DocketNo. 21171. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 272 P. 80 (State v. Baker) 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
State v. Baker, 272 P. 80, 150 Wash. 82, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 965 (Wash. 1928).

Opinions

*84 Parker, J.

— The defendants were, by information verified by the prosecuting attorney for Clark county and filed in the superior court for that county, charged with the crime of murder in the first degree, as follows:

“That they, the said Luther Baker, Ellis Baker and Lewis ‘Ted’ Baker, on or about the 22nd day of May, 1927, in the county of Clark, state of Washington, did, then and there, with a premeditated design to effect the death of Lester M. Wood, sheriff of said Clark county, and any other officer who might attempt to inquire into and interfere with the illicit liquor operations then being carried on by defendants, and without excuse or justification, unlawfully and feloniously shoot, kill and murder said Lester M. Wood, he, the said Lester M. Wood, then and there dying as a result of the unlawful acts of said defendants.”

The defendant Lewis Baker is commonly known as “Ted” Baker. This manifestly accounts for designating him as he is named in the above quoted charge. We shall hereafter refer to him as “Ted,” and the other defendants as Luther and Ellis, respectively. The defendants each being duly arraigned, each attacked the information by motion and demurrer, which, upon hearing, the trial court overruled. Thereinafter, on June 27, 1927, each in person, being then also represented in court by counsel, pleaded not guilty. The court at that time set the case for trial on the merits to commence on July 25, 1927. Before the day set for trial, some other motions and objections hereinafter to be noticed were disposed of by the court adverse to the elaims of the respective defendants.

On July 25, 1927, the case proceeded to trial upon the merits before the court sitting with a jury, and continued until August 4,1927, when the jury returned its verdicts finding Luther guilty of murder in the first degree and that the death penalty shall be inflicted upon him, finding Ellis guilty of murder in the first *85 degree but that the death penalty shall not be inflicted upon him, and finding Ted guilty of murder in the first degree but that the death penalty shall not be inflicted upon him.

The court, having overruled appropriate timely motions challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain any conviction as against Ellis and Ted, made respectively in their behalf, and having overruled their respective motions for new trial which were, in effect, motions in the alternative to their prior challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain any conviction against either of them, and having overruled the motion for new trial made in behalf of Luther, rendered a final judgment against each of the defendants, that Luther shall suffer the death penalty, that Ellis shall suffer life imprisonment and that Ted shall suffer life imprisonment. From this final disposition of the case in the superior court, all of the defendants have appealed to this court.

Luther was fifty-nine years old at the time of the homicide. He has lived near the village of HocHnson, some twelve miles northeasterly from Yancouver, in Clark county, practically all his life since he was two or three years old. He has, generally speaMng, been a farmer, though he has frequently worked away from home at other employment. Ellis was fifty-one years old at the time of the homicide. He is a brother of Luther and the father of Ted. He has lived practically all his life near HocHnson, being born there. He has, generally speaHng, been a farmer, though he has frequently worked away from home. Ted is a son of Ellis, and was twenty-one years old at the time of the homicide. He was born near HocHnson and has lived there practically all his life, though he was living in Yancouver for some time immediately prior to the homicide. *

*86 Luther and Ellis have for many years hunted to a considerable extent with firearms in the foothills and mountains to the east of Hockinson, and for many years have possessed firearms and are experienced in their use. It was common for them to carry firearms when they went frequently into the hills and mountains, whether they went there for hunting or to look after their stock, which they frequently let graze and range over that country. It is not far to the east of Hockinson that the foothills of the Cascade mountains begin to rise.

Over what may be termed the first range of hills there is the Dole valley, some ten miles northeasterly from Hockinson. There is a rough road from Hockin-son in a somewhat direct northeasterly course over the first range of hills to Dole valley. This road is but little improved, and, while not suitable for automobile travel, it is possible to so use it. It is, however, quite suitable for the driving of stock over it. The most practical way for automobile travel, and by far the most used way, into Dole valley, is over a good road northerly from Vancouver or Hockinson to the Lewis river, thence easterly up the Lewis river, thence southerly up Eock creek which drains Dole valley. This roundabout way to Dole valley is several miles longer than by the hill road.

In Dole valley, several miles south of its junction with the Lewis river and some one hundred yards west of Eock creek, is an old logging camp, having a few old camp buildings, called Huston’s camp. The county road there runs southerly up Eock creek and the valley just west of Huston’s camp. The hill road from Hockinson comes into this road some distance north of Huston’s camp. Some three-quarters of a mile southwesterly from Huston’s camp is the Erion place, with its small house, barn, corral and some cleared *87 land. Huston’s camp is a place frequented by picnickers and campers coming to Rock creek, in Dole valley, for recreation and fishing. Bast of Rock creek and the valley, the country rising higher towards the mountains is wild and unsettled, and at some distance back is sufficiently open for grazing of stock. The country for a considerable distance back on each side of Rock creek has been heavily timbered, but was logged off years ago, and now has for the most part a dense second growth. This is particularly true all over the comparatively limited territory here in question.

There is a so-called horse trail leading from Huston’s camp north and east several hundred yards to Rock creek, where it crosses the creek by a ford just south of where a small creek called Smith creek comes into it from the east. The horse trail from there leads on easterly up the hill and clear beyond the territory with which we are here concerned.

There is a foot trail, not practical for horse travel, leading from the road a very short distance south from Huston’s camp, a hundred yards or more down to Rock creek at a point directly east of Huston’s camp, crossing the creek on a footlog and leading thence up the hill northeasterly for a distance a little more than an eighth of a mile to the horse trail. The junction of these two trails is approximately an eighth of a mile east of the Rock creek ford of the horse trail. A short distance, about one hundred feet, east of the junction of the foot trail and the horse trail, there is a somewhat obscured trail leading from the horse trail some two hundred feet northerly down to a secluded place near Smith creek.

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Bluebook (online)
272 P. 80, 150 Wash. 82, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baker-wash-1928.