State v. Crotts

60 P. 403, 22 Wash. 245, 1900 Wash. LEXIS 254
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1900
DocketNo. 3216
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 60 P. 403 (State v. Crotts) 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. Crotts, 60 P. 403, 22 Wash. 245, 1900 Wash. LEXIS 254 (Wash. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dunbar, J.

The defendant was tried on an information charging him with the crime of murder in the first degree, and upon the cause being submitted to the jury a verdict was returned finding him guilty of manslaughter. Judgment was entered, and an appeal is brought here on errors alleged to have been committed by the court.

The first error alleged is the action of the court in asking leading questions of the witnesses, and asking them in such a way as to violate § 16, art. 4, of the constitution, which provides that judges shall not charge juries with respect to matters of fact, nor comment thereon. In this case, while the witness Strachan was relating circum[247]*247stances attending the affray, and during the cross-examination by defendant’s counsel, the court interposed as follows:

“ Q. When you raised your cue that time and threatened the deceased, and commanded him to put down the dipper, you say that he threw it down. Now, do you think that was done in obedience to that command ?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. He seemed at that time to subside ?

Q. And yield ?
Q. And had apparently consented to stop his quarreling ?

Q. And at that time, then, the affray seemed to have the appearance of being at an end, as far as he was concerned ?

A. ■ Yes, sir.”

Again, when counsel for the defense was cross-examining the witness Patton, who had testified in detail as to how the deceased was acting at the time the fatal shot was fired, the court interposed the following questions:

“ Q. Was Mr. Snell at that time, or did he have the appearance of, giving up the trouble ?

A. Yes, sir.”

At this point counsel for defendant interposed the following objection:

“If your honor please, we desire to object. I believe we have the right to object to the court’s asking a question, if we believe it is immaterial. We ought to have objected to similar questions yesterday, because — well, our ground simply is that they are. leading, and that they are leading away from the interests of the defendant. They are leading in the interests of the state. I don’t say but what it is proper for the court sometimes, and very often, to ask questions, and I am not. objecting to it on that ground, but [248]*248I object to it just for the same reason as if tbe prosecuting attorney was asking that.

Court. As I understand the rule, the court may ask any questions that it sees fit, if it be leading or otherwise.

Mr. Parker. Tes, sir; I think it has, too; but I think that is governed by the same rules.

Court. Objection overruled.

Mr. Parker. We ask an exception.

Court. Exception noted.

Q. Tou answered the question?

By Mr. Earley (for the state) :

Q. So the jury can hear what was the answer to the question ?

A. I said he was not in the act of going any further in the struggle; he seemed to be giving up the fight.”

The defendant in this ease was relying upon self-defense, so it will be seen that the interrogatories of the court were concerning material questions involved in the case.

It is urged by the respondent that, as no exceptions were taken by the defendant to the questions propounded by the judge at the time they were propounded, under the general rule, and under the rulings of this court, no basis for a determination of those questions in this court has been laid. It is true that the ordinary rule is in consonance with the ruling, frequently announced by this court, that alleged errors will not be reviewed without they are excepted to at the time they are committed; but we do not think the error alleged in this instance falls within the rule, nor that the rule should be enforced when its observance would tend to destroy the very object for which the objection is ordinarily made. An attorney is placed in a delicate position under such circumstances. It is dangerous for him to enter into a controversy with the court in relation to matters and proceedings which the court itself instituting. The court should not place counsel in this [249]*249position without it becomes absolutely necessary for the furtherance of justice. In this case the defendant’s counsel had to choose between the probability, or at least the possibility, of prejudicing his case in the minds of the jury by reason of his expressed opposition to the course pursued by the court, or else lose the benefit of an objection which he was entitled to make. We do not think counsel should be compelled to imperil their cause in the lower court for the purpose of protecting their rights in the 'appellate court. Besides, in this case, upon the second effort of the court in this direction, counsel, probably feeling that it could not in safety be tolerated longer, objected to the questions propounded by the court and suggested the error which, in his judgment, the court had committed the day before, when his objections were overruled and he was cavalierly informed that the court could ask any questions that it saw fit; and this controversy was especially called to the attention of the jury by the interposition of the prosecuting attorney, who insisted that the question asked by the court should be answered so that the jury could hear it.

Again," where the constitutional right has been invaded, it has been held by this court that no failure of objection or exception .should stand in the way of considering errors based on the violation of such provisions.

In Linbeck v. State, 1 Wash. 336 (25 Pac. 452), it was held that, where the defendant in a prosecution for burglary was not sworn as a witness in his own behalf, it was error for the court not to instruct the jury that from such fact no inference of guilt should be drawn against the defendant; and the fact that the defendant remained silent did not amount to a waiver of such right. And in that case it was said:

“ The statute in question makes it the duty of the court to give such instruction, irrespective of the action of the [250]*250defendant in relation thereto, and while we do not now hold that the right to have this instruction given may not be waived by some express act of the defendant to that end, we do hold that the simple fact that he remained silent did not amount to such waiver.”

In this case the constitution emphatically prohibits the judge from charging the jury with respect to matters of fact, or from commenting thereon; so that the duty was as imperative on the court not to comment on the facts, as it was in Linbeck v. State to give such instructions as the statute made it its duty to give.

In Freidrich v. Territory, 2 Wash. 358 (26 Pac. 976), it was held that, although there was no exception to the whole or a part of the charge on the ground that it is an argument upoti the facts, yet, in a capital case, if there is prejudicial error, which is patent upon the face of the record, denying the accused the fair and impartial trial which is his right, the supreme court will not allow these technical objections to deprive the defendant of a new trial.

In State v. Myers, 8 Wash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 P. 403, 22 Wash. 245, 1900 Wash. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crotts-wash-1900.