State v. Denby

255 P. 141, 143 Wash. 288, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 633
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1927
DocketNo. 20244. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 255 P. 141 (State v. Denby) 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. Denby, 255 P. 141, 143 Wash. 288, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 633 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

By an information filed in the superior court of Spokane county, the appellants, Denby and Linem, were charged with the crime of robbery. The charging part of the information reads as follows:

“That the said defendants, Warren 0. Denby and Dick Linem, alias Jack Armstrong, in the county of Spokane, state of Washington, on or about the 11th day of March, 1926, then and there being, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously, with force and violence and fear of immediate injury to the person, take from the immediate presence of one, George Arvanitis, certain personal property, to wit: one' hundred gallons of moonshine whiskey, of the value- of six hundred dollars, the said property then.and there being in the possession and under the dominion and. control of said George Arvanitis, and belonging to said George Arvanitis.” '

To the information the appellants demurred, which demurrer was overruled, whereupon they entered pleas of not guilty and the case proceeded to trial. The jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged.against both of the appellants, and they then moved in arrest of judgment and for a new trial. These motions the. court denied and entered the. judgment in accordance with the .verdict. The appeal is from the judgment so entered.

From the facts presented at the trial, it appears that, on March 10, 1926, the complaining witness, George Arvanitis, a Greek resident of the city of Spokane, was approached by one Harry Woods and told that parties from Lewiston, Idaho, desired to purchase some one hundred gallons of moonshine whiskey. A meeting place was appointed, and in the evening of that day,, at about six o’clock, Arvanitis went to a room occupied by *290 Woods where he met the appellant Linem. At this meeting, Arvanitis and Linem discussed the terms of a possible sale and purchase of liquor, Arvanitis agreeing to furnish the liquor at a price of six dollars per gallon. Linem was not then ready to close a bargain, saying he would have to consult his partner and would let him know later whether he would take the liquor or not.

On the evening of the 11th, Linem called Arvanitis and stated to him that he had received word from his partner and that they would take the liquor, making an appointment with him at a certain time and place where they would agree as to the place to make deliyery. At the appointed time, Arvanitis drove in his car to the appointed place and there met Linem who told bim that his partner was at the Spokane Hotel and it was necessary for him to see him before final arrangements could be made, telling Arvanitis at the same time to drive down to the Spokane Hotel, where the appellant would meet him. Arvanitis drove as directed, the appellant following in a Hudson coach. The appellant met some person at the hotel and talked with him for some moments, and then came to Arvanitis’s car and told him that they were ready to take the liquor and for him to go and get it.

The evidence is not very definite as to the place the liquor was to be delivered, but it is evident that they gave Arvanitis to understand that they would meet him on the road some place on his return trip. Arvanitis then drove to his cache, which was some distance from the city of Spokane, took from the cache seven 10-gallon and two 15-gallon kegs of moonshine whiskey, loaded the kegs into his car and started back to Spokane. After proceeding a short distance, he overtook one Preston Moore, who was walking along the highway in *291 the direction Arvanitis was going, and took him into his car. The car then proceeded about a mile when they were signalled to stop by a flashlight. Arvanitis came to a stop and found himself nearly abreast of another car, described by him as the Hudson coach already mentioned. Two men approached him with drawn revolvers, one from the right side of the road and the other from the left. Arvanitis did not submit tamely, and a struggle ensued during which he was dragged from his car, struck repeatedly, and finally subdued by a blow on the head from one of the revolvers. During the struggle several shots were fired from one of the revolvers. The liquor was then transferred from Arvanitis’s car to the car of the highwaymen, who then started down the road in the direction of Spokane. Arvanitis then called to Moore, who seems to have retreated to a place of safety at the beginning of the struggle, and the two entered upon the pursuit of the fleeing car. They had proceeded but a short distance when a shot from the pursued car punctured the radiator of Arvanitis’s car, which in a short time thereafter caused him to abandon the pursuit. The sheriff’s office was shortly thereafter notified of the robbery, and the appellants, from the description of them given by Arvanitis and Moore, were arrested on the next day in the city of Spokane.

The state produced as a witness a garage keeper in the city of Spokane who testified that the appellant Linem, shortly after seven o’clock in the evening of March 11th, came to his place of business and desired to rent a car for use later on in the evening. The owner agreed to rent the car and prepared a rental contract, leaving it with an employee. Later on, some person came and took the car, signing the name “D. Wilson” to the contract. The car was returned during the night of the 11th and the speedometer reading showed that *292 it..had-been, driven by the renter somewhere near seventy-five -miles. On the morning of the 12th, Linem came to the rental garage and reported that a door had been tom off the rented car while it was in use-by the renter-. The car was taken to a repair shop, and, while there, it was discovered that it contained two small holes resembling bullet holes, one in the right side of the cowl and one-in the top.

The appellants were arrested in a rooming house in the city of Spokane, and clothing was there found similar to the clothing the highwaymen were wearing at the time of the robbery. A revolver -was also found in the room. - It was similar in size to-those used in the robbery, but an examination showed it to be one that had not been fired for some time.

The appellants did not take the: stand, but other witnesses for them attempted to establish an alibi.

The appellants make a number of assignments of error, the first being that the evidence is insufficient to justify a conviction. But we think this objection hardly'requires argument. The. mere statement of the evidence, we think, shows that a case was made for the jury.

It'is next urged that the court- erred in not sus-* taining the demurrer to the information. An examination of the information shows that it does not follow the language.of the statute, which defines the crime, of robbeiy, in that it does not contain in precise .words the allegation that the taking of the property was against the will- of the complaining witness. The information does charge, however, that the taking was with force and violence and by putting in fear. This, we think, is sufficient to meet the objection made: While it nmst appear from some source in an information for robbery that the taking was not with the consent of the victim, *293 this sufficiently appears when it is charged that such taking was by means of force and violence.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 141, 143 Wash. 288, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-denby-wash-1927.