State v. Guerzon

160 P.2d 603, 23 Wash. 2d 242, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 240
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1945
DocketNo. 29534.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 160 P.2d 603 (State v. Guerzon) 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. Guerzon, 160 P.2d 603, 23 Wash. 2d 242, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 240 (Wash. 1945).

Opinion

*243 Mallery, J.

Maxine Guerzon, a white girl, and Alfred B. Moore, a negro, were jointly informed against by the prosecuting attorney of King county on a charge of assault in the first degree alleged to have been committed on one Jesus Raby Crisustomo, a Filipino, in the early morning of August 22, 1944, in King county, Washington. To this information, both defendants entered pleas of not guilty. They were tried and convicted by a jury, and judgment and sentence upon the verdict was pronounced by the court. Maxine Guerzon appeals.

Amore Guerzon, the Filipino husband of appellant, and Crisustomo, who will for convenience hereafter be referred to as J. J. (his nickname), had arrived in Seattle from Alaska, where they had been employed as cannery workers for about three months, on August 20, 1944.

Amore Guerzon and J. J. had been friends for years prior to Guerzon’s marriage to Maxine Guerzon, nee Mun-ger, and J. J. had known Maxine since the year 1940. The last time he had seen Maxine Guerzon prior to the night of the assault was in April, 1944, in Los Angeles, at which time he had quarreled with her. At that time he was working on Terminal Island, Los Angeles. He left Seattle for Alaska in May, 1944.

Alfred B. Moore was a negro soldier who had been inducted into the service from Los Angeles and had been in the army about eighteen months. He had been married to Bessie Moore about sixteen years. For about eight or ten months prior to April of 1944, Moore’s detachment had been in the Aleutian islands. He had returned to the states and to Fort Lawton the latter part of March or the first part of April of 1944. Moore telephoned his wife, who resided in Los Angeles, at the time of his arrival, and she came to Seattle to see him. He obtained a furlough for nineteen days commencing April 18, 1944, and on that day Mr. and Mrs. Moore left Seattle by train for Los An-geles. On the day before, Maxine Guerzon, who had been in Seattle with her husband, Amore, left there in company with another girl to visit friends in Los Angeles. They *244 took the bus to Portland and there took the same train out of Portland on which were Moore and his wife.

Maxine and Moore became acquainted with each other shortly after the train got out of Portland. They exchanged notes, engaged in tete-a-tetes, and, in short, Moore’s attentions to Maxine were by her encouraged to such an extent that she agreed to go out with him when they reached Los Angeles.

Maxine was in Los Angeles about ten days, during which time she had at least six dates with Moore. When she got back to Seattle, she went to her husband’s hotel, stayed with him a few hours, and then moved to another place in Seattle, where Moore contacted her frequently after his return to Seattle on May 7, 1944. The acquaintanceship by this time had developed to such an extent that Maxine wanted Moore to divorce his wife for her. She stated that she “was crazy about him.” On at least one occasion, she was'with Moore from midnight until 10:30 a.m. the following morning, at which time she answered the phone in his room at the Mar Hotel.

' Maxine’s husband, Amore, and J. J. were then in Alaska; having left Seattle in May. While there, they had a conversation about Maxine; and on the day their boat docked on its return to Seattle, Maxine, who had been in Los Angeles, returned to Seattle'. This was on August 20, 1944. She was accompanied by her sister, Gloria Munger Quitazol; and' they came up in Maxine’s 1941 Buick sedan. Maxine saw her husband, Amore, as soon as she arrived in Seattle; and then on August 21, 1944, she and her sister went to another' hotel and there registered under their maiden names. She then telephoned Moore and arranged to meet him at eight o’clock p. m. at a club near 12th and Washington streets in Seattle.

Later that evening, appellant, Maxine Guerzon, while with Moore and her sister, saw J. J. in another club. There they had a brief conversation. J. J. testified that Maxine said to him, “J., I don’t like that deal where you told to my husband I am nigger lover.” He denied making the statement, and Maxine asked him to accompany her, a little *245 later on, to a place where she intended to get her husband so that J. J. could deny in her presence and before Amore, having made such a statement. Maxine then left the Merchant Marine Club, rejoined Moore, and they then crossed the street to the colored Elks’ Club on Washington street. Moore testified that at that place, Maxine said to him, referring to J. J., “I don’t like that so and so; I am going to kill him.” She asked Moore to accompany her, and she and Moore left the Elks’ Club, walked to where her car was parked (just a few steps away and across the street from the club in which Maxine had just a few minutes before left J. J.), took a .38 caliber revolver out of the glove compartment of her car, smashed the dome light over the back seat, and handed the gun to Moore, who then got into the back seat. Maxine then started the car and drove around the block to 7th and King streets; she then asked Moore to lie down on the floor of the car in the back and when he refused, let him out of the car on the corner, telling him to wait there for her.

When he got out of the car, Moore stuck the barrel of the gun under his belt and waited there for Maxine, who drove back to Washington street, picked up J. J. (who thought she was taking him to confront her husband), came back to where Moore was waiting, stopped the car, and Moore got into the back seat. Maxine then, according to Moore, told J. J. that she was “taking him for a ride— she was going to kill him.” During the ride she told him to “pray,” that the cigarette she told him to light was “the last cigarette you smoke,” and that during all this time Moore was holding the gun against the back of J. J.’s head. Maxine finally said, “let him have it” and J. J. heard Moore “cock” the gun, twisted around in the front seat, ducked and jumped out the door as Moore fired. The bullet entered J. J.’s body a little to the front of and near the right hip bone, coursing downward and to the front, and lodged in the scrotal sac.

According to Moore, he then jumped out of the car, rejoined Maxine Guerzon, wiped the finger prints off the *246 window of the car, disposed of the gun, and then they came back to town and he went out to camp.

In his opening statement to the jury, the deputy prosecuting attorney said:

“The state is going to show this crime was planned and accomplished by a white girl and her Negro paramour to eliminate a Filipino who she believed was going to or had exposed her illicit .relationship to her husband, Amore Guerzon.” (Italics ours.)

The appellant contends that this constituted reversible error on the following grounds: First, the statement was an attack on the character of the accused Maxine Guerzon in advance of her taking the witness stand to testify in her own behalf. Second, the statement was an unfounded charge of collateral crime, namely: that of adultery (Rem. Rev. Stat., §2547 [P.P.C. §118-115]). Third, there was never any evidence of any nature introduced throughout the trial

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Bluebook (online)
160 P.2d 603, 23 Wash. 2d 242, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guerzon-wash-1945.