State v. Guthrie

56 P.2d 160, 185 Wash. 464, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 467
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1936
DocketNo. 25798. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 56 P.2d 160 (State v. Guthrie) 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. Guthrie, 56 P.2d 160, 185 Wash. 464, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 467 (Wash. 1936).

Opinions

Geraghty, J.

Calvin Guthrie, Thomas Joyce and Martin Joyce were jointly charged, in an indictment returned by a grand jury impaneled in Pierce county, with the crime of grand larceny. A fourth defendant, Charles Owens, was named in the indictment, hut was dismissed in the progress of the trial and testified as a witness for the state. The defendants seasonably interposed a motion to set aside the indictment and a plea in abatement, which were denied, as were a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence and motions to dismiss and for a directed verdict at the close of the *466 case. The jury’s verdict found the defendants guilty as charged, and after denial of motions in arrest of judgment and for new trial, judgment was entered and sentence imposed, from which the defendants appeal.

The indictment charges that the appellants, with intent to defraud Pierce county, obtained from the county “possession of and title to $244.50 in money of value of $244.50 in lawful money of the United States of America, ’’ by color and aid of false and fraudulent representations and pretenses and by trick, scheme, and device, in that Guthrie, being commissioner of Pierce county for district No. 3 and having supervision of Lake View Sanitorium, and Charles Owens, an employee of the county, under control of Guthrie, with Martin Joyce and Thomas Joyce, confederated and combined together with a unity of mind and common purpose and aim to defraud the county by furnishing to it certain services, labor and material in and about the repair of a boiler located in the sanitorium and charging the county $619.50 therefor, a sum grossly in excess of the fair and reasonable value thereof, and grossly in excess of a sum for which another person had offered to furnish the material and render the service; that the appellants well knew that the fair and reasonable market value of the services and materials was $375; that the appellants furnished the services, labor, and material for the repair of the boiler and thereafter presented and filed a verified claim and demand for payment under oath in the sum of $619.50, with the proper officers of the county; that the board of county commissioners of Pierce county, acting upon false and fraudulent representations made by the appellants that the claim was true and correct and that no public officer or employee of Pierce county had any personal interest therein, approved the claim; and the sum called for therein was thereafter duly paid to the

*467 appellants; and that (Guthrie, Owens, Martin and Thomas Joyce

“ . . . did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously, aid, abet, counsel, hire, induce and encourage each other to do and commit said crime as herein alleged.”

The appellant (Guthrie became commissioner of Pierce county in January, 1933. In the division of the duties of the three county commissioners, he had the supervision of the sanitorium. Owens was stationary engineer at the Pierce county court house, under appointment of (Guthrie, and for some time had charge of the boilers at the sanitorium.

During the period covered by the indictment, Martin Joyce was a policeman in the employ of the city of Tacoma. He was a stationary engineer by trade and had never done any contracting. The appellant Thomas Joyce, a. brother of Martin, was engaged in the moving and storage business, as “Logan’s Moving & Storage Company.” He had never engaged in the contracting business, as the term is understood, nor done any brick work of the kind involved here.

During the spring or early summer of the year 1933, it was found that some repair work was required on one of the boilers at Lake View Sanitorium. Owens spoke of the prospective work to Tom Lillis, a bricklayer and expert boiler repairman, who had on former occasions done boiler repairing for Pierce county. After an examination of the boiler, Lillis estimated that the necessary repairs would cost $420, and gave Owens a written estimate containing a list of the repairs and the labor and material required. Some time later, Owens told Lillis that Commissioner (Guthrie had authorized the repair of the boiler and had requested that one hundred dollars be added to the bill for himself, (Guthrie. Lillis declined this proposal. *468 Later, Owens requested him to add an extra fifty dollars for his labor, saying that the rest would be added to the material bill. This proposal Lillis also declined, but offered to do the necessary labor on the job for $1.25 an hour for anyone who was given the work.

One Bendel, a salesman for George Schofield Company, dealing in construction material, gave Owens prices on the material required for the boiler job. He testified that Owens asked him if it would be possible to sell material at one price and bill the county at another. Bendel reported the suggestion to his company and was directed to advise that what Owens proposed could not be done. After this, Owens’ connection with the sanitorium boilers was discontinued, although he remained engineer at the court house.

The boiler matter was left in charge of Mr. Peterson, the general business manager of the sanitorium. After Owens’ direct connection with the sanitorium job had ceased, Bendel approached Peterson, then in charge, in an effort to sell the required material. He was informed by Peterson that the order had been given to one Horjes, of the American Plumbing & Steam Supply Company. Bendel then saw Horjes, who requested a profit of ten per cent to his company for running the order through its books. This, Bendel refused, for the reason that the American Plumbing & Steam Supply Company was not in the material business and, therefore, not entitled to it. After obtaining the list of required material made by Lillis and given to Owens, Bendel, for his company, submitted a bid to the American Plumbing & Steam Supply Company of $221.50, being Lillis’ figures.

While the material was sold to the American Plumbing & Steam Supply Company, it was delivered by the Schofield Company direct to the sanitorium. The *469 American Plumbing & Steam Supply Company billed Logan’s Moving & Storage Company for $293.65 for this material. Lillis, who had originally bid on the work, was employed by Martin Joyce, up to that time a stranger to him, to do the brick work. Joyce informed him that he had a job of repairing the sani-torium boiler and wished to employ bim for the work. Lillis gave Joyce his labor prices: $1.25 an hour for himself and $.75 an hour for a helper. Joyce left the details of the job largely to Lillis, although he made short daily visits to the sanitorium.

Lillis testified that the reasonable value of the labor and material in the repair job, if done by the county, would be $375. He testified, however, that, if done by contract, with the cost of bond and other incidental expenses and a guarantee of the work for one year, coupled with the possibility that, as the work progressed, the necessity for additional repairs would develop, the figure of $619.50 would not be unreasonable ; in fact, that a man would be a fool to make such a contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 P.2d 160, 185 Wash. 464, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guthrie-wash-1936.