State v. Hoffman

191 P.2d 865, 30 Wash. 2d 475, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 401
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1948
DocketNo. 30372.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 P.2d 865 (State v. Hoffman) 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. Hoffman, 191 P.2d 865, 30 Wash. 2d 475, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 401 (Wash. 1948).

Opinion

Beals, J.

The defendant herein, George Hoffman, being then confined in the state penitentiary at Walla Walla, was, by information filed April 25, 1946, by the prosecuting attorney of Walla Walla county, charged with the crime of *476 “escape as prisoner,” the charging portion of the information reading as follows:

“That the said George Hoffman in the county of Walla Walla, State of Washington, on the 24th day of April, 1946, being then and there a prisoner confined in a prison to wit: The Washington State Penitentiary, under and by virtue of a sentence imposed and commitment issued by R. M. Webster, a judge of the Superior court of Spokane County, Washington, on the 1st day of February 1944, in a cause entitled ‘State of Washington against George Hoffman, Defendant’ in which said George Hoffman was convicted of the crime of Burglary in the Second Degree did then and there wil-fully, unlawfully, and feloniously escape from said prison by the use of force and fraud.”

The defendant, having pleaded not guilty to the information, was put upon his trial, the jury finding the defendant guilty as charged by the information. From a judgment and sentence imposed pursuant to the verdict of the jury, the defendant has appealed.

Appellant assigns error upon one of the trial court’s instructions to the jury; upon the court’s refusal to give a requested instruction; upon the denial of appellant’s motion for a directed verdict, and upon the denial of his motion for a new trial.

Appellant did not testify and introduced no evidence, and, on this appeal, relies solely upon his contention that the evidence introduced by the state is not sufficient to support the verdict of guilty, the judgment based thereon, and the sentence imposed.

The evidence discloses that, during the month of April, 1946, appellant was lawfully confined, as above stated, in the Washington state penitentiary, and, on the twenty-fourth day of that month, was so confined. It appears from the evidence that, on the date last mentioned, appellant, in some unknown manner, concealed himself in the recreation yard of the penitentiary, hiding there until after the yard supposedly was cleared; that, after the guards had been withdrawn from the watch towers overlooking the yard, appellant, with the aid of a basketball backstop post, climbed the wall surrounding the yard, the wall being four *477 teen feet in height, and escaped. The statement of facts contains no direct evidence that appellant hid in the yard, while present there during the recreation period, on the day of his escape, but testimony introduced by respondent tends to eliminate any other theory concerning his escape.

Appellant was taken into custody in the city of Tacoma, May 28, 1946, and returned to the penitentiary. In due time, he was placed upon his trial, pursuant to the information referred to above.

No evidence introduced by the state supports the charge that appellant escaped from the penitentiary by “fraud,” and the court properly withdrew that portion of the charge from consideration by the jury. Respondent argues that, from the evidence, the jury was warranted in finding that appellant escaped from the penitentiary by the use of force.

Rem. Rev. Stat., § 2342 [P.P.C. §114-109], reads as follows:

“Every prisoner confined in a prison, or being in the lawful custody of an officer or other person, who shall escape or attempt to escape from such prison or custody, by force or fraud, if he is held on a charge, conviction or sentence of a felony, shall be guilty of a felony; if held on a charge, conviction or sentence of a gross misdemeanor or misdemeanor, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”

There is no statute in this state making escape from prison an offense save the above, which declares an escape “by force or fraud” to be a crime.

From the statement of facts, it appears that, when the usual evening count of the prisoners disclosed appellant’s absence, a search was made, with the result that the above-mentioned, four-by-four-inch post, nine or ten feet in length, was found leaning against the inside of the wall enclosing the recreation yard. This post had been a support of a basketball backstop in the yard. The lower end of the post, which had been buried in a block of cement, was much rotted and decayed. Leaning against the wall, the post reached to within three or four feet of the wall’s top. On the outside of the wall, near the point where one using *478 the post as an aid in mounting the wall would have descended to the ground, were footprints indicating that the person who made them had an unusually short stride, which corresponded with that of appellant.

The statement of facts contains no evidence as to how,when, or by whom the basketball post was broken at the surface of the ground or placed in position against the wall, the evidence disclosing, however, that the post was much rotted at its base.

The issue is narrow and sharply drawn between appellant and respondent, the former contending that the record contains no evidence to the effect that appellant used “force” in escaping from the penitentiary, while respondent contends that the evidence affords a sufficient foundation for the verdict of the jury and the judgment entered thereon.

In the case of State v. Hoffman, 110 Wash. 82, 188 Pac. 25, it was held that penal statutes must be strictly construed. In the course of the opinion, the court said:

“Unless the language of the statute makes the conduct of the appellant criminal, there can be no recourse to the intention of the act to establish its interpretation. Though conduct may be within the reason of an act and the mischief to be remedied thereby, yet it cannot be punished as a crime if not so denominated by the statute. Lewis, Sutherland’s Statutory Construction (2d ed.), § 520.”

Rem. Rev. Stat., § 2298 [P.P.C. § 112-83] (which is a portion of chapter 249, p. 890, Laws of 1909, entitled “Criminal Code”), reads as follows:

“Every provision of this act shall be construed according to the fair import of its terms.”

It may be noted that § 884 of the Code of 1881 made it a crime for a person confined in jail to “break such jail and escape therefrom”; Rem. Rev. Stat., § 2342, supra, being essentially a re-enactment of the prison-break statute, with the addition of the element of fraud, and refers to an “escape,” without direct reference to the element of prison break. Many states have enacted statutes making it a crime for one lawfully confined to escape from prison, but, in this *479 jurisdiction, such an escape is not made a crime by statute unless effected by “force or fraud.”

Appellant and respondent are correct in agreeing that the word “force,” as used in the statute above quoted, is the equivalent of an element of the common-law crimes of “prison break” or “prison breach.” It is also true that there is some analogy between the use of force in effecting a “prison break” or an escape from prison, and the use of force in effecting a burglarious entry.

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Related

State v. Rinkes
306 P.2d 205 (Washington Supreme Court, 1957)
State v. Basden
196 P.2d 308 (Washington Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
191 P.2d 865, 30 Wash. 2d 475, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hoffman-wash-1948.