State v. James

385 P.2d 558, 63 Wash. 2d 71, 1963 Wash. LEXIS 520
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1963
Docket36608
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 385 P.2d 558 (State v. James) 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. James, 385 P.2d 558, 63 Wash. 2d 71, 1963 Wash. LEXIS 520 (Wash. 1963).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

March 14, 1962, an information was filed charging defendant-appellant, William James, and Richard Topper with the crimes of (1) first-degree murder, (2) robbery, and (3) grand larceny.

April 2, 1962, Richard Topper pleaded guilty to count III of the information — grand larceny — and was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of not more than 15 years.

April 9, 1962, an amended information containing the same three counts was filed against both defendants.

During trial, defendant Topper was discharged from counts I and II. The jury found defendant James guilty on all three counts and inflicted the death penalty.

It is not necessary to set forth the facts of the alleged crimes.

We discuss only two categories of the defendant’s assignments of error: (1) those we deem sufficiently meritorious to warrant a reversal of the judgment and sentence; and (2) those raising questions of law that, in all probability, will be presented to the trial court on a retrial of defendant James.

Defendant James did not take the stand. His codefendant Topper was the key witness for the state. They were represented by different counsel.

Topper’s plea of guilty to grand larceny planted a suspicion in the mind of James’s counsel that Topper had arranged with the prosecuting attorney to plead guilty to grand larceny and to testify on behalf of the state; in return, counts I and II against him were to be dismissed.

This suspicion became a possibility when the state failed to deny the allegation in affidavits filed in opposition to pretrial motions by James to interview Topper, to examine evidence in possession of the prosecuting attorney, and to strike Topper’s name from the amended information. The motions were denied.

*73 During early stages of the trial, the possibility that Topper would testify for. the state became a probability. On examination of the first prospective juror, Topper’s counsel stated:

“. . . I would like to explain at this time that it is contemplated that the defendant, Richard Topper, whom I represent, . . . will be a witness for the prosecution.” (Italics ours.)

On various occasions, the prosecuting attorney, while examining prospective jurors, alluded to the possibility that Topper might be dismissed from the trial. For example, he stated:

“If it should transpire . . . that Mr. Topper is dismissed from the murder and the robbery counts, having plead guilty to hauling this money away, you understand that that is a decision and an act, a judicial act that Judge Evans considers and acts upon based upon a full disclosure of all the circumstances. Some of those facts may come into evidence before you as jurors and some of them may not be admissible, but do you understand that that is a judicial act that the court performs, that it is not some legal flim-flam, or arbitrary act to be performed by the prosecuting attorney ...” (Italics ours.)

(Parenthetically, the prosecuting attorney should not have informed the jury that the court might consider matters not admissible in evidence. This reference, as disclosed by the record, is to the file of the prosecuting attorney and to certain lie detector tests that might have been given.)

Further, in selecting the jury, Topper’s counsel claimed no right to exercise preemptory challenges. On motion of James’s counsel, the court permitted him to exercise 12 challenges.

Finally, in his opening statement, the prosecuting attorney said:

“. . . it seems that Richard Topper will' take this stand and tell you himself all the things that he did, as well as all the things that he knows that James did.”

After 13 witnesses had testified for the state, the suspicion became a certainty; in the absence of the jury the prosecuting attorney moved that defendant Topper be discharged, but that

*74 “ . . . it [the discharge] be held in abeyance until the facts show that the defendant Topper has in fact related in this court all the facts that he knows concerning the crimes charged.”

After argument, the court said:

“I am going to grant the motion of the prosecuting attorney to discharge the defendant Topper, that he may be a witness for the state and testify fully as to all material matters within his knowledge, and the discharge is conditioned upon that. If he does testify fully with reference to all matters within his knowledge, the order is self-executing.” (Italics ours.)

The jury returned to the courtroom. The trial judge said:

“Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, in your absence a question of law was presented to the Court and ruled upon.
“The prosecuting attorney made a motion to discharge the defendant Topper so that he may testify as a witness for the state, and the Court has granted that motion, providing that he testify fully as to all material matters within his knowledge.” (Italics ours.)

Topper’s testimony covers 163 pages of the statement of facts. On redirect examination by the prosecuting attorney, Topper replied in the affirmative to the following question:

“Q. Mr. Topper, when your lawyer here, Mr. Grant, talked to you about testifying in this case, talked about the question of your then being dismissed from the murder and robbery charges by the Court, did he say anything to you as to whether or not you would have to tell this Court all you knew about this, truthfully, just as it happened, before that [Topper’s discharge] would take place?” (Italics ours.)

It was stated in oral argument in this court that defendant Topper left the courtroom after he had completed his testimony and was not in court during the remainder of the trial. We do not find that Topper’s counsel participated further in trial proceedings. At the end of the case, the court instructed the jury that Topper had been discharged from counts I and II.

*75 James’s counsel, by proper exceptions in the trial court, and by assignments of error in this court, presents two basic questions of law on this phase of the case:

A. Did the discharge of defendant Topper, in the manner disclosed by the record, constitute a comment on the evidence and the credibility of the witness contrary to the provisions of the state constitution?

B. Must a codefendant in a criminal trial be unconditionally discharged prior to the time he testifies for the prosecution?

A. Comment on the Evidence

Article 4, § 16, of the Washington constitution provides:

“Judges shall not charge juries with respect to matters of fact, nor comment thereon, but shall declare the law.”

In State v. Crotts, 22 Wash. 245, 250, 60 Pac. 403 (1900), the court explained that

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Bluebook (online)
385 P.2d 558, 63 Wash. 2d 71, 1963 Wash. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-james-wash-1963.