State v. Navone

39 P.2d 384, 180 Wash. 121, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 830
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1934
DocketNo. 24468. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 384 (State v. Navone) 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. Navone, 39 P.2d 384, 180 Wash. 121, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 830 (Wash. 1934).

Opinion

Beals, C. J.

Defendant, Ed Navone, was arrested pursuant to an information which charged him with the crime of selling intoxicating liquor to Allen Birnie, a minor of the age of seventeen years. Defendant moved against this information and also demurred thereto. At the hearing, over defendant’s objection, the state was permitted to amend the information by adding thereto, after the description of the offense as originally charged, the words, “and one Bobert Handley a minor of the age of nineteen years,” whereupon the information was sustained. Thereafter, a second information was filed, containing two counts, the first charging the sale of intoxicating liquor to Allen Birnie, “a minor of the age of eighteen years,” and the second charging a similar sale to Bobert Handley “a minor of the age of nineteen years.” No order was entered formally disposing of the first information filed.

Defendant thereupon moved that the second information be quashed because of the pendency of the first *123 information, or in the alternative that proceedings on the second information he stayed until the first information had been disposed of. This motion was deified, whereupon defendant moved that the state be required to elect upon which of the two informations it would proceed, and upon denial of this motion, demurred to the original information and to both counts of the second information, his demurrers being overruled.

Defendant was put upon his trial upon the second information, and at the close of the state’s case, the court directed a verdict of not guilty as to count one. The case was submitted upon count two, the jury finding defendant guilty, including in their verdict a recommendation that clemency be extended. From judgment and sentence pursuant to this verdict, defendant appeals, assigning error upon the overruling of the various demurrers which he had interposed to the two informations, upon the refusal of the court to quash the second information, and upon the denial of his motion to require the state to elect upon which information it would proceed.

Error is also assigned upon the overruling of various motions for orders declaring a mistrial made by appellant, based upon alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney; upon the denial by the trial court of appellant’s motions for a new trial and for arrest of judgment; upon the giving of certain instructions and upon the refusal to give others requested by appellant, and finally upon the entry of judgment and the imposition of sentence pursuant thereto.

We find no merit in appellant’s assignments of error based upon the filing of the second information and appellant’s trial thereon. The second information was filed in the same proceeding as the first, and manifestly superseded the same. If the state should attempt to bring appellant to trial upon the first infor *124 mation, an appropriate remedy would doubtless be available to Mm.

Neither do we find error in connection with the refusal of the trial court to require the state to elect as to upon which information it would proceed. Appellant was placed upon his trial upon the second information. He does not argue that he was surprised by this action, and we find no basis for his contention that he was prejudiced by the ruling of the trial court in connection with the matters above referred to.

Appellant was tried pursuant to Rem. Rev. Stat., § 7328-1 [P. C. § 3180], which provides, inter alia, that “Every person who shall sell any intoxicating liquor to any minor shall be guilty of a felony. ’ ’ The statute does not define the word minor, and appellant argues that this word as used in the act should be held to refer to one under the age of eighteen years, instead of to persons under the age of twenty-one years. Appellant was convicted of the offense of selling liquor to Robert Handley, who was nineteen years of age.

If appellant’s position is sound, count two of the information upon which appellant was tried and under which he was found guilty stated no offense and his demurrer thereto should have been sustained.

Rem. Rev. Stat., § 10548 [P. C. § 580], provides that “All persons shall be deemed and taken to be of full age for all purposes at the age of twenty-one years and upwards. ’ ’.

Appellant contends that, as there is no statute declaring that a person shall not he of full age until he or she reaches the age of twenty-one years, and as there are other statutes which declare that, for certain purposes defined therein, a minor shall be deemed to be a person under eighteen years of age, it must be •held that the statute under which he was tried applies *125 only to sales of intoxicating liquor to persons less than eighteen years old.

Appellant argues that, as criminal statutes should be strictly construed, the courts must adopt in connection with the word minor, as employed in the criminal statute above quoted, the lowest age at which, under any one of our statutes, a person is said to be a minor. In this connection, appellant calls attention to the section of the workmen’s compensation act defining a minor to be “a person of either sex under the age of eighteen (18) years,” Rem. Rev. Stat., § 7627 [P. C. § 3533], and to the section of the statute providing for punishment of juvenile delinquency, which, according to its terms, applies to children under eighteen years of age. Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1987-1 [P. C. § 593]. Other sections of the criminal code are by their terms made applicable to persons under the age of eighteen years.

We find no merit in appellant’s contention. Our statute above quoted follows the common law, and for all general purposes fixes the age of majority at twenty-one years. A minor is one who has not reached this age. The special statutes relied upon by appellant are, by their terms, limited in their application to minors under eighteen years of age, thereby simply creating a class within a class.

By the criminal code of 1909, prior statutes making the sale of intoxicating liquor to minors an offense were repealed, and the following section, now Rem. Rev. Stat., § 2445 [P. C. § 8831], adopted:

“Every person who— . . .

“(4) Shall sell or give, or permit to be sold or given to any person under the age of twenty-one years any intoxicating liquor, cigar, cigarette, cigarette paper or wrapper, or tobacco in any form; . . .

. “Shall be guilty of a gross misdemeanor.” ■ •

*126 We hold that, under our law against the sale of intoxicating liquor to minors, the statute is violated by a sale to a person under twenty-one years of age.

A resume of the evidence is necessary to a discussion of appellant’s other assignments of error. It appears from testimony introduced by the state that Allen Birnie, Robert Handley and Roy Curtain' met at the Birnie home at about eight o’clock on the evening of April 2, 1932. Curtain was over twenty-one years of age, the other boys being younger. The three intended to go to a dance on the evening in question, and as a prelude desired to drink some liquor.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 384, 180 Wash. 121, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-navone-wash-1934.