State v. Nichols

255 P. 89, 143 Wash. 221, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1188
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1927
DocketNo. 20335. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 255 P. 89 (State v. Nichols) 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. Nichols, 255 P. 89, 143 Wash. 221, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1188 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

The defendant, John M. Nichols, was charged by information with the crime of having unlawfully and feloniously burned his dwelling house, situated in Spokane county, Washington, on or about January 17,1926. The jury found him guilty. He has appealed from a judgment and sentence on the verdict.

The testimony in the case is wholly circumstantial. It is quite voluminous but the facts, stated about as briefly as reasonable, are substantially as follows. Appellant and his wife occupied and owned the building as a residence. It was located just outside the city limits of Spokane. The family consisted of the appellant and his wife and two small boys given to Mrs. Nichols about one month after they were born. The boys attended a school, a little further out from *222 the city than their home. Appellant owned two automobiles, a Hudson and a Studebaker. On Friday, January 15, he towed the Hudson car to town, .as he told another person, to have it repaired. He owned two hogs that he employed a neighbor to butcher on January 16. On the same day, as appellant’s wife testified, they and the-children drove into, town taking the children’s savings banks, had them opened by an employe she did not kaow at the bank that had supplied them, and used the money buying things for the.boys. They returned home that'afternoon about half past three o ’clock. Having forgotten an intended purchase, appellant drove back to town about four o ’clock. They had a dinner appointment that evéning at six-or seven o’clock with friends, Mr. and Mrs. Cook,proprietors of the Sheldon Hotel in the city. It. was nearly eight o’clock when he ..returned home, stating to his wife that he had been delayed "on account of tire trouble. Just before leaving for their dinner appointment, she cooked something for the boys to eat. They, and the children, taking.. their. dog with them, drove to the Sheldon Hotel, arriving as Mrs. Ñichols testified, about half past eight or earlier, or nine o’clock as Mr. Cook testified. They took no night clothes with them. After dinner, they engaged in a small but merry party at the hotel in the private rooms of Mr. and Mrs. Cook. About midnight, they spoke of going home, but, upon the invitation of their hosts, decided to .remain over night. Thereafter the party continued until two or three o ’clock, at which time they retired for the night. They had on prior occasions spent the night, with their friends. ■ - ...

About three o’clock that morning, Mr..Leibrecht, a neighbor, living a.few hundred.feet from the Nichols home, observed it on fire. He aroused his two sons, .all *223 three taking pails as they went over to the fire. One of the boys, George, was. the first on the scene. The window, frame and sash in a front room were ablaze. He went to the. back door, opened the. screen that was not fastened and found the solid door wide open. He hallooed but got no answer. The three taking water from the kitchen sink soon extinguished the flames. Bed clothing on the bed in that room had been removed and they found on the mattress a live mineral coal of fire burning with a slow “singeing” fire in a hole three or fbfir inches deep and about eighteen inches across. They, destroyed that fire, as they supposed. They found the front door open. Still smelling smoke, they went, into the living room and found live coals on a pillow or cushion nearly consumed by slow burning. It fell apart on being picked up. They noticed two kerosene oil cans sitting on. the floor in the dining room, later found to be empty. Kerosene oil had been

.“. . . spilled all over the floor, all over the house and sprinkled over the walls and ceiling, and we smelled more smoke still, so we. went to. look for more fire, and we went into one of the other bed rooms and found coals in the bed there, so we put them out and I noticed a coal on the floor of the closet in that bed' room.”

•The window in the breakfast nook was open. In the kitchen, the stove lids had been taken off and left piled on the kitchen stove and the coals had been taken out of the fire box.. In the basement they found no fire, though the furnace doors were open. There was a very small quantity of fuel in the basement. The family parrot was gone, but the cage was left. They noticed as missing the clothing from two beds, the dining room rug, and that the drawers of the sideboard were open. The Leibrechts went home.

About six o’clock that morning, the newspaper boy *224 noticed smoke coming from the Nichols house, and he and Frank Leibreeht went over and

“. . . found that fire in the bed where the window had burned wasn’t out, the coals were still red, so we put those out.”

About nine o’clock Sunday morning appellant, his ■wife and the two children drove from the hotel out to their home. Using their telephone, she called the Leibreeht house. George answered and went over. George asked them if somebody had robbed the house and set it on fire. They said “yes.” The three walked around and they enumerated to George what had been stolen, including the children’s banks. Appellant estimated to George his damage at one thousand dollars, and said it would have been better if the house had burned clear down. George asked him: “Hadn’t you ought to call up the sheriff, or would they come out on Sunday?” Appellant said, “No, No, they wouldn’t do anything on Sunday,” and stated further that he would wait until Monday and bring out an insurance adjuster. Appellant and his •wife spoke about cleaning up a room and staying there, but then decided to go back to the hotel. They remained there about an hour after George left.

When on the witness stand, Mrs. Nichols testified that the articles missing were as follows: An electric percolator, waffle irons, a jacket to her suit, cut glass water pitcher and tumblers, a cross fox fur, some silk comforts, wool blankets, a dining room rug, a parrot, Havi-land china, silver knives and forks, two children’s toy. police patrols, two pairs down pillows and appellant’s black overcoat. She further testified that out at the house on Sunday her husband made arrangements with George Leibreeht to take his own bed clothes and sleep at the garage to take care of the place that night. This *225 was denied by George. She further testified -that from the house she telephoned, trying to get one of the deputy sheriffs that they were acquainted with, and 'that the jailer answered the call, saying the sheriff’s office was closed from noon Saturday until Monday morning and that none of them were around. The jailer for that day testified that he alone answered the telephone calls and that if anyone wanted the sheriff or a deputy he always asked them to state their business if they would, and that he did not receive a call from Mrs. Nichols that day that he knew of.

She testified that on Sunday there was no evidence of violence or breaking into the house and that they securely locked the doors, and tried them, and the windows before returning to the Sheldon Hotel about noon that day and that nobody but the family had keys to the doors. They spent the afternoon at the hotel and about the city with friends. The Cooks invited other friends in for dinner after which the party engaged in music and dancing and cards. Mrs. Nichols testified she did not dance that night, that the party was trying to cheer her up.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 89, 143 Wash. 221, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nichols-wash-1927.