State v. O'Donnell

71 P.2d 571, 191 Wash. 511, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 611
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1937
DocketNo. 26592. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 71 P.2d 571 (State v. O'Donnell) 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. O'Donnell, 71 P.2d 571, 191 Wash. 511, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 611 (Wash. 1937).

Opinions

Geraghty, J.

— On the night of November 26, 1935, two police officers of the city of Seattle were shot to death in a tavern outside the north limits of the city. They had gone to the tavern in response to information that it was being burglarized. Subsequently, the appellants, together with Lester Rorick, were charged, by information in two counts, with the crime of murder in the first degree, in that, while in the commission of burglary, they fired the gun shots resulting in the death of the two officers.

Rorick pleaded guilty to the charge and testified as a witness for the state at the trial of the appellants. The jury returned verdicts finding the appellants guilty on both counts, as charged in the information. A special verdict recommended the death penalty for Joseph O’Donnell; no recommendation was made as to John O’Donnell. After the denial of motions in arrest of judgment and for new trials, the court entered judgments sentencing John O’Donnell to the state penitentiary for the term of his natural life and imposing the death penalty on Joseph O’Donnell, in accordance with the recommendations of the jury.

The evidence was sufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict, and the judgment should be affirmed, unless, as contended by the appellants, prejudicial errors were committed by reason of which they were denied the fair and impartial trial guaranteed to them by law.

The first and controlling error assigned is gross misconduct of the prosecuting attorney in his opening statement to the jury. In the course of this statement, the prosecutor said:

*513 “Incidentally, the evidence will show both of these men have records for burglary and robbery — prior records, and they have both served time in penitentiaries. ... in view of the other testimony, in view of the other burglaries and the records that will show from the evidence, the state is going to ask you to hang these two men.”

These remarks of the prosecuting attorney, made at the initial stage of the trial, were highly improper and, beyond question, prejudicial to the appellants, so much so that, whether guilty or innocent, they could not thereafter have had a fair trial.

“It may be that the defendant is guilty. On that we express no opinion. It must be remembered, however, that ‘though unfair means may happen to result in doing justice to the prisoner in the particular case, yet, justice so attained, is unjust and dangerous to the whole community’.” State v. Pryor, 67 Wash. 216, 121 Pac. 56; citing Hurd v. People, 25 Mich. 404.

The prosecutor’s remarks violated certain principles, basic in our system of criminal procedure. First, he placed the appellants’ character in issue in advance of their taking the witness stand to testify in their own behalf; second, he asked the jury to hang the appellants not alone for the specific offenses with which they were charged, but “for the other burglaries and the records that will show from the evidence”; and third, by charging the appellants with the commission of collateral crimes, he placed them in a position where they had either to take the witness stand or rest under the imputation of those crimes; this being, in effect, a specie of compulsion to testify in violation of the immunity granted by the Federal and state constitutions. If the court had permitted the state to introduce evidence tending to show the commission by the appellants of other felonies, the error of the procedure *514 would not be questioned, nor would the court hesitate to grant a new trial.

While the prosecuting attorney was not testifying as a witness under oath, his statements were no less injurious to appellants. The office of prosecuting attorney is quasi-judicial. The incumbent is elected by the people to perform the highly responsible duties of the office in the belief that he possesses the high standard of character deemed necessary to the proper performance of his functions; his declarations to the jury are not taken lightly as the words of a mere advocate, but as having the prestige of authority. And so the law holds him to a high degree of fairness in presenting the state’s case against persons charged with crime.

“The district attorney is a quasi judicial officer. He represents the commonwealth, and the commonwealth demands no victims. It seeks justice only, equal and impartial justice, and it is as much the duty of the district attorney to see that no innocent man suffers, as it is to see that no guilty man escapes. Hence, he should act impartially. He should present the commonwealth’s case fairly, and should not press upon the jury any deductions from the evidence that are not strictly legitimate.” Commonwealth v. Nicely, 130 Pa. 261, 18 Atl. 737.
“He is an officer of the state, provided at the expense of the state for the purpose of seeing that the criminal laws of the state are honestly and impartially administered, unprejudiced by any motives of private gain, and holding a position analogous to that of the judge who presides at the trial. Such is the view taken of the office of the prosecuting attorney by the courts of this country as well as of England, and we think it is the true view of his position.” Biemel v. State, 71 Wis. 444, 37 N. W. 244; and cited with approval in State v. Montgomery, 56 Wash. 443, 105 Pac. 1035, 134 Am. St. 1119.

*515 The rule which excludes evidence of the bad character of the accused is grounded on the policy of avoiding the uncontrollable and undue prejudice, and possible unjust condemnation, which such evidence might induce.

Speaking of the rule that the defendant’s bad character may not be offered against him, Wigmore says:

“This policy of the Anglo-American law is more or less due to the inborn sporting instinct of Anglo-Normandom— the instinct of giving the game fair play even at the expense of efficiency of procedure. This instinct asserts itself in other departments of our trial-law to much less advantage. But, as a pure question of policy, the doctrine is and can lie supported as one better calculated than the opposite to lead to just verdicts. The deep tendency of human nature to punish, not because our victim is guilty this time, but because he is a bad man and may as well be condemned now that he is caught, is a tendency which cannot fail to operate with any jury, in or out of Court. There are also indirect and more subtle disadvantages. Our rule, then, firmly and universally established in policy and tradition, is that the prosecution may not initially attack the defendant’s character.” 1 Wigmore on Evidence (2d ed.), § 57, p. 272.

This policy of the law is referred to in State v. Devlin, 145 Wash. 44, 258 Pac. 826, as follows:

“It is the law of the land, a right vouchsafed by the direct written law of the people of the state. It partakes of the character of fair play which pervades all the activities of the American people, whether in their sports, business, society, religion or the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 P.2d 571, 191 Wash. 511, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-odonnell-wash-1937.