State v. Perry

167 P.2d 173, 24 Wash. 2d 764, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 339
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1946
DocketNo. 29812.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 167 P.2d 173 (State v. Perry) 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. Perry, 167 P.2d 173, 24 Wash. 2d 764, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 339 (Wash. 1946).

Opinions

Steinert, J.

An information filed by the prosecuting attorney for Kitsap county charged the defendant with the crime of assault in the second degree, alleging that the assault was made with intent to commit rape. Upon a verdict of guilty rendered by the jury, the court entered judgment of conviction and sentence. Defendant appealed.

The evidence introduced by the state may be summarized as follows: The complaining witness, a widow about forty years of age, resided with her sister a short distance from the business district of the city of Bremerton. The house in which she lived is in the middle of a block and is situated several hundred feet back from the street. A private driveway leads from the street to the house.

On the night of July 30, 1945, at about 10:30 o’clock, the complainant boarded a bus in the downtown section of the city and rode toward her home. Seated beside her, next to the window, was a man whom she did not know but who later proved to be the appellant herein, a married man about twenty-five years of age, whose home was approximately a half mile beyond complainant’s place of residence. No word or other communication passed between these two passengers while riding on the bus.

Nearing her destination, complainant signaled for a stop and moved forward to the front of the bus. For the accommodation of the complainant, the operator of the bus stopped the conveyance midway in the block at a point opposite the private driveway, as he had been in the habit of doing on similar occasions. Complainant disembarked and proceeded up the driveway toward her home.

In the meantime, unknown to the complainant, appellant had also left the bus, making his exit by the rear door, and was following her up the driveway. Reaching a point *766 near the house, complainant heard footsteps directly behind her, whereupon she stopped and turned around. Appellant made some indefinite inquiry of her concerning the locality of a certain street and, upon her reply to the effect that she did not know its location, struck her violently in the face, across her nose and mouth. He then seized her by the throat, at the same time saying, “I am going to rape you.”

Complainant endeavored to scream, but could not do so because of appellant’s hold upon her throat. She fought with all her strength, but was overpowered and borne to the ground, with him on top of her. She begged him to let her go, offering to give him money or to write him a check if he would but leave her alone. Despite her pleas, he continued choking and beating her.

The struggle lasted about five or seven minutes, when appellant finally desisted without effécting his declared intention. In the struggle, complainant lost her earrings and one of her shoes. She was bleeding from her nose, mouth, and ears. One of her stockings was torn, and abrasions were inflicted upon one of her legs.

When allowed to free herself, complainant got up from the ground and, at the first opportunity, ran into her house, told her sister what had occurred, and summoned the police. The appellant hurried away from the vicinity and shortly afterwards arrived at his own home, where he changed his clothes, after which he went to his place of work at the shipyards, on night shift.

The next day, the police, upon a second visit to complainant’s home, examined the spot where the attack had occurred and found the missing earrings and shoe. About nine days later, they arrested the appellant. At first, he denied all connection with the crime but, upon being identified by the complainant, admitted that he had assaulted her, although he strenuously denied that it was with any intention to commit rape upon her.

His testimony upon the trial was that he had been drinking heavily during that evening and that someone had “doped” the drinks which he had imbibed. He refused to *767 tell, however, who had been his companions at the time the drinks were being served. He further testified that he had struck the complainant because, when he inquired of her the direction of a certain street, she reproached him for being drunk, which made him “mad at her.” In his testimony, he also went to some length in. emphasizing the good moral character which he had borne throughout life, asserting that he had never had sexual relations with any woman other than his wife. To this he added that he had always been of a nervous temperament and that he had once been examined by a physician for that ailment, brought about or accelerated by the fact that his marriage was opposed by his wife’s father. On cross-examination, appellant admitted, however, that he had recently been convicted for assault in the third degree, committed upon another woman.

The assignments of error, two in number, are directed solely to alleged misconduct on the part of the trial judge and of the prosecuting attorney. It should be stated, at this point, that appellant’s present counsel came into the case after the judgment of conviction was entered.

The first assignment of error is predicated upon certain remarks made by the trial judge when the case was first called for trial.

It appears from the evidence that, on the night before the trial, appellant, while in jail, had asked that he be given a mental examination, claiming that a fellow cell-mate by his actions “nearly runs me crazy.” The next morning, before the commencement of the trial, such examination was made in the judge’s chambers, at which appellant’s attorney was present. Upon the completion of the examination, proceedings in open court were begun with the calling of a jury. After twelve prospective jurors had been called from the assembled panel and had taken their seats in the jury box for examination upon their voir dire, the trial judge, in his general explanation of the nature of the case, made this statement:

“And I think I should say to you, Mr. Perry [appellant] has acted somewhat peculiarly in jail and the doctors watched him and the deputies watched him and he has had *768 two attorneys, one attorney before Mr. Johnson, and no one else has ever suggested that he wasn’t mentally capable. He’s nervous, excitable, and emotional, but in order to be certain, as certain as we can be; we want to be sure to protect anybody who has any mental irresponsibility, we had two doctors examine him. We don’t have a psychiatrist, but we had two doctors examine him, and they both insist that he is mentally all right and no one else has ventured the opinion he is not. So, he is going to trial on this charge.”

No exception to these remarks was taken, no motion to discharge the panel of jurors was made, no motion for continuance of the case because of the remarks was interposed, and no motion for new trial on that, or any other, ground was presented. The examination of the jurors on their voir dire proceeded regularly to its conclusion, and, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, it must be presumed that appellant’s counsel satisfied himself that the jury as finally selected was not influenced unfavorably toward the appellant by the court’s remarks.

At any rate, counsel did accept the jury, and did elect to try the case upon the evidence to be submitted.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P.2d 173, 24 Wash. 2d 764, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-perry-wash-1946.