State v. Rossignol

153 P.2d 882, 22 Wash. 2d 19, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 379
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1944
DocketNo. 29479.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 882 (State v. Rossignol) 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. Rossignol, 153 P.2d 882, 22 Wash. 2d 19, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 379 (Wash. 1944).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This is an appeal by Norbert Rossignol from a judgment and sentence entered after his conviction by a jury upon the following information:

*20 “Comes now the Prosecuting Attorney in and for Spokane County, Washington, and charges the defendants, John Doe and Norbert Rossignol, with the crime of Grand Larceny, committed as follows:
“That the said defendant, John Doe, whose true name is to the Prosecuting Attorney unknown, in the County of Spokane, State of Washington, on or about the 1st day of November, 1943, then and there being, did- then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously take personal property, to-wit: the sum of Six Hundred and Eighty Dollars in lawful money of the United States, from the person of Alex Derreck, the owner thereof, with intent to deprive and defraud the said Alex Derreck of the said property; and that the said defendant, Norbert Rossignol, in the County of Spokane, State of Washington, on or about the 1st day of November, 1943, then and there being, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously aid, counsel and abet another, to-wit: the said John Doe, whose true name is to the Prosecuting Attorney unknown, in the taking of the said personal property, to-wit: the sum of Six Hundred and Eighty Dollars in lawful money of the United States, from the person of the said Alex Derreck, the owner thereof, with intent to deprive and defraud the said Alex Derreck of the said property.”

Three questions are stated as being involved in the appeal, and there are five formal assignments of error. None of the assignments has to do with instructions given or refused or rulings as to the admission of evidence. All may be fairly disposed of by considering two questions: Was there sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict? and, Was there a prejudicial variance between the information and the evidence offered to sustain it?

The crime charged was alleged to have been committed in the Fountain Billiard Parlor, a combination beer parlor and card roorh conducted in a storeroom in Spokane.- The room was about twenty feet in width, but of greater depth. As one entered from the street, there was a bar along the right wall, and a series of open booths along the left. Down the middle were some tablés and chairs and a juke box. About forty feet from the entrance there was a transverse partition, of which the lower part was wood and the upper, glass. The back room thus created was used as a card *21 room. The construction of the partition was such that one sitting in a chair just back of it could see through the glass portion into the front room. At the time the crimes alleged to have been committed took place, there were thirty-five or forty people in, the premises, of whom about twenty-five were in the front room.

The evidence will be abstracted in the order in which it was given. Newman, supervisor of the card room, testified that he was sitting on the left side, just back of the partition, and could see into the adjoining booth. He saw Rossignol seated in that booth. A little later he saw a man wrestling with Alex Derreck, an employee of the billiard parlor whom everyone called Nick, and saw the man take a purse or pocketbook from Nick’s pocket. Rossignol was right there sitting in the booth. The man who had taken the purse and Rossignol hurried out together. Newman yelled to the proprietor: “There goes Nick’s pocketbook.”

Alex Derreck, or Nick as he was universally called, testified that there were two fellows in the booth, one of whom was Rossignol.

“A. Oh, they said, ‘Nick, you sit down and drink, too.’ I said, ‘No. I am working here.’ He speak my name. Q. What one spoke your name? A. And the other fellow pushed me, started wrestling with me. I said, ‘Leave me alone. I am working here,’ and about the same time he pulled my pocketbook, ...”

He identified his pocketbook which still contained the $680 which was in it when taken from his pocket, and testified that it was returned to him shortly afterwards by a man named Erickson. On cross-examination, he testified that he did not know which of the men took the money, but made it clear that both were involved.

“A. Yes. There was two men. This fellow held me. This fellow called me ‘Nick.’ I said, ‘Leave me alone. I am working here. I ain’t got time.’ He said, ‘Oh, sit down; sit down.’ The other fellow had his hand across my back, like that. I don’t know which one took it, but one fellow got the money.”

John Erickson testified that he was standing near the partition at the back of the front room when someone hoi *22 lered out that “two fellows in the booth got Nick’s pocketbook,” and that one of the fellows in the booth went towards the lunch counter, and the other “hit a fast gait to the front door, and when he got to the front door I took out after him.” He identified Rossignol as that man, and testified that he ran down the block to Sprague and then turned south on Lincoln.

“Q. And were you ever able to catch up with him? A. I was just a few feet behind him. I was just behind him. I was going to catch up with him, and he just stopped and turned around and shoved the billfold at me, and then wheeled.”

The witness further testified that he had just been discharged from an eleven-day treatment for bronchitis at a Spokane hospital, and that, at the moment Rossignol handed him the purse, he was overtaken by a violent spasm of coughing. When he was able to look up, Rossignol was nowhere in sight. He concluded that he must have run into an alley, since he would not have had sufficient time to reach the street corner. On cross-examination, he testified, in part, as follows:

“A. Another guy brought him back. Q. Who? A. I don’t know the party’s name. It is in the police records back there. Q. Where was he? A. He said he got him in the alley and came back with him. That is all I know.”

Masselt, the proprietor of the billiard parlor, said that he saw Rossignol seated in the booth with a man whose name he had heard was Danny Wallace, or Eddy Wallace, and that he saw this man scuffling with Nick and seemingly trying to turn him around. Someone at the back called out: “They have got Nick’s purse.” Rossignol ran out, and later a tall, slight man, whose name witness did not know, brought him back. Masselt had already summoned the police.

Callerman, a police detective, testified that he responded to a call from the billiard parlor and took Rossignol to the police station. Erickson and a man named Day went with them. At the office Day said, in the presence of Rossignol:

*23 “A. Well, he said, then — he said he saw this other man take the billfold off of this man, and this man went up the street, and he told us he caught him; he went on up the street and caught him and brought him back, and led him back to the Fountain Beer Parlor, and that is where we picked him up.”

It was shown at this point that Day was somewhere in Seattle, and, after the cross-examination of Callerman, the state rested.

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Related

State v. Taplin
513 P.2d 549 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
153 P.2d 882, 22 Wash. 2d 19, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rossignol-wash-1944.