State v. Salmeier

269 P. 798, 148 Wash. 627, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 896
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 27, 1928
DocketNo. 21304. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 269 P. 798 (State v. Salmeier) 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. Salmeier, 269 P. 798, 148 Wash. 627, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 896 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Fullerton, C. J.

On November 15, 1926, the appellant, Salmeier, was informed against in the superior court of Adams county on two counts, one for the crime of seduction and the other for the crime of lewdness. He was arrested late in the month of December following, on a warrant issued upon the information, and gave bail to answer the charge. On January 3, 1927, he was brought before the court for arraignment, at which time he expressed a desire to plead guilty to the charge and to marry the prosecuting witness. The court thereupon took his plea of guilty, and suspended further action until January 6, 1927, to give the appellant an opportunity to consummate the marriage. On January 6, the prosecuting attorney reported to the court that the marriage had been consummated, whereupon the court entered an order directing that “further proceedings in the said cause be stayed as provided by the statute.”

Immediately following the marriage, the appellant abandoned his wife and left the state, leaving her destitute and failing thereafter to contribute to her support. The wife gave birth to a child on April 27,1927, both the wife and child dying within a few hours thereafter.

A bench warrant was issued for the appellant’s arrest, and later he was arrested at the city of Seattle, in this state, and on February 25, 1928, was brought before the court and required to show cause why he should not be sentenced on his plea of guilty. At that time the appellant challenged the jurisdiction of the *629 court to proceed further with the cause; and after his challenge had been overruled, he asked leave to withdraw his plea of guilty to the charge against him and enter a plea of not guilty thereto. He supported his application to withdraw his plea by his own affidavit.

In the affidavit he avers, in substance, that, at the time he was arraigned on the information, he was without an attorney or means to employ one, and was not informed by the court, or by any one, of his right to have an attorney appointed to defend him, and of his right to a trial by jury and compulsory process to procure the attendance of witnesses on his behalf; and he specially avers that he was misled in these particulars by statements made to him by the prosecuting attorney. He further avers that he has a meritorious defense to the charge against him, in that he could show that the prosecuting witness was not of previous chaste character. With respect to the charge of abandoning the prosecuting witness after his marriage to her, he averred that it was understood and agreed between them that he was not to live with her or support her; that in fact she told him at that time she could not live with him because she was then suffering from a vile venereal disease.

The trial court granted him a hearing upon the aver-ments of his affidavit, at which much testimony was taken. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court found that his charges had not been sustained, refused to allow him to withdraw his plea, and upon his plea of guilty adjudged that he was guilty as charged in the information, and sentenced him to punishment upon both counts. It is from this judgment and sentence that the present appeal is prosecuted.

The statute relating to seduction is found at § 2441 of the code (Rem. Comp. Stat.) and reads as follows:

*630 “Every person who shall seduce and.have sexual intercourse with any female of previously chaste character, shall be punished by imprisonment in the state penitentiary for not more than five years or by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year or by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars, or by both fine and imprisonment: Provided, That if at any time before judgment upon an information or indictment, a defendant shall marry such female, the court shall order all further proceedings stayed; and if at any time within three years from the date of such marriage the defendant shall wrongfully fail to support or provide for or shall wrongfully desert or abandon such wife, said proceedings shall be revived and continued in the same manner as though no marriage had taken place, and in the trial of such cause the wife shall be competent to testify and may testify against her husband.”

The contention that the court was without jurisdiction is based on the further contention that the section of the statute quoted, particularly that portion of it which provides for a revival of the prosecution if the accused after marrying the female seduced shall wrongfully fail to support or provide for her or shall wrongfully desert or abandon her, is unconstitutional. The argument is that the act violates those clauses of the constitution which guarantee to a person accused of crime a speedy public trial before an impartial jury in the county in which the crime is alleged to have been committed. The case of Waldon v. State, 50 Tex. Cr. R. 512, 98 S. W. 848, cited by the appellant, supports the contention. The statute in question in that case was the substantial counterpart of our own, but we are not persuaded that the reasoning upon which it is rested is sound.

Unquestionably, if the legislature passed an act which denied to an accused person a speedy trial, the act would be void, but we cannot conceive that the act *631 here in question does so. Under the act, an accused may have a speedy trial if he so wills. All he needs do is put the charge against him in issue by pleading not guilty, or refusing to plead at all, when a speedy trial will be accorded him. If the trial is postponed, it is wholly of his own volition. There is no legal compulsion requiring him to pursue the remedy of the statute, and if he does so he does so of his own free will and for his own benefit. It is not the rule generally, nor the rule in this state, that an accused person may of his own volition and for his own benefit procure a postponement of his trial and afterwards complain that the trial was not speedy. State v. Fox, 71 Wash. 185, 127 Pac. 1111; State v. Miller, 72 Wash. 154, 129 Pac. 1110.

The state of Arkansas has a statute substantially like our own. In Burnett v. State, 76 Ark. 295, 88 S. W. 956, the statute was upheld against the attack here made. In the course of the opinion, the court said:

“In Stewart v. State, 13 Ark. 720, this court quoted, with approval, the following language of the Supreme Court of Mississippi in the case of Nixon v. State, 2 S. & M.

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Related

State v. Saylors
422 P.2d 477 (Washington Supreme Court, 1966)
State v. Powell
279 P. 573 (Washington Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P. 798, 148 Wash. 627, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-salmeier-wash-1928.