State v. Schoonover

211 P. 756, 122 Wash. 562, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 1207
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1922
DocketNo. 17532
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 211 P. 756 (State v. Schoonover) 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. Schoonover, 211 P. 756, 122 Wash. 562, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 1207 (Wash. 1922).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

— D. N. Schoonover and Owen Baker were convicted of the crime of grand larceny, under an information charging them with taking from one Peter Marinoff, and converting to their own use, one hundred and sixty-five bottles of intoxicating liquor and one hundred dollars in money, the property of Marinoff. From the judgment of conviction, Schoonover appeals.

The information charged, and the evidence tended to show, that the property was taken by trick and device. It appears that, early in the evening on which the offense was committed, Baker met one Cunningham at a railway depot in the city of Tacoma, and inquired of him where intoxicating liquor could be procured. Cunningham answered that he had none himself, but could take him to a person he thought could supply it. Baker and the witness then got into an automobile and drove to a place where one Tony Pelusso was found. Pelusso and Baker then entered into negotiations for liquors, Baker saying that he would take any quantity up to fifteen or sixteen eases. Pelusso said the liquor would be furnished by a friend of his, and that he did not know how much this friend had on hand, but he would have him deliver such quantity as he possessed. The friend subsequently proved to be the Peter Marinoff above mentioned. A time and place was appointed for the delivery, and the parties separated.

Sometime after eight o’clock of the same evening, Cunningham again met Baker at the depot, from [564]*564whence they drove in Baker’s car to the appointed place, where they found Pelusso. Shortly thereafter Marinoff appeared with his car, in which he had fifteen cases of intoxicating liquors. The parties proceeded to transfer the liquors from Marinoff’s car to Baker’s, and had nearly completed the task when Schoonover and another person appeared, claimed themselves to be police officers of the city of Tacoma, and pretended to put under arrest Cunningham, Pelusso, Marinoff, and one Williams, who had accompanied Marinoff; Baker being permitted to drive away with the liquors which had been loaded into his car. Marinoff and Pelusso were then searched by the pretended officers, and one hundred dollars was taken from the person of Marinoff, and one hundred and twenty-five dollars from the person of Pelusso. Marinoff was then handcuffed to Williams, and all of the persons arrested were put into Marinoff’s car and he was directed to drive to the police station. On the way, the driver was told by the pretended officers to stop the car, and inquiry was then made as to which of the persons was responsible for the liquors, and upon Marinoff’s taking the blame upon himself, the rest were told to go. Marinoff was then directed to drive on, and after he had gone a short distance, the pretended officers again told him to stop, saying they wished to use a near-by telephone. They left the car and immediately disappeared, whereupon Marinoff drove to his home, and shortly thereafter made complaint to the city police officers of Tacoma. The third person engaged in the transaction was not recognized, nor apprehended. The defense of Schoonover and Baker on the merits was a general denial, aided by an alibi.

The first contention on the appeal is that the court erred in submitting’ to the jury the question of the [565]*565larceny of the intoxicating liquors; the argument being that intoxicating liquors, since they are contraband under both the state law and the national prohibition act, have no value and are not, therefore, a subject of larceny. In so far as the question is affected by our state laws, we have decided contrary to the contention in State v. Donovan, 108 Wash. 276, 183 Pac. 127. There the precise question was presented, and, after citing and reviewing the sustaining authority, we held that its outlawed and contraband nature did not prevent it from being the subject of larceny. But subsequent to the decision of the cited case, the national prohibition act was enacted, the twenty-fifth section of which provides that it shall be unlawful to have or possess any liquor, or property designed for the manufacture of liquor, in violation of the act, and that “no property rights shall exist in any such liquor or property.” (41 U. S. Stat. at Large 315.)

It is argued that this provision of the Federal act necessitates a conclusion different from that adopted by us, as our statute does not contain the quoted words. We cannot think, however, that this difference in the wording of the statutes in any way affects the principle upon which the rule is rested. The state punishes the wrongful taking of personal property belonging to, or in the possession of, another because of the offense against the majesty of its laws and because of the inherent wickedess and criminality of the act, as well as because of the wrong done to the individual whose property is taken. Stated in another way, the state punishes larceny because it is larceny, and, that the guilty may not escape, it will treat any form of personal property having actual value as having value for the purposes of larceny, notwithstanding it may be unlawful for the possessor to have it in possession. [566]*566Furthermore, the declaration of outlawry against intoxicating liquors and the declaration that there are no property rights therein is for the purpose of discouraging its possession, not for the purpose of encouraging larceny, and it is not the policy of the law, nor conducive to good morals or good government, to allow the laws directed against one offense to become a shield against the punishment of another.

The case of People v. Spencer, 201 Pac. (Cal.) 130, is cited to us as a case decided since the enactment of the national prohibition act, holding that there cannot be larceny in the wrongful taking of intoxicating liquors since the passage of that act." But an examination of • the case will show that the court pursued the line of reasoning adopted in the cases opposed to our own case of State v. Donovan, supra, and that its reasoning, if followed, would have required a contrary conclusion in that case. It was not rested solely on the declaration in the Federal act to the effect that no property rights exist in intoxicating liquors held for unlawful purposes. A case decided since the passage of the act, and sustaining our view, is People v. Wilson, 298 Ill. 257, 131 N. E. 609.

It is next asserted that there was no competent proof of value of the property taken sufficient to make the offense grand larceny. A witness testified that it not only had a value far in excess of the statutory requirement for grand larceny, but that it had a market value in excess of that sum. The argument, however, is that, since the property was the subject of outlawry by both the state and the national laws, it could have no value of any kind at the place and time of its taking. But this does not follow. That the property had no value in the market overt for the purposes of barter and sale is doubtless true. But the evidence abundantly shows [567]*567that it had a ready sale and was in demand at that time and place. The fact, moreover, that the appellant considered it of sufficient value to justify its wrongful taking is some evidence of value. A sale of the property would, of course, be criminal, but that is not the question before us. We are now considering the appellant’s criminality, and, if his act was criminal, no criminal act or intent on the part of another would justify it.

It is further contended that the court unduly abridged the cross-examination of the witness Marin-off as to the ownership of the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 P. 756, 122 Wash. 562, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 1207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schoonover-wash-1922.