State v. Shaw

135 P. 20, 75 Wash. 326, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1717
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1913
DocketNo. 11135
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 135 P. 20 (State v. Shaw) 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. Shaw, 135 P. 20, 75 Wash. 326, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1717 (Wash. 1913).

Opinions

Parker, J.

On February 27, 1912, at Walla Walla, the defendant, William J. Shaw, while laboring under some considerable excitement, and evidently believing himself to have been greatly wronged by his wife’s desertion of him, induced by one Hudson, a one time friend, shot and killed his wife. He was charged, by information filed in the superior court for Walla Walla county, with the crime of murder in the first degree. He pleaded not guilty, and there was also interposed in his behalf by his counsel the plea that, at the time of shooting his wife, he was mentally irresponsible. He was thereafter tried, found guilty as charged, and his motion for a new trial being denied, he was sentenced to be hanged. From this conviction and sentence, he has appealed to this court.

Appellant is a colored man, about 24 years old. His wife at the time of her decease was about 20 years old. They were married at Seattle, in the year 1910. Her maiden name was Alice Chapman, and prior to her marriage to appellant, she lived with her mother, Mirs. L. M. Chapman, at Franklin, in King county. Soon after their marriage, they moved to La Grande, Oregon, where he worked in a barber shop. While there they became acquainted with’one Hudson and his people, who were also colored people. They became friendly with the Hudsons and associated with them considerably. In the early spring of 1912, some misunderstanding arose between appellant and his wife growing out of what he evidently conceived to be her too frequent visits to the Hudsons. Accord[328]*328ing to his story, told on the witness stand, on February 5th she told him that she had received a letter from her mother with money, and that she was going to Franklin where her mother lived. Soon thereafter she left La Grande, appellant supposing she had gone to Franklin. Soon thereafter a letter came to La Grande from her mother addressed to her, which he opened and read, and learned therefrom that her mother had not sent any money. This letter was not offered in evidence, nor was the substance of its contents testified to further than to show that he learned therefrom that his wife had not received money from her mother. This letter was evidently in answer to the letter from his wife to her mother hereinafter quoted. The remainder of his story is best told in his own language, as follows:

“The following Sunday, Hudson came to my place of 'business, and I noticed a post card in his pocket. I went to take it out to look at it and he said ‘don’t.’ I glanced at it, and saw ‘son,’ and recognized it as my wife’s handwriting. He pushed it back and said ‘That is from a man I used to work for in Walla Walla.’ He had been here. He said that same day he was going to Salt Lake City, and I said ‘Why are you going so sudden?’ And he said he was getting lonesome. I began thinking about this letter, and I walked to his place of business, and he was in the bathtub taking a bath. I took the card and read it, and it said: ‘Today is Friday, and only one letter from you. Love. B. H.’ I recognized it as my wife’s writing. Then I began to think what was the best thing I could do to get Hudson prosecuted. Her mother had written that she had not sent her the money, and I formed a conclusion that he had. I spoke to the chief of police about it and told him about it, and asked him what he advised me to do in a case of that kind. He said1 we could do little there. He said he would advise me to go to Walla Walla. The next morning I was passing by Hudson’s shop early, and he called me inside and asked me if I wanted to buy some stuff. I said I would take two cans of that yellow polish. He pulled his drawer open and I noticed he had a big revolver. I said: ‘Are you going to sell that too?’ He said: ‘No, I will take it with me, I will probably need it.’ I made up my mind to come to Walla Walla too, and I would see whether he came there or [329]*329went to Salt Lake. The next morning I. told the boss that I had seen this card, and I had suspicions that Hudson had given my wife the money to leave on, and I was going to Walla Walla to find out whether it was a fact or not, and to see if I could get him prosecuted. Before I left I bought a revolver at La Grande, thinking I might have trouble with Hudson. I came to Pendleton and stayed all night to see whether Hudson would go this way or go the other way. The next morning I got up before six o’clock and met a fellow there named Bob. I had known him in La Grande, and I asked him to see if Hudson was on the train. He went there and said Yes, that he was going to Walla Walla. He said Hudson told him that he was married and had a wife in Walla Walla and he was coming here. ... I came on the rear end. He got off and walked up the street. I let him walk two or three blocks and then I followed him. He went into a little house on the side of the street there, and I watched him, and I went to a house on the corner and inquired who lived there. A lady came to the door and said, no, he did not live there, but she knew him' last fall, that he had been around there. I asked her, did she know whether he was married, and she said no, but he said he was, he said he had a wife. I asked her where I would find the police station and she told me. She said she did not think he had a wife. I suspicioned that my wife was living as his wife ... I went to a barber shop and asked a colored fellow working there if he knew a colored lady of that description. He said yes, her name was Alice Hudson. I said, ‘Is she living as Alice Hudson?’ and he said ‘Yes.’ He said: ‘She is expecting her husband in a day or two.’ I said: ‘Do you know where she lives or works?’ And he said ‘No.’ He said he had heard some one say she worked for the prosecuting attorney. He said he had heard that. He went to the phone and look up the prosecuting attorney’s office and I rang up, and he said no. I rang the office, there was no one at the house. His name was Henry Allen. He said he could find out, and he rang up a friend of his and she said she was working for Mrs. Copeland. I went to Mrs. Copeland’s, and she informed me that she had quit, and was working for Mrs. Sharpstein. I went to Mrs. Sharpstein’s door and Mrs. Sharpstein came to the door, and I said: ‘Can I speak to Alice?’ She said: ‘All right.’ And she called Alice to the [330]*330door. I said: ‘Alice, I know Hudson gave you money to leave me on, and he came here to live with you, and. I am going to prosecute him, and I want you to come back with me.’ She said: ‘You get right out; I won’t have anything to do with you.’ I had that pistol, and before I had time to think I fired, and walked towards town, and some one hollered to me and I turned around and saw the chief of police standing there. He took me to the police station.”

There were three shots heard by witnesses. One witness, who saw appellant at the time from a distance, testified that,

“He went up on the back porch, and I saw him talking there, and heard two shots fired quick. Then after that he ran down half of the steps, about half way, and then went back and fired a third shot, and he came down around the house.”

Mrs. Sharpstein testified to what occurred at the time of the shooting as follows:

“I was getting lunch when some one came around the house and rapped at the door. Alice started to the door, and I was standing about half way between the refrigerator and the door, and I opened the door myself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 P. 20, 75 Wash. 326, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shaw-wash-1913.