State v. Shimoaka

251 P. 290, 141 Wash. 337, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 818
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1926
DocketNo. 20200. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 251 P. 290 (State v. Shimoaka) 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. Shimoaka, 251 P. 290, 141 Wash. 337, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 818 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

*338 Fullerton, J.

The appellant, Y. Shimoaka, was convicted upon an. information charging that,

“He, said Y. Shimoaka, in the county of .King, state of Washington, on the 13th day of December, 1925, wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously did have in his. possession a certain narcotic drug, to wit, 5,250 grains of Cocaine, with intent unlawfully and feloniously to sell, furnish and dispose of the same, which said narcotic drug had been theretofore unlawfully acquired by him-the said Y. Shimoaka.”

The sentence was to a term in the state penitentiary of not less than nine nor more than ten years.

The evidence on the part of the state tended to show that the appellant, at about seven o’clock in the evening of December 13, 1925, was seen by two narcotic agents in the employ of the Federal government passing along a street in the city of Seattle. His somewhat eccentric behaviour attracted the attention of the officers, and they accosted him as he was about to enter a building occupied by Chinese as a club or tong house. On being so accosted, the appellant dropped a'package from beneath his coat which, on examination, proved to contain a number of smaller packages, each of which contained a narcotic drug known as cocaine, the total quantity being 5,250 grains. The officers arrested the appellant and took him to the city jail, at which, place one of the officers visited him on the next morning. In a conversation had at that time, the officer asked him whether the narcotic found on him was all he possessed. This inquiry the officer states he answered affirmatively, saying further that he at one time had twenty ounces, but had sold all over and above what he then possessed to an unknown Chinaman.

' The appellant’s version of the transaction was that the package, found on him by the federal officers, was given him at a moving picture show by a white man *339 to be delivered at a certain address; that he was given one dollar for carrying the package, and did not know, until after his arrest, what it contained; that he had no intent or purpose to sell the package or do anything else with it than deliver it at the address given him. He also put his character in issue; showing by his employers that his reputation for truth and veracity was good, and that his demeanor was that of a law-abiding person.

In rebuttal, the state showed that cocaine had a “street value” of one dollar a grain.

The assignment first to be noticed is that the prosecuting attorney was guilty of misconduct in his cross-examination of the appellant and his witnesses. The appellant testified that he had been employed for a number of years during the fishing season of each year by the Carlisle Packing Company; that the company operated fish canneries in Alaska, in which a number of Japanese and Chinese were employed, and his position was that of straw boss, or second foreman, over such employees. In his cross-examination of the appellant, and of those who knew him at the canneries and testified as to his character, the prosecuting attorney sought to show that these employees were, for the greater part, narcotic addicts, and that the appellant’s principal duty was to supply them with narcotics ; the evident purpose being to show that the appellant was a dealer in narcotic drugs. The objection, however, is to the form of the questions, and to the persistency with which the prosecutor pursued the inquiry, rather than to the subject of the inquiry. But we find no reversible error in the proceedings, even under this view of the record. The record, as we read it, does not show that the prosecutor was unduly persistent, and to the questions which may have been ob *340 jectionable because of their form objections were sustained. Moreover, the questions which the court did permit to be answered were answered in the negative, and nothing derogatory to the appellant .was elicited by them. Under the rule announced by us in State v. Gleen, 135 Wash. 153, 237 Pac. 292, and the cases there cited, the error, if error there was, was- without prejudice. ■ •

It is next assigned that the court erred in allowing the state to show the character of the house to which the appellant was taking the narcotics. The nature of the testimony on this question, we have hereinbefore indicated. The witness, describing the place, said it was a “Chinese club house,” “what they call a tong house,” with a large room on the lower floor where men congregated to play games, while on the upper floor were sleeping rooms. We fail to see error in this. Certainly, we think the state was entitled to show the character of the place to which the appellant was going when in possession of the drugs, as a part of the surrounding circumstances characterizing his acts at the time, which the jury were entitled to consider. We are-aware, of course, that there is a widespread belief, however unfounded it may be, that the members of the Chinese race of people now remaining in the Pacific coast states are more addicted to the use of narcotic drugs than are the members of any other race of people there residing. Assuming that we may take cognizance of this belief, it would not render the testimony inadmissible. The fact still remains as .a part of the surrounding circumstances which the state was entitled to show to the jury.

The appellant requested the following instructions :

“You will weigh and consider the weight and credibility of the testimony of the defendant in exactly *341 the same manner and same way that you do the testimony offered by any witness in the case.
“The defendant is presumed to be innocent and that presumption goes with him throughout the trial, and in considering the credibility of his evidence, you will give him full consideration for the presumption created in his favor by law.”

The second of the requested instructions was given, in substance, in language to which no objection could be taken, although not in the precise form in which it was requested. Under our practice, the court is permitted to charge the jury in its own language, and, if in its charge it fully covers the subject of a request, error cannot be predicated thereon. The court in this instance fully complied with the rule.

The first of the requests was, also, fully covered. While the court did not single out the testimony of the appellant and instruct specially, thereon, it classed the appellant with the other witnesses in the case, and, with some minuteness of detail, instructed them as to the legal rules by which they should be guided in determining the weight to be given to their testimony. This, we think, is sufficient in any event, but the request itself was not correct in substance. The appellant had a special interest in the result of the case, which all of the other witnesses did not, and any correct instruction must take, this circumstance into account.

The state put on the stand a chemist of the federal narcotic division, who had analyzed the contents of the packages taken from the appellant. In the course of his examination by the state the following occurred:

“Q. [By Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 290, 141 Wash. 337, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shimoaka-wash-1926.