State v. Simmons

100 P. 269, 52 Wash. 132, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1086
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
DocketNo. 7742
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 100 P. 269 (State v. Simmons) 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. Simmons, 100 P. 269, 52 Wash. 132, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1086 (Wash. 1909).

Opinion

Rudkin, C. J.

The appellant was convicted of the crime of statutory rape, and from the judgment and sentence of the court, this appeal is prosecuted.

The assignments of error are twenty-five in number, but many of them are so closely associated that they may be considered together. The first, second, third, and twenty-fourth [134]*134assignments are directed against the sufficiency of the information. These assignments are not discussed in the briefs and séem to be without substantial merit. On the trial of the case the state elected to rely upon an act of sexual intercourse committed on the 10th day of January, 1907, and the fourth, fifth, sixth, and twelfth assignments of error are based on exceptions to rulings of the court permitting the prosecuting witness to testify to conversations had with the appellant at other times and dates than that upon which the state elected to rely for a conviction. There was no error in these several rulings. State v. Wood, 33 Wash. 290, 74 Pac. 380; State v. Fetterly, 33 Wash. 599, 74 Pac. 810.

The seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and thirteenth assignments of error are based on exceptions to rulings of the court admitting in evidence three certain letters written by the appellant to the prosecuting witness, and permitting the prosecuting witness to testify to the handwriting of the appellant. The letters, if properly identified, were clearly admissible, and the prosecuting witness testified that she had seen the appellant write and knew his handwriting. The witness was therefore competent. Greenleaf, Evidence, § 577.

The fourteenth assignment is based on exceptions to the admission of testimony tending to show that the appellant was a married man, and that the prosecuting witness was acquainted with his wife. Such testimony would seem utterly irrelevant and immaterial, but the wife of the appellant was a witness in his behalf and the same matter was gone into fully by the defense, so that the ruling of the court was not prejudicial if erroneous.

The fifteenth assignment is based on exceptions to the ruling of the court admitting in evidence a certain school register kept by the appellant, and permitting a certain witness to identify the handwriting of the appellant. All matters shown by the school register were admitted to be true at every stage of the case by both the state and the accused, and the ruling of the court was not prejudicial if erroneous.

[135]*135The seventeenth assignment is based on exceptions to the admission in evidence of a certain letter written by the appellant to his wife and found in the cell of the city jail at Northport, which had been occupied by the appellant. This letter was sufficiently identified and was competent for the consideration of the jury.

The eighteenth assignment of error is based on the ruling of the court in favor of the competency of a certain physician, who testified that he had examined the complaining witness some months after the alleged rape and found that she was pregnant. The pregnancy of the complaining witness was not denied or disputed, and the testimony was in all respects true whether the witness was competent or incompetent.

The nineteenth assignment is based on the refusal of the court to direct a verdict of acquittal at the close of the state’s case. Without going into the testimony in detail, we deem it sufficient to say that the letters and other testimony offered by the state were ample corroboration of the prosecuting witness under the act of 1907.

Romer Zimma was called as a witness for the appellant, and in response to a question, testified that he did not see the complaining witness and a third party hugging and kissing each other at a time and place specified. He was then asked the following question:

“Now, Romer, don’t you remember of stating to me that at the time you saw Parrot at Johnson’s, winter before last, that you saw them in the kitchen by themselves, hugging and kissing each other?”

to which an objection was sustained, and on this ruling the twentieth assignment of error is predicated. Had the witness testified to some affirmative fact prejudicial to the appellant, the ruling complained of would perhaps be erroneous. Greenleaf, Evidence, §’444. But the witness testified to a mere negative, and had he been ever so successfully impeached the only effect would be to destroy testimony which [136]*136was in itself worthless. The error was therefore harmless.

The twenty-first and twenty-second assignments are based on the refusal of the court to give two certain instructions requested by the appellant. The first request was as follows:

“You are further instructed that you are not authorized and have no right to resort to a comparison of any writing or writings which you may have with you in your jury room and which are not admitted by the defendant to be his handwriting, with any other writing which you may have with you in your jury room not admitted by the defendant to be his handwriting, for the purpose of determining whether either or any of such writing or writings was or is the handwriting of defendant.”

This instruction was properly refused. Greenleaf, Evidence, § 578; State v. Minton, 116 Mo. 605, 22 S. W. 808. The second request was embodied in substance in the general charge of the court.

The twenty-third assignment of error is based on the ruling of the court permitting the jury to take the exhibits to their jury room. This ruling was in accordance with the statute. Bal. Code, § 5004 (P. C. § 618).

The last assignment of error is based on the ruling of the court denying a motion for a new trial. In so far as this motion was based on the exceptions already considered, it was properly denied. Certain affidavits were filed in support of the motion, and these we will consider briefly. One of the affidavits, filed some thirteen days after the close of the trial and the return of the verdict, averred that the ordinary period of gestation had elapsed between the 10th day of January, 1907, and the 13th day of October, 1907, the date of the affidavit; that the prosecuting witness had not yet been delivered of a child, and that she had stated to her friends that she had no reason to believe, and did not believe, that she would be confined within nine months from the 10th day of January. This affidavit discloses no sufficient ground for granting a new trial. The period of gestation is un[137]*137certain at best, and no effort was made by the appellant at the trial to prove the probable time of parturition. Furthermore, the fact that the prosecuting witness was pregnant was only a circumstance in the case. It was not at all necessary to sustain a conviction. Another affidavit was filed by the attorneys for the appellant, stating that they were informed by two of the jurors who sat at the trial that they were not satisfied from the testimony that the appellant had written certain letters received in evidence, that the jurors resorted to a comparison of the handwriting in said letters with the handwriting of the appellant in the school register received in evidence, and that after such comparison the jurors all treated such letters as having been written by the appellant. Aside from the fact that this affidavit is based entirely on hearsay and no excuse is shown for not producing better or more satisfactory evidence, we think the affidavit, if true, stated no ground for a new trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P. 269, 52 Wash. 132, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-simmons-wash-1909.