State v. Smith

197 P. 770, 115 Wash. 405, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 769
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1921
DocketNo. 16354
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 197 P. 770 (State v. Smith) 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. Smith, 197 P. 770, 115 Wash. 405, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 769 (Wash. 1921).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

On November 11/ 1919, Warren O. Grimm, Ben Casagranda and Arthur McElfresh, members of the American Legion, were killed in Centraba, Lewis county, Washington, while participating in a patriotic parade, the first anniversary celebration of the signing of the Armistice.

Britt Smith, O. C. Bland, Bert Faulkner, Bay Becker, John Doe Davis, James Mclnerney, Loren Boberts, Eugene Barnett, Mike Sheehan, Bert Bland, Ole Hanson, John Lamb and Elmer Smith were charged by an information with the crime of murder in the first degree for the killing of Warren O. Grimm. Davis and Hanson escaped and were never captured. The other defendants plead not guilty, and in addition Loren Boberts entered a special plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. At the trial, upon the conclusion of the state’s case in chief, upon motion of the defendant and by order of the court, Bert Faulkner was discharged. The jury acquitted Elmer Smith and Mike Sheehan; found Loren Boberts not guilty by reason of insanity; and convicted the rest of the defendants on trial of the crime of murder in the second degree. Those convicted, viz, Britt Smith, O. C. Bland, Bay Becker, James Mclnerney, Eugene Barnett, Bert Bland and John Lamb, have appealed.

The tragedy occurred on Tower avenue which runs north and south. The avenue is intersected at right angles by Second street and by Third street north of [408]*408Second street. The avenue is eighty feet wide and Second and Third streets sixty feet each. The southeast corner of the avenue and Second street is occupied by a stable fronting fifty feet on the avenue. Adjoining it on the south is the Avalon Hotel, a two story rooming house fronting twenty-five or thirty feet on the avenue. Across the avenue, in front of the last mentioned buildings, are two business houses. The northeast corner of the avenue and Second street is occupied by a building, north of which there is a lot of about one hundred feet frontage on the north part of which is situated a small residence set back from, the avenue. About one hundred and twenty-five feet north of Second street is the south wall of the Arnold Hotel, a two story rooming house fronting about thirty feet on the east side of Tower avenue. The northwest corner of the avenue and Second street is occupied by a two story brick business block fronting fifty feet on the avenue; adjoining it on the north is the Roderick Hotel fronting about thirty feet on the avenue; adjoining it on the north is the I. W. W. Hall fronting about twenty-five feet on the avenue; and adjoining it on the north is a one cent to one dollar store. On each side of Tower avenue north of the buildings referred to, and as far as Third street, the property consists of buildings separated by lots or parts of lots. The sidewalk on the west side of the avenue and in front of the hall is sixteen feet wide. Another place of importance in this case is what is called Seminary Hill. It is unsettled and is situated four hundred yards east from the I. W. W. Hall and has an elevation of about seventy-five feet above Tower avenue. The avenue at the hall, and for a short distance each side of the front of the hall, is. in plain view from Seminary Hill.

[409]*409On September 2, 1919, Britt Smith rented the building for the I. W. W. Hall for four months. The lower floor in the front was fitted up and used by the I. W. W. for assembly purposes. Britt Smith resided in the rear part of the building on the ground floor, and acted as secretary for the I. W. W. The place was local headquarters for members of the organization. In it they held public meetings and engaged in propaganda work, held conferences and kept their literature which was sold and distributed.

It was the contention of the prosecution at the trial that defendants acted pursuant to a prearranged plan to shoot and slay members of the Centralia or Grant Hodge post of the American Legion on passing the I. W. W. Hall in the parade and that the killing of Warren O. Grimm was wholly unprovoked. On the other hand it was the theory of the defendants on trial that the business men or Commercial Club of the city had recently planned and threatened to raid the I. W. W. Hall on the occasion of this celebration and that they used the members of the post as a means to accomplish that purpose; and that the members of the post were the aggressors while the defendants only defended themselves and their property.

The defendants were I. W. Ws. Nearly all of them in testifying admitted they were provided with dangerous weapons, and many of them admitted the sta- ' tions they occupied at the time of the shooting. There was testimony showing numerous conferences and preparations on the part of the defendants (different ones of them from time to time) for several days including the 11th of November and up until the time of the shooting. About one o’clock that day Bert Bland, Loren Boberts and Ole Hanson by somewhat different ways went to Seminary Hill. They were pro[410]*410vided with heavy clothing and carried a suit case containing arms, ammunition and food. The former was armed with a 25 caliber Colt’s automatic pistol and a 32-20 caliber Winchester rifle, the latter of which he shot some eight times. Loren Roberts was armed with a 22 high-power Savage rifle which he shot a number of times. (Counsel for appellants in his brief says: “One of these bullets probably killed Arthur Mc-Elfresh.”) Hanson was armed with a 250-3000 Savage rifle, which- he shot a number of times. A total of twenty or twenty-five shots were fired by these three men. There is evidence to show that Davis (not captured) and appellant Barnett took stations at the south front window on the second floor of the Avalon Hotel, seventy-five feet south of Second street—a room rented and occupied for several nights before by Bert Bland. There is testimony that Barnett owned and was armed with a 38-55 Winchester rifle (the only one of that size among the defendants) and that a number of shots were fired from that window. Warren O. Grimm was killed by a 38-55 Winchester bullet. John Lamb and O. C. Bland were in a front room, upstairs in the Arnold Hotel, armed with a rifle and revolver, whence shooting was done, as testified to by the state’s witnesses. The rest of the defendants who were tried, other than Elmer Smith, were stationed in the I. W. W. Hall, nearly all of whom it was shown were armed.

The parade took the same route as that traveled on similar occasions for several years. It formed at the city park shortly before two o ’clock. It was composed of a number of more 'or less independent divisions, the first comprising members of the Elks Lodge; the second a band; third a contingent of boy scouts, marines and sailors; fourth, the Chehalis post of the American Legion; fifth, the Centralia post of the [411]*411American Legion; and, sixth, a few automobiles carrying Red Cross nurses in uniform. The Centraba division of the American Legion was under the direction of its post commander, Warren O. Grimm. In this order the parade moved east on Main street to Pearl street, thence to Tower avenue, thence north .on the east side of the avenue to Third street where it turned and retraced its way on the west side of the avenue. It was the program to return to the High School auditorium south of the city park where patriotic exercises were to be held. The soldiers, or ex-soldiers, in uniforms, were marching in platoons that were supposed to be separated from each other regularly by three or four paces. The Centraba post consisted of seventy or eighty men, or eight platoons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 P. 770, 115 Wash. 405, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-wash-1921.