State v. Smith

48 P.2d 581, 183 Wash. 136, 100 A.L.R. 474, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 729
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1935
DocketNo. 25653. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 48 P.2d 581 (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, 48 P.2d 581, 183 Wash. 136, 100 A.L.R. 474, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 729 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

Tolman, J.

Tlie appellant, appealing from a judgment and sentence based on a verdict of guilty upon four counts involving Ms actions as a county commissioner of Snohomish county, assigns as error the giving of a certain instruction, the overruling of his motion for a new trial, and the entry of the judgment against him.

To a clear understanding of the situation, it seems necessary to say that the information upon which appellant was tried charged in four several counts that, while county commissioner, and as such, the appellant, unlawfully audited and allowed two payrolls, each con-taimng an item for man and team at six dollars per day, which item was false and fraudulent and known so to be; and also, that the appellant felomously obtained from Snohomish county sums of money aggregating $138.80 by causing the man to whom the false items upon the payroll were paid by the county, to turn over and deliver to him one-half of the money so obtained, with intent to appropriate and convert the same to his own use and with intent to deprive and defraud the county of money so obtained.

The state introduced abundant evidence tending to show every element of the several offenses charged. The story in simple words is substantially tMs: WMle appellant was one of the county commissioners, an old caterpillar tractor was, by the county, traded in on the purchase of a new tractor. Thé company wMch thus received title to the old tractor had no immediate use for it and was willing, if the county put it in repair, to let the county use it for a time. The tractor needed new tracks before it could be used. These new tracks *138 were ordered in the regular way, were billed to the county,'and the bill was allowed and paid by the county in the usual course.

Being equipped with the new tracks, under directions from the appellant a man by the name of Roark was employed to operate it and was put at work. Also, under instructions from the appellant, payroll vouchers were made and payrolls made up carrying the item “Bob Roark man and team” at $6 per day for each day the tractor was so operated. Roark, in fact, furnished no team and furnished nothing but his individual services. At once upon receiving from the county the amount shown to be due him by the payrolls, Roark divided and paid over one-half of the amount so received to the appellant. For one of these payments, appellant gave Roark a receipt, indicating that the money was to be used to purchase parts for the caterpillar tractor.

In his defense, appellant admitted freely practically every fact which the state’s evidence tended to prove, but asserted that, as the caterpillar tractor did not belong to the county, he thought it best to provide a fund for the purchase of necessary repairs to the tractor by the method which has been indicated; and that the tractor broke down several times on the work, that new parts were bought and paid for by him and placed upon the tractor so that its use might be continued. Appellant also testified that he thus paid out all and more than all of the money which he received from Roark; and, of course, he testified that he acted in entire good faith throughout and without personal profit. Appellant did not call any witness to corroborate his testimony as to the purchase of parts and payment therefor by him.

In rebuttal, the state produced evidence tending to show that the only parts put upon the caterpillar trac *139 tor, after it began to operate, were old parts which had been lying about the garage, presumably the county garage, and inferentially, at least, such parts belonged to the county.

With this evidence before the jury, the court gave the following instruction:

“You are instructed as to counts three and four of the information that intent to defraud is an essential element of the crime of grand larceny charged in such counts.
• “To justify you in finding the accused guilty of these counts, or either of them, it is required, not only that you be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused actually obtained the money in the manner as alleged, but in obtaining the same the accused intended to defraud the county of Snohomish and that the money was received with such intent.
“Therefore, if you should believe from the evidence adduced bearing thereon that the accused honestly believed he had a right to receive this money and actually did expend such money for repair of the tractor referred to in the testimony, or for replacement of parts thereon or either of such, or after hearing all the evidence in the case you should have a reasonable doubt as to whether accused did intend to defraud in his dealings with the money, then you must find the accused not guilty, as to those counts three and four.”

Appellant attacks the last paragraph of this instruction because, as he asserts, his intent when he obtained the money is the decisive issue, and what he afterwards did or afterwards intended is but evidence of his intent at the vital moment.

We do not entirely disagree with this view, and we think the last part of the instruction is technically erroneous; but, even so, we can see no possible prejudice to the appellant in it.

As before indicated, the appellant freely admitted that he obtained the money in the manner shown by the state and testified that he paid it out for parts at *140 once. There was no evidence tending to show that the appellant intended to pay hut was, by force of circumstances, prevented or delayed in so doing. If the jury believed him at all, there was nothing in the instruction to prevent a verdict in his favor. The instruction but followed his own testimony, and had that been believed, no doubt, he would have been acquitted.

The words of the instruction “and actually did expend such money for repairs,” etc., in the light of the evidence before the jury, were helpful to the appellant rather than harmful, and now furnish no legitimate basis for the reversal of the judgment.

The motion for a new trial raises two questions, the first of which has to do with the absence of the appellant from the court room for a short period of time during the trial below.

It appears that counsel for the appellant on the occasion in question said: “Mr. Smith take the stand— No, we will call Boy Starr first.” Whereupon, Boy Starr was sworn and asked half a dozen questions, none of which elicited anything of any great materiality, and the whole of Starr’s testimony, if it had any value at all, was inferentially beneficial to the appellant. There was no cross-examination^ of Mr. Starr.

During the moment or two when the witness Starr was on the stand, the appellant, according to his own affidavit, hurried from the court room into an anteroom for the purpose of using the telephone, closing the court room door behind him as he went out. After using the telephone, he stepped into the toilet, and he avers that he heard nothing which went on in the court room during his absence. Whether that absence covered the whole time during which Starr was testifying, does not appear, but, at any rate, the appellant was present to take the witness stand when Starr’s examination was completed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P.2d 581, 183 Wash. 136, 100 A.L.R. 474, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-wash-1935.