State v. Wilson

231 P.2d 288, 38 Wash. 2d 593, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 466
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1951
Docket31542
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 231 P.2d 288 (State v. Wilson) 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. Wilson, 231 P.2d 288, 38 Wash. 2d 593, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 466 (Wash. 1951).

Opinion

Hill, J.

Turman G. Wilson and Utah E.'Wilson were convicted of kidnaping in the first degree and murder in the first degree, with a recommendation by the jury that the death penalty be inflicted upon each of them for each offense. From the judgments of conviction and sentences of death, this appeal is taken.

The evidence-in-chief by the state, briefly summarized, is that Jo Ann Dewey was in the bus depot at Portland, Oregon, at about 10:25 p. m. Sunday, March 19, 1950, and had purchased a ticket to go to Vancouver, Clark county, Washington. She later telephoned her mother from the bus depot in Vancouver concerning a ride to her home, and was told to go to St. Joseph’s Hospital and come home with a neighbor who was employed there. Between 11:30 and midnight, a woman’s screams were heard by nurses in the hospital and by residents in a nearby apartment house. Witnesses attracted-by the screams told of seeing a woman beaten and placed in a dark, trunk-type sedan which was driven away before the two men involved could be identified except generally as to size and build.

The police were immediately notified of the occurrence, and one of the officers sent to investigate found, in the street near where the sedan had been standing, a beer bottle of the type called a “stubby.” That it had been opened quite recently was evidenced by the fact that the remaining beer “was fresh enough so it had bubbled up” and the officer “noticed large bubbles in the bottle.” Utah Wilson’s fingerprints were found on this bottle.

*597 Also found on the ground in proximity to the place where the sedan had been, were the handle of Jo Ann Dewey’s purse and a barrette belonging to her.

Jo Ann Dewey never reached the hospital. It was not until Sunday, March 26th, that her nude body was found in the Wind river, in Skamania county, some fifty-five miles easterly from the scene of the kidnaping. Her death was caused by carbon monoxide poisoning. Prior to her death, which a doctor testified must have occurred within an hour or two of the kidnaping, she had been brutally beaten about the head and face, her teeth had been fractured and knocked loose, and she had been cut behind her right ear. While unconscious or immediately after her death, she had been sexually violated.

Turman and Utah Wilson were driving a dark, trunk-type Buick sedan on Sunday, March 19th. They left Silverton, Oregon, some sixty miles from Vancouver, at dusk that day; and it was about 6:45 a. m. Monday, March 20th, when they were seen by their brother Grant Wilson and his wife at their home two miles east of Camas and some sixteen miles east of Vancouver. The state’s only witness as to their movements during the intervening period was Grant Wilson, who testified as to their statements to him. Those statements placed them in a theater in Portland, Oregon, at the time of the kidnaping. They told him that they had returned to their mother’s home at Green Mountain, some six miles north and west of Camas, at about 3:00 or 3:30 that morning, but, because they saw three cars in the vicinity which they thought belonged to law enforcement agencies, they drove by and continued on to Grant’s instead of staying at their mother’s as they had intended. Without waking Grant, they parked the Buick and took a Pontiac, and then drove past their mother’s again. As the cars were still there, they stayed in a wooded area until morning, and then returned to Grant’s at about 6:45 a. m. Their reason for their actions, as given by Grant, was that:

“Turman felt they were looking for him because of his prior experience with the Vancouver and Portland police. They had been just after him all times and he felt that since *598 the police were there they were after him for something he didn’t know what.”

Without tracing their movements through the next week (most of the time spent in Oregon), as related by them to Grant, suffice it to say that Turman and Utah left for California late Monday, March 27th, in an Oldsmobile that Turman, using the name of Ted E. Davis, had purchased in Portland March 22nd. When arrested in Sacramento, California, March 30th, the brothers were registered at a motel under fictitióus names.

The first assignment of error goes to the question of whether the evidence outlined above was sufficient to take the case to the jury, it being urged that the trial court erred in refusing to grant appellants’ motion for a directed verdict of acquittal at the conclusion of the state’s case.

Although no one positively identified Turman and Utah as the men who had seized Jo Ann Dewey and driven away with her, the men described by witnesses to the assault were about their build and the car seen by the witnesses resembled the Buick sedan which Turman and Utah were driving that night. Utah’s fingerprints on the recently opened beer bottle afford an identification that completely disposes of appellants’ contention that there was no evidence to show that Utah was in Clark county at the time of the kidnaping. In Parker v. Rex, 14 C. L. R. (Austr.) 681, 3 B. R. C. 68, it was said:

“ ‘A finger print is therefore in reality an unforgeable .signature. That is now recognized in a large part-.of the world, and in some parts has, I think, been recognized for many centuries. It is certainly now generally recognized in England and other parts of the British Dominions. If that is so, there is in this case evidence that the prisoner’s signature was found in the place which was broken into, and was found under such circumstances that it could only have been impressed at the time when the crime was committed. It is impossible under those circumstances to say there was no evidence to go to the jury.’ ” (As quoted in 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1207, annotation.)

It was established that Utah and Turman were together at Silverton ■ on. the evening of the 19th and when they *599 arrived. at .Grant’s home on the morning of the 20th, and their story to Grant was that they had been together all of the intervening period; so the. jury was justified in concluding that, where Utah was, Turman was also.

The murder charge was predicated on Rem. Rev. Stat., § 2392 [P.P.C. § 117-5}, and the information charged that Turman and Utah had,

“ . . . while engaged in the commission of or attempt to commit the crimes of rape, larceny or robbery, or in the withdrawal from the scene of such crimes or attempted crimes, unlawfully and feloniously ...”

killed Jo Ann Dewey, which, under the statute, constitutes murder in the first degree. The details of events after the kidnaping until Jo Ann Dewey was killed and her body thrown into the Wind river are unknown, but her clothing and purse have never been found (at least so far as the record discloses), and the' inference that she had been robbed, raped, and killed by the same men who had seized her on the streets of Vancouver seems inescapable to us. State v. Craemer, 12 Wash. 217, 40 Pac. 944; State v. Gates, 28 Wash. 689, 69 Pac. 385; State v. Whitfield, 129 Wash. 134, 224 Pac. 559; State v. Bolen, 142 Wash. 653, 254 Pac. 445; State v. Cerciello, 86 N. J. L. 309, 90 Atl. 1112, 52 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1010; People v. Jennings,

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Bluebook (online)
231 P.2d 288, 38 Wash. 2d 593, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilson-wash-1951.