83 Wash. 444 | Wash. | 1915
In addition to the questions raised and decided in the case of State v. Kenney, ante p.441, 145 Pac. 450, it is complained that the court erred in permitting jurors to serve or to become subject to challenge by the defendant, it appearing that the jurors objected to had served as jurors in the Kenney case.
The court did not abuse its discretion. The jurors qualified themselves. So far as we have been able to discover, no juror was allowed to sit in the case who had not asserted that he would disregard the testimony given in the other case and render a verdict upon the facts as disclosed in the instant case.
The only acts of counsel which, if torn from their settings, might be called misconduct, were in asking character witnesses, called to sustain those whose reputations had been put in issue, whether they did not know that defendant had been guilty of some misconduct and whether they, the witnesses, did not know that he lived with and associated with people of questionable character. This was within the limit of legitimate cross-examination.
We find no error, and the judgment is affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Gose, Parker, and Morris, JJ., concur.