106 P.2d 591 | Wash. | 1940
Two questions are presented upon the appeal, first, whether the charge of being an habitual criminal should have been dismissed because the appellant was not brought on for trial within the period of sixty days. The other question is whether he was entitled to a jury trial.
[1] Whether he was entitled to a dismissal depends upon whether an information charging one with being an habitual criminal charges a criminal offense.
Rem. Rev. Stat., § 2312 [P.C. § 9143], provides that, if a defendant is informed against for an "offense" and the trial has not been postponed upon his own application, he must be brought to trial within sixty days after the information is filed or the charge will be dismissed, unless good cause to the contrary is shown.
As to the first question, the appellant was not entitled to a dismissal if the information charging him with being an habitual criminal did not charge a criminal offense, within the meaning of the statute just referred to.
Rem. Rev. Stat., § 2286 [P.C. § 8721], sets forth what will constitute being an habitual criminal. The severer penalty provided by statute for one who is an habitual criminal is not imposed for an offense, except the last one (in this case, burglary in the second degree), upon which the defendant has been convicted and not yet sentenced.
The question of previous convictions is important only to determine whether, taken in conjunction with the last offense, the defendant has shown a persistence in crime which authorizes the severer penalty. The charge of being an habitual criminal does not constitute *688
a separate offense. State v. Le Pitre,
[2] As to the matter of a jury trial, in the recent case ofState v. Furth, ante p. 1,
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded, with direction to the superior court to grant a new trial.
ALL CONCUR. *689