121 Wash. 226 | Wash. | 1922
The appellants were convicted of the offense of contributing to the delinquency of a female child.
The first of the errors assigned for reversal relate to the admission of testimony. A young woman, who was the companion of the defendants and the complaining witness at the time the acts and circumstances occurred on which the state relies for conviction, was called as a witness on behalf of the state. In her testimony, after narrating the manner and by whom she and the female child mentioned had been brought to a certain city which she named, she stated that a room had been procured for them at a hotel therein. Asked who procured the room, she answered that it was procured by a brother of one of the defendants and another boy. The defendants moved to strike the answer, which motion the court overruled.. It is argued that this was prejudicial error, because the defendants cannot be convicted for the wrongful acts of others. But we find no error in the court’s ruling. This was but a link in the chain of circumstances, without the narration of which the defendant’s part in the affair could not have been well understood. It is perhaps true that enough would have been told had the testimony been confined to the fact that others than the defendants procured the room, but the mentioning of the others ’ names was not error.
One of the defendants took the witness stand on his own behalf, and on his cross-examination the state sought to show certain admissions made by him at the time of his arrest. To these questions objections were interposed and sustained by the court. The complaint of the defendants is that the prosecuting attorney was guilty of misconduct in asking the questions and misconduct in too unduly persisting upon their materiality, thereby getting before the jury matter improper as evidence. No objection was made to the conduct of the prosecutor at the time, and the trial court was not called upon to rule on the particular objection. It may be true, as the defendants argue, that improper conduct on the part of a prosecuting attorney can amount to reversible error whether objected to or not, but we cannot think this such a case. The matter inquired into was not entirely foreign to the. issues then on trial. Indeed, it seems to us, that affirmative answers to the questions propounded would have tended somewhat strongly to impeach certain statements the defendant witness had_ made in his
The defendants make certain further objections based upon the assumption that the evidence shows that the complaining witness had theretofore been married, and in consequence was to be “deemed and taken as of full age” at the time of the commission of the acts laid in the information. These objections, we think, must have been made under a misconception of the record. The record does indeed show that the woman companion of the complaining witness was theretofore married and was then living separate and apart from her husband, but we find nothing in the record, and nothing is pointed out to us, which shows that the complaining witness had ever been married.
Affirmed.