43 Wash. 206 | Wash. | 1906
An information was filed in the superior court of Spokane county, charging John H. Messner, J. W. Prall and Anette Franzen with the crime of conspiracy, committed as follows:
“That the said defendants, John H. Messner, J. W. Prall and Anette Franzen, on the 22nd day of July, A. D. 1905, in the eounty of Spokane, aforesaid, maliciously and un
To this information each of the defendants interposed a plea of not guilty. The application of the defendant Pranzen for a separate trial was granted, and the remaining defendants were tried together and found guilty as charged. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and from the judgment and sentence of the court the defendant Prall has appealed.
The different assignments of error have been presented and discussed under three general heads, as follows: Objections going to the sufficiency of the information; exceptions to the instructions given, and to the refusal to give instructions requested; and insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. The appellant contends that the information is insufficient because it does not set forth the false pretenses or contain a description of the land upon which the defendants conspired to obtain the mortgage from the prosecuting witness. Conspiracy is not a statutory offense in this state, and we must therefore look to the common law for a definition of the crime.
“Without attempting to review and reconcile all the cases, we are of opinion that, as a general description, though perhaps not a precise and accurate definition, a conspiracy must
See, also, 2 Bishop, New Crim. Law, § 175; 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 832. The. essence of the crime of conspiracy is the unlawful combination, and if the object of the conspiracy is the accomplishment of some unlawful act, the means by which the unlawful act is to be accomplished need not be set forth in the indictment or information. People v. Butler, 111 Mich. 483, 69 N. W. 734; State v. Grant, 86 Iowa 216, 53 N. W. 120; 8 Cyc. 667, and cases, cited. The information was therefore sufficient.
To a proper understanding of the questions arising out of the instructions given and refused, a brief reference to- the testimony becomes material. At the time of the commission of the offense charged in the information, the prosecuting witness was under conviction for the crime of arson, and was out on bail in the sum of $2,500 pending further proceedings in the cause in which the conviction was had. She testified, in substance, that a mortgage to secure the sum of $3,650 was to be executed in favor of the appellant Prall by one Glasson, in whose name the title to the property stood, and that this sum was to be disposed of as. follows: $1,500 to pay the amount of her reduced bail bond, in order that she might leave the state, $2,000 to. bribe various officers of Spokane county to the end that she might not be brought back or interfered with, $100 to the appellant Prall for his trouble, and $50 to assist the witness in making her escape. In order to sustain the charge of conspiracy to obtain the mortgage under false pretenses, the prosecution must take the position that these representations as to the disposition to be made of the proceeds arising from the mortgage were false and untrue. The appellant, on the other hand, testified that the mortgage was to be executed in the sum of $3,500, $2,500 of
“And in this connection, I instruct you that, if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants, Messner, Prall and Pranzen, or any two of them, entered into a conspiracy as alleged in the information, for the purpose there stated, and in furtherance of such conspiracy induced said Latham to believe that the money or any part thereof to be raised by said mortgage was to be raised to bribe persons in 'official positions, it will be your duty to find the defendants guilty, even though' you further find that said Latham desired that the money to be so raised should be used for such unlawful purplose;”
and refused the following, requested on the part of the appellant :
“If you find from the evidence in this case that $1,000 represented by the mortgage mentioned in the information was to be secured to the firm of Peacock, Wells & Ludden as attorneys’ fees for the witness, Mary A. Latham, and $2,500 represented by said mortgage was to be paid by defendant Prall into any bank the said Mary A. Latham or her said attorneys might select for the use and benefit of said Mary A. Latham, the court instructs, you that your verdict should be not guilty.”
We think the instruction as given was erroneous, as it told the jury in effect that both defendants on trial were guilty even though the conspiracy were confined to the defendants Messner and Pranzen; and when we come to a further review of the testimony, it will appear that such instruction may have been highly prejudicial to the appellant Prall. The requested instruction, or one of similar import, should have been given. Every litigant has a right to have his theory of the case presented to the jury, if there is testimony to sustain it, and there was ample testimony to sustain the theory em
In the last case cited the court said:
“Whatever may be the views entertained by a court as to the truth or falsity of the evidence adduced, it is incumbent upon him‘to charge the jury, under appropriate instructions, the law applicable to every phase of the testimony adduced on the trial. This is expressly commanded by the statute. To hold otherwise would authorize the trial judge to submit the law applicable only to such evidence as he might deem worthy of credit, discarding such' as he believed unworthy of credence, and often, doubtless, thus impressing the minds of. the jurors with the fact that the testimony was fabricated or false; and in this way it would be used strongly against the accused by the jury. The only safe rule is to follow the statutory law of the state in all criminal trials.”
This is a statutory requirement in the state of Texas> but the rule is the same in all jurisdictions whenever a proper request is made.
The respondent does not question the correctness of this rule, but contends that the court, in substance, complied with it. We cannot agree with this contention. While the instructions >of the court were clear and explicit, they presented the case entirely from the standpoint of the prosecution. Of course they were accompanied by the injunction that, if the jury did not find the facts as set forth in the charge, they should find the defendants not guilty; but this fell far short of presenting to the jury the appellant’s theory of the case.
The last question for consideration is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. The facts disclosed by the testimony are substantially these: The appellant moved from
In the latter part of April, 1905, the appellant returned to Oregon. On May 7, 1905, after his departure, the store building above referred to was consumed by fire. A few days after the fire.the prosecuting witness was arrested on the charge of arson. Soon after her arrest, she communicated with the appellant in Oregon, and asked him to return and assist her in her trouble. It does not clearly appear that the exact nature of her trouble was disclosed by this letter. There was also a second letter and a communication by telephone from some person in Spokane-. During the month of June, 1905, the prosecuting witness was tried on the arson charge, and the jury returned a verdiet of guilty on the 18th day of June. Between the 18th day of June and the 13th day of July, the prosecuting witness held frequent consultations with the defendants Messner and Eranzen. What transspired at these different meetings we only know from the testimony of the prosecuting witness, as the other defendants did not take the witness stand.
The appellant returned from Oregon on the 12th day of July, and soon thereafter called upon the prosecuting wit
The appellant then obtained an order from the prosecuting witness on the Holland Bank for the abstract of title to> the property, presented the order to' the bank, obtained the abstract, and turned it over to the attorneys for examination. The attorneys discovered an existing mortgage on the propr erty in the sum of $2,000. The appellant informed them that he had been told that this mortgage was a mere security for the present bail bond of the prosecuting witness and would be discharged as soon as the bail bond was superseded by another. Mr. Wells consulted the mortgagee and ascertained that the existing mortgage was for a bona- fide loan, and that only $500 had been paid thereon. Upon this discovery, both the appellant and the attorneys consulted refused to have anything further to do with the mortgage or. the case. These negotiations covered several days, during which, on the 20th day of July, the prosecuting witness was
On the second night after these negotiations fell through, the prosecuting witness left Sptokane and went to Mead, and the following night fled to Idaho. She was brought back to Spokane and, uplon her return, disclosed to the officers the facts testified to by her as above set forth, and as a result the defendants Messner and Franzen and the appellant Prall were arrested on the charge of conspiracy. As already stated, she testified at the trial that the funds arising from the mortgage were to be used in an entirely different maimer from that stated by the appellant, largely for the pfarpose of bribery. The negotiations between the appellant and Peacock, Wells & Ludden are established facts in the case, and they would seem to be wholly inconsistent with the theory of the prosecution and the testimony of the prosecuting witness. The conduct of the appellant can only be accounted for on the assumption that he was planning a defense to this charge while he was plotting to obtain a mortgage from the prosecuting witness by false pretenses, and, yet, the very defense he planned would prove his undoing in case he succeeded in his efforts to obtain the mortgage by other means. It may be that the defendants Messner and Franzen and the prosecuting witness discussed the plans and propositions testified to by her before the return of the appellant from Oregon, but there is no evidence to connect the appellant with any conspiracy until as late as July 12. These; facts disclose the vice in an instruction which would permit the jury to find the appellant guilty on proof of a conspiracy between Messner and Franzen alone, as well as the harm resulting to t-he appellant from the failure of the; court to present his; theory of the case to the jury.
This court will not pass finally upon the testimony at this time. The prosecuting attorney declares in his brief that “a pathetic story is revealed by the testimony in the record,” and in this connection it becomes a pertinent inquiry whether
However, the printed page may deceive. Trial judges and jurors have opportunities that we do not enjoy, and if another jury should return a similar verdict on a, proper submission of the case, and the trial judge should permit that verdict to stand, all further inquiry might be foreclosed. For the error in the giving and refusing of instructions, the judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Hount, O. J., Fullerton, Hadley, Hoot, Dunbar, and Crow, JJ., concur.