122 Wash. 392 | Wash. | 1922
-This is an appeal by James E. Redmond and Robert Lynch from a judgment of conviction on a charge of robbery. The offense consisted of the taking by the appellants of some twenty-five thousand dollars in currency from a bank messenger which the messenger was carrying from a Federal reserve bank in the city of Seattle to another bank in the same city. The sole contention for reversal is that the evidence fails to show that the taking of the property was by means of force or violence, or by putting the bank messenger in fear.
The evidence on the question of force and fear is found in the testimony of the messenger, the testimony of certain eye-witnesses to the transaction, and the testimony of a participant in the act. This testimony shows that the offense was committed on July 14,1921,
If is our opinion that there was here sufficient evidence of force and fear to constitute the crime of robbery. It is generally held that if the taking of the property be attended with such circumstances of terror, or such threatening by menace, word or gesture as in common experience is likely to create an apprehension of danger and induce a man to part with property for the safety of his person, it is robbery. And in consonance with the rule, it was held' in the much cited case of Long v. State, 12 Ga. 293, that it is not neees
Affirmed.