74 Wash. 125 | Wash. | 1913
— The appellant was convicted of the crime of murder in the second degree, for shooting and killing one Oliver Sanford, and sentenced to serve a term of from ten years to life in the state penitentiary. At the time of the homicide, the appellant was in the employ of the Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Company as a street car conductor, in the city of Seattle. He had been so employed for about two years. The killing occurred on the rear platform of the car, a “pay-as-you-enter” car, at the end of the “Ballard Beach line,” between 9:30 and 10 o’clock in the nighttime on the 31st day of August, 1912. The appellant had then been a conductor on that line for about four months. This line extends from the business part of the city through and to the limits of what was formerly the city of Ballard. In the course of the outward trip, Otis Sanford, a son of the de
The appellant further testified that passengers were not allowed to ride upon the Y. The motorman testified that, immediately after the tragedy, the appellant said, “They came out here to beat me up, and when they attacked him he shot them.” Other witnesses gave similar testimony. Another witness, a passenger upon the cars, testified that he heard the young man say to the appellant, “We will get even with you.” Roy Sanford, a son of Oliver and a brother of Otis, a witness for the state, testified that he had an engagement for a launch ride with his father, mother, brother and the rest of the family “just as soon as I could get there”; that his launch was at “Carlson’s boathouse,” near where the canal locks were being constructed; that he was working at a store at Queen Anne and Mercer streets in the city; that he left the store about 9:30 on the evening' of the tragedy, and went direct to Ballard to meet his engagement, and that he heard of the tragedy when he had arrived at the boathouse. He further testified that there were two ways of going to the boathouse, one from 32d avenue N. W. and 59th street, the other from the end of the line, and that his father and brother were more familiar with that vicinity than he was. There was other testimony tending to show that the shortest route to the boathouse was from 32d avenue and 59th street. The appellant then sought to prove, by a motorman who had worked one year on the Ballard Beach line, the place where people usually left the car to go to the canal locks. Upon the objection of the state’s attorney, this line of evidence was rej ected, and the appellant’s counsel was warned by the court to pursue the inquiry no further as the evidence was not competent. The exclusion of this evidence is - assigned as error. This witness was then asked to state if he knew the general reputation of the Ballard Beach line as to whether it was a
These assignments may best be considered together. The appellant admitted the killing and sought to exonerate himself from criminal culpability by pleading self-defense. The state’s evidence shows that both father and son had an engagement with a son and brother for a launch ride the evening of the tragedy. The appellant testified that, when the car was approaching 32d avenue and 59th street, the father, whom he had not before observed, passed out of the body of the car to the rear platform, as if to alight at that point, and that he said to the son, “Ain’t you going to get off here?” to which the son answered, “No, I am going to the end of the line to get this fellow,” indicating the appellant, and that after a conversation between the two, carried on in a whisper, he heard the father make a like remark. As corroborative of this testimony the appellant was entitled to show, if he could, that 32d avenue and 59th street was the place where passengers going to the boathouse or the canal locks usually left the car. If the destination of the father and son was the boathouse, as the state’s testimony tended to prove, and 32d avenue and 59th street was the usual and customary place for persons to alight going to that point, the testimony rejected was competent and material, in that it tended both to corroborate the appellant and to shed light upon the motive of the deceased and his son in remaining upon the car. Robertson v. O’Neill, 67 Wash. 121, 120 Pac. 884.
So it was with the offer to prove the reputation of the line upon which the tragedy occurred. If it had a reputation for lawlessness and the appellant knew it, facts which he had
“Actual or positive danger is not indispensable to justify self-defense. Men when threatened with danger are obliged to judge from appearances and to determine therefrom in the light of all the circumstances the actual state of the surroundings, and in such cases if they act upon reasonable and honest convictions, induced by reasonable evidence under all the circumstances, they will not be held responsible criminally for a mistake as to the extent of the actual danger.”
See, also, State v. Claire, 41 La. Ann. 191, 6 South. 129.
The court instructed:
“The same condition which will authorize a man to act in defense of himself will authorize him to act in defense of his son. If the father, seeing his son assaulted or menaced with great danger to life, under circumstances such as are cal
This instruction should have been qualified by an instruction that, if the son was himself the aggressor, then the right of the father to act in his defense remained in abeyance until the son had in good faith attempted to withdraw from the conflict which he had brought on. This qualification springs from the principle that one who is himself the aggressor may not invoke the law of self-defense until he has in good faith attempted to withdraw from the combat, and one who goes to the defense of another stands in the shoes of him he seeks to defend., 21 Cyc. 827; People v. Travis, 56 Cal. 251; Smurr v. State, 105 Ind. 125, 4 N. E. 445. The instruction was wrong, and being the only instruction upon the right of the father to go to the defense of the son, we do not think it was rendered harmless by other correct instructions upon the question of self-defense.
The appellant suggests that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. One of the state’s witnesses testified that the young man said to appellant, “I will get on some other night and drag you off and beat you up”; that the appellant answered in substance, “If you want to beat me up, come to the end of the car line,” and the young man replied, “All right, you are on; I will be out there.” This, with the admitted killing and other circumstances not necessary to set forth, made a case for the jury.
The judgment is reversed.
Crow, C. J., Mount, Fullerton, and Parker, JJ., concur.