115 Wash. 184 | Wash. | 1921
The defendant was prosecuted before a justice of the peace of Clarke county upon a criminal complaint which charg’ed that “he not being authorized by law or any officer authorized thereto, on or about the 26th day of October, 1919, in the county of Clarke and state of Washington, then and there being, did then and there willfully and unlawfully have verbal communication with a prisoner or prisoners in the
The case is presented upon two assignments of error, viz: (1) in overruling the demurrer to the complaint; and (2) in denying an application for a change of the trial judge.
Section 2377, Eem. Code, upon which the complaint is based, provides:
“Every person who, not being authorized by law or by any officer authorized thereto, shall have any verbal communication with any prisoner in any jail, reformatory, penitentiary, or other penal institution, or shall bring into or convey out of the same any writing, clothing, food, tobacco or any article whatsoever, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The appellant insists that the facts stated in the complaint are not sufficient to constitute a crime, because “two things must concur to constitute a crime, first, there must be an act done of a character to threaten the security of the state or its citizens; and second, the act must have been done with some evil intent.” Surely an act violating a positive law manifestly designed to promote the discipline and safekeeping of prisoners (consisting of convicts, and others accused of crime) until the sheriff, who has charge of the jail, is relieved of their custody by legal authority, of necessity is a threat and dangerous to the peace and security of the state and its citizens. That is the act with which the appellant is charged by the complaint. As to the element of evil intent, admit that it is essential in this statutory crime, it is to be observed that the complaint defines the act in the lan
Upon taking the appeal to the superior court, the justice of the peace made and certified a copy of the conviction and other proceedings in the case and transmitted the same to the clerk of the superior court. Thereafter, and for some time, nothing was done in the case until with or immediately prior to the demurrer the appellant filed the statutory affidavit of prejudice against the trial judge, who, upon having his attention called to it, entered an order dénying the application for another judge. Thereupon, and on the same day, the trial of the appellant was had in the superior court. No statement of facts or bill of exceptions has been furnished on the appeal, so that we have no record here except the certified transcript and the briefs of the respective parties. It appears that the appellant conducted the proceedings in his own behalf in the justice of the peace court and in the superior court without any attorney of record representing him. The statutes (§ § 209-1, 209-2, Rem. Code) upon the subject of an affidavit of prejudice and a change of judges contain no limitation upon the time when the right to demand another judge shall be exercised. By construction, however, it has become the settled rule that the application must be seasonably made. State ex rel. Nelson v. Yakey, 64 Wash. 511, 117 Pac. 265; Bedolfe v. Bedolfe, 71 Wash. 60,127 Pac. 594; State ex rel. Sheehan v. Reynolds, 111 Wash. 281, 190 Pac. 321.
The prosecuting attorney contends the act relating to disqualification of judges of the superior court has no application to criminal cases and that the judgment should be affirmed. It has been applied to criminal cases, apparently without any contention that such cases are not within the scope of the act; a course which seems to be fully justified by the terms of the
Concluding that the judge who tried the case had been disqualified under the statutes by the affidavit of prejudice, the judgment is reversed with directions to the lower court to proceed in conformity with this opinion.
Parker, C. J., Main, Tolman, and Mount, JJ., concur.