246 P. 1119 | Wash. | 1926
The appellant was convicted of incest and appealed. The judgment was reversed because of prejudice to appellant's rights in the taking of adverse testimony, on a motion for a new trial, without giving the appellant notice and opportunity to be present in person or by counsel. The cause was remanded with direction to reexamine that witness upon notice to the appellant and his attorney and to hear such rebuttal testimony, if any, as might be appropriate, and then upon the whole record to dispose of the motion for a new trial. State v. Ward,
The appeal brings up the whole record, including, of course, the trial record. On the merits of the case it is *197 enough to say that there was ample evidence to sustain the verdict against the appellant.
[1] Concerning the motion for a new trial and the hearings thereon, and also the disposition of the motion made by the trial court, the record fails to disclose any abuse of discretion on the part of the trial judge. Both sides were accorded a fair hearing. Counsel for appellant criticises the conduct and course of that hearing on the ground that the prosecuting witness was under the restraint of public authorities at the time of the hearing of the motion for a new trial. But it appears that at that time she was an inmate of the state school for girls located at Grand Mound, and at the hearing at Everett was in the care of an attendant from that school. The examination of the witness was in open court, whereupon further hearing was continued to a future date agreeable to the appellant, at which time additional evidence pertaining to the motion for a new trial was taken in open court.
Affirmed.
TOLMAN, C.J., MAIN, and PARKER, JJ., concur. *198