105 Wash. 634 | Wash. | 1919
The defendant in this case was charged with the crime of assault in the third degree. The trial resulted in a verdict of guilty. From the judgment entered upon the verdict, the defendant appeals.
On July the 21st, 1917, and for some time prior thereto, the appellant was and had been living at the Hotel Russell, in Seattle. On the night of that day, the appellant returned to his room at about twelve o’clock and found therein the complaining witness and a woman. The complaining witness he had not known
“I thought you had gone home;” and that, thereupon, the complaining witness applied to him a vile epithet and struck at him, and knocked off his glasses, and “when he went to strike again I threw up my left arm and I think it struck his right arm. He went down the stairs and his hat fell off. I ran down after him and picked up his hat as I went.”
The complaining witness testified that when they met at the head of the stairs the defendant applied to him a vile epithet and told him to “get down the stairs,” and he further testified:
“"When he came down the stairs around the banister, I went down the stairs. When I got to the bottom, the son was there, and hauled off and smashed me in the face here, and cut my lip all open. When I got to the street entrance, the doctor (appellant) overtook me, and had some big heavy instrument or something, and came down on my head. ’ ’
It was for the assault that occurred on this occasion that the appellant was tried and convicted. The theory of the defense was that the complaining witness had not been struck or assaulted by the appellant. The theory upon which the case was prosecuted
The controlling question is whether it was error for the court to instruct the jury that the appellant admitted that he “used force” on the complaining witness. This is a direct comment upon the evidence, and if it is not justified by the testimony of the appellant himself, it is violative of his rights under article 4, § 16 of the constitution. As we read the evidence of the appellant, it is not to be construed as an admission on his part that he used force. It is true that he testified that he threw up his left arm to ward off a blow directed at him by the complaining witness, after he had been once struck and his glasses knocked off, and that he thought it struck the right arm of his assailant. This language is more restricted than the language used in the instructions. In other words, the trial court, in the language used, went beyond the testimony of the witness. The fact has not been overlooked that two witnesses on behalf of the state testified; one, that the appellant, after the oc
The instructions were a comment on the evidence within the constitutional provision above referred to, and were not justified by the testimony of the appellant. The respondent claims that the error in the instructions is not now open to the appellant because no exceptions were taken thereto which were called to the attention of the trial court, relying upon the general rule in such cases. Where, however, the instructions invade a constitutional right of the accused, it is not necessary, in order to have such error reviewed, that an exception be taken and called to the attention of the trial court. State v. Crotts, 22 Wash. 245, 60 Pac. 403; State v. Jackson, 83 Wash. 514, 145 Pac. 470; Eckhart v. Peterson, 94 Wash. 379, 162 Pac. 551.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to the trial court to grant a new trial.
Chadwick, C. J., Mitchell, Mackintosh,, and Tolman, JJ., concur.