State v. Ito

Mitchell, J.

R. Ito, appellant, was charged and convicted of manslaughter in the killing of one Norris De Lane, a boy six years of age, on March 20, 1923, at a street intersection in the city of Seattle, by the reckless and unlawful driving of an automobile.

The first assignment is that the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of police officers concerning the search for a man named Tasucha, and the use of that name by the appellant in renewing his automobile license, upon the ground that it was irrelevant and immaterial. "When the boy was run over and killed by the automobile, the driver failed to stop and hurriedly drove away. No witness at the scene of the injury was acquainted with the driver, noticed to be a Japanese, but one of them took the license number of the car, which, upon inquiry at the state license department, was learned to have been issued in the name of Tasucha as owner. The officers’ investigation and search showed that Tasucha, who formerly owned the car, had returned to Japan a number of years ago and that the car had been purchased and used by one named Ito, or Oti. Pursuing the search, they learned of repairs to the car for him in the name of Tasucha, and later they found the appellant, who admitted to the officers that he owned the car, that no one drove it but himself, that he had continued to take out the license in the name of the former owner, and that his real name was Ito. This testimony was clearly not immaterial or irrelevant, going as it did to the question of the identity of the person who caused the death of the boy.

The next assignment is upon instructions to which exceptions were taken. It is presented in four subdivisions. (1) The defense was an alibi. The appellant claimed, and introduced proof to show, that from *404two to five o’clock p. m. of the day of the injury, lie was elsewhere, and that, since the evidence on the part of the state showed that the boy was killed at three-thirty to four p. m. of that day, it was error for the court in the instructions in speaking of the time to refer to it as the “20th day of March,” rather than confine it to three-thirty to four p. m. of that day. The contention is too technical to be favored and is incorrect in principle. Under any and all of the testimony on behalf of the prosecution, if the boy was not killed within the hours that the appellant claimed he was elsewhere, then there was no proof that the boy was killed at all. The instructions could not have been confusing or misleading. State v. Druxman, 88 Wash. 424, 153 Pac. 381.

. (2) It is objected that certain instructions eliminated from the consideration of the jury the question of whether or not the appellant’s conduct was the proximate cause of the injury. We think the appellant is in error in making this contention. The instruction was:

“If, however, you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was, at the time alleged in the information, engaged in doing an unlawful act, to-wit: driving a vehicle upon any public street in a careless and imprudent manner, or at a greater speed than was reasonable or proper, having due regard to the traffic and use of the way by others, or so as to endanger the life and limb of any person, or driving a motor vehicle across a public street intersection at a rate of speed faster than twelve miles per hour, and that such unlawful act resulted in the killing of the said Norris De Lane, then it would be immaterial whether the killing was accidental or intentional. The defendant would be guilty and it would not excuse the defendant that he had tried when it was too late, to avoid the accident.”

*405The instruction was correct. State v. Stentz, 33 Wash. 444, 74 Pac. 588.

(3) The following instruction is objected to as a comment upon the evidence, viz.:

“The jury is instructed that circumstantial evidence is to be regarded by the jury in all cases, and is many times quite as conclusive in its convincing power as direct and positive evidence. When it is strong and satisfactory the jury should so consider it, neither enlarging nor belittling its force. It should have its just and fair weight with you; and if, when it is taken as a whole and fairly and candidly weighed, it convinces the guarded judgment, you should convict, and on such conviction you are not to fancy situations or circumstances which do not appear in the evidence, but you are to make those just and reasonable inferences from circumstances proven which the guarded judgment of a reasonable man would ordinarily make under like circumstances. And if, in connection with the other evidence before you, you then have no reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s guilt, you should convict him. ’ ’

The objection is not justified. Had the court said that the circumstantial evidence in the case is convincing, or that it is as convincing as the direct and positive evidence in the ease, a different situation would have been presented. On the contrary, the court simply stated a truism, that many times such testimony is as convincing as direct and positive evidence. Taken in connection with the whole paragraph of the instruction, it was but to say to the jury that, if they were satisfied of defendant’s guilt beyond any reasonable doubt, even though upon circumstantial evidence, together with the direct evidence, they should convict, and that they should not discriminate for or against circumstantial evidence, but should act upon it with equal faith as in the case of direct testimony, if it was *406convincing. Roberts v. State, 17 Ariz. 159, 149 Pac. 380; People v. Howard, 135 Cal. 266, 67 Pac. 148.

(4) The instruction on the subject of alibi was in the form approved in State v. Rosi, 120 Wash. 514, 208 Pac. 15, and State v. Johnson, 122 Wash. 394, 210 Pac. 774.

The third general assignment is that the motion .for a new trial should have been granted, argued here as though the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict. Upon a consideration of the evidence, however, we are satisfied that it was ample to sustain the verdict. The trial was a fair one.

Affirmed.

Main, C. J., Pemberton, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.