State v. Ficklin
Decision Date | 14 December 1937 |
Docket Number | 26871. |
Citation | 74 P.2d 187,192 Wash. 575 |
Parties | STATE v. FICKLIN. |
Court | Washington Supreme Court |
Department 1.
Appeal from Superior Court, Cowlitz County; Howard J. Atwell, Judge.
Lyle J Ficklin was convicted of an attempt to commit sodomy, and from a judgment vacating a void sentence and imposing a new sentence, he appeals.
Judgment affirmed.
Roswell J. Quinn, of Kelso, and C. D. Cunningham, of Centralia, for appellant.
Shirley Marsh, Jerard Imus, and Ronald Moore, all of Kelso, for the State.
Appellant was, on the 13th day of February, 1936, charged with the crime of sodomy alleged to have been committed on the 1st day of June, 1933.He was afterward placed on trial, and on April 3, 1936, the jury found him guilty of an attempt to commit the crime charged in the information.The trial court then sentenced him to imprisonment in the state penitentiary for an indefinite term, not to exceed five years.Upon appeal to this court the judgment was affirmed.State v. Ficklin, Wash.,67 P.2d 897.
After the remittitur was received by the trial court, appellant was, on the 23d day of August, 1937, again sentenced to imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a term of not less than three nor more than five years and at the same time the trial court entered an order setting aside the former sentence.
The one question to be decided is whether or not the trial court had the authority and jurisdiction to vacate the sentence of August 15, 1936, and impose a new sentence on August 23 1937.
Under the facts as we find them, it is manifest that defendant was first sentenced under the provisions of the Laws of 1935, c. 114, p. 309, § 2, and that such sentence was void.Lindsey v. State,301 U.S. 397, 57 S.Ct. 797, 81 L.Ed. 1182;State v. Hanlen, Wash.,69 P.2d 806.
In fixing the term of imprisonment of five years, the court complied with the terms of Rem.Rev.Stat. § 2456and§ 2264.The first section fixes the penalty for sodomy at not more than ten years and the latter section provides that the conviction of an attempt to commit a crime shall be punishable by imprisonment for not more than half the longest term that can be imposed for conviction of the completed offense.
The sentence did not, however, conform to the provisions of Rem.Rev.Stat. § 2281, which provides that the court shall fix the minimum as well as the maximum of the term to be served.
In his former appeal, appellant did not contend that section 2, chapter 114, page 309, of the Laws of 1935, was ex post facto, and it was a considerable time after the case had been decided by this court on appeal that the Supreme Court of the United States, Lindsey v. State, supra, held that section ex post facto and void with respect to crimes committed Before the act was passed.
It is true that Rem.Rev.Stat. § 2281, providing that the trial court should fix both the minimum and maximum terms of imprisonment, had been repealed by chapter 114, Laws of 1935, § 9, p. 319.However, we held in State v. Hanlen, supra, that Rem.Rev.Stat. § 2006(P.C. § 9198), was a valid and saving clause as to crimes committed prior to the effective date of any act repealing former criminal statutes.
Appellant has cited the following cases: Dickson v. Matheson,12 Wash. 196, 40 P. 725;Kuhn v. Mason,24 Wash. 94, 64 P. 182;Kawabe v. Continental Life Ins. Co.,97 Wash. 257, 166 P. 617;In re Shilshole Avenue,101 Wash. 136, 172 P. 338;In re Jones' Estate,116 Wash. 424, 199 P. 734;State ex rel. Cross v. Superior Court,158 Wash. 46, 290 P. 430.These are civil cases wherein an attempt was made by the lower court either to modify or vacate a judgment when the proper remedy was by appeal, or to vacate or change a judgment after appeal had been taken to this court.All of them properly state the law, but are not applicable here, for the reason that they do not have any reference to the actions of a trial court in relation to a void sentence in a criminal case.
After the Supreme Court of the United States had decided the Lindsey Case, appellant stood Before the...
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State v. Hanlen
...of 1935, by reason of the savings clause embodied in Rem.Rev.Stat. § 2006. This conclusion was reaffirmed by this court in State v. Ficklin, Wash., 74 P.2d 187. we remanded the cause to the trial court and directed that a judgment be entered and a sentence imposed fixing both the minimum an......
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State v. Fenter
...that this statute applies to all repealed criminal statutes. See State v. Hanlen, 193 Wash. 494, 76 P.2d 316 (1938); State v. Ficklin, 192 Wash. 575, 74 P.2d 187 (1937); State v. Hanlen, 190 Wash. 563, 69 P.2d 806 (1937). Although RCW 9A.98.020 exempts three categories from repeal and thus ......
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State v. Mehlhorn
...The issues raised on the present appeal are controlled by our decisions in State v. Hanlen, 190 Wash. 563, 69 P.2d 806, State v. Ficklin, 192 Wash. 575, 74 P.2d 187, and State v. Lindsey, 77 P.2d 596. The imposed upon the appellant, after his plea of guilty, being void, he stood subject to ......
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State v. Gedraitis
... ... position on this appeal would amount to no more, in effect, ... than to leave him subject to the reimposition of the same ... sentence by the superior court ... The ... situation here is somewhat analogous to that in State v ... Ficklin, Wash., 74 P.2d 187, 188. Ficklin had been ... convicted of the crime of sodomy, and sentenced to a term in ... the state penitentiary. On appeal to this court, the judgment ... was affirmed. After the decision of the Supreme Court of the ... United States in Lindsey v ... ...