Bressler v. People

117 Ill. 422
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 117 Ill. 422 (Bressler v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bressler v. People, 117 Ill. 422 (Ill. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholeield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Peter Bressler was indicted by a grand jury of WTiiteside county for the crime of larceny. The venue was changed to the circuit court of Lee county, where he was tried and convicted, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of one year. He sues out this writ of error,, and brings the record of his trial and conviction before us for review.

Before proceeding to the questions arising on the rulings during the progress of the trial, we must pass upon the question, arising in limine, whether the court had jurisdiction to try the case, for without that jurisdiction the judgment is a nullity.

The statute provided that the term should commence on Monday, the 9th day of February, A. D. 1885. At two o’clock in the afternoon of that day, court was opened by one of the circuit judges, in due form of law. An order of court was then made, and entered of record, to the effect that if, at five o’clock in the evening of that day, no judge of the court should be in attendance, the" sheriff should continue the court until the next morning at nine o’clock. At the time to which that adjournment was made, no judge of the court being in attendance, the sheriff made proclamation, in pursuance of the order, that the court was adjourned until the next morning at nine o’clock. At the last named hour there was yet no judge of the court present, and at five o’clock in the evening of the same day, (the second day of the term,) the judge of the court still being absent, the sheriff made proclamation that the court was adjourned until nine o’clock the next morning, (the third day of the term,) and posted notices, on the door of the court house, of such adjournment; At the last named hour the judge of. the court was present, and court was opened in due form. Bressler then filed a plea, setting up these facts, to the jurisdiction of the court. . A demurrer to the plea was filed on behalf of the People, which the court sustained, and adjudged that Bressler should answer over, to which ruling he, at the time, excepted. Very clearly, the demurrer to the plea was properly sustained. It is provided by section 20, chapter 37, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, that “if, at any time after the opening of court for the term, no judge of the court is present at the time and place of holding court, the sheriff of the county or his deputy may adjourn the court from day to day, or, upon the written order of the judge, from time to time, and shall give notice of such adjournment by making proclamation in the court house, and by notification posted on the‘door of the court house.” The adjournment on the first day was, strictly, by order of the court, and no notice of that adjournment was therefore required to be posted; and it is not claimed that the adjournment on the second day was not in conformity with the statute, assuming the first adjournment to have been regular.

The larceny charged, was of two promissory notes; given by the defendant to one Henry Smith. They were both dated December 31, 1883. One was payable October 1, 1884, for $975.76, with interest from date at eight percent per annum, and the other was payable on the 1st of November, 1884, for $1603.92, with interest, also, at "eight per cent per annum. A payment of $905 had been made and credited on the last mentioned note, and the sum of $110 had been paid and credited on the other note. Both notes were secured by chattel mortgage. The notes were in the possession of Adam Smith, who was a brother of the payee, and a justice of the peace. It is agreed, on all hands, that on Monday, the 29tli of September, 1884, the defendant was in the office of Adam Smith, in Sterling, and then paid, on the first named note, a check drawn by Frank Bressler on Galt & Tracy’s bank, for $625, the cash upon which was soon after paid by the bank to Adam Smith, and that, at that time, the possession of both of the notes passed, by some means, from Adam Smith to the defendant. The evidence also agrees in proving that before the check was paid over, a computation was made of the interest due upon the note, and it Avas found that $300, added to the amount of the check, would overpay that amount by sixty-eight cents; that after the check was delivered, Smith, not having the sixty-eight cents, handed back to the defendant a dollar, and the defendant then handed Smith thirty-one cents in change, which Smith accepted in lieu of the thirty-two cents which Avas necessary to make the accurate change.

Smith testified that the defendant was in his office, in the morning, several times, before the interest Avas computed and the check paid over, inquiring at each time whether one Sox, to whom he claimed to have sold four colts on the day before for $300, had called, saying at one time, perhaps the first, that Sox had agreed to meet him there that morning and pay that sum on the note; that finally, a short time before noon, the defendant concluded to have the computation made and pay OArer the check, as was done, saying that Sox could pay the $300 when he came, which he expected might be at any moment; that just as they had got through changing the money, and while they were yet standing at the office table, (these notes, Avith a number of other notes, all of which were pasted together at the corner Avith mucilage, still being on the table,) August Schwertferger entered the room; that witness then turned from the table and advanced two or three steps to meet Schwertferger, and they spoke to each other; that just at that time the defendant passed around Schwertferger and left the room; that the witness, after talking to Schwertferger, turned to his -table, took the notes that were still lying there and put them in a safe, and locked it; that he then went to the bank and drew the money upon the check, and afterwards went to his dinner; that upon returning to his office he brought the packages of notes out of the safe, with the intention of indorsing the payment upon the note, and he then found that the notes were missing; that he immediately employed a constable to go with him to the residence of .the defendant, about three and a half miles from Sterling, where, finding the defendant, he demanded of him a return of the notes, speaking loud enough for the defendant to hear him, twice, but the defendant made no answer to him, and, with his son Frank, drove rapidly away in a buggy. On the next day but one, the larger of the two notes was returned to the witness by a person to wrhom the defendant had delivered it for that purpose.

Schwertferger testified that as he entered the room, at the time mentioned by Smith, he heard the jingling of money, and he observed the defendant standing at the table, doing something with the papers there, and that he (defendant) then took something and went out, passing, by the witness; that he put in his pocket what he took.

Sox testified that about two weeks before the 29th of September, the defendant wanted the witness to look at some horses and cattle he desired the witness to buy. He informed witness that they were mortgaged, but said that he preferred to sell them at private sale. ' Witness went and examined the property, but did not then make any purchase. On the Friday next before the 29th of September, the defendant again called upon the witness for the same purpose, and he then told witness that he wanted to sell to make up $300 to pay to Smith; that on the Sunday next before the 29th, witness bought four colts from the. defendant for $300, which he agreed to pay to Smith between that time,—i.

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Bluebook (online)
117 Ill. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bressler-v-people-ill-1886.