Burch v. Lockwood

247 Ill. App. 66, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 40
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 27, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,978
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 247 Ill. App. 66 (Burch v. Lockwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burch v. Lockwood, 247 Ill. App. 66, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 40 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought an action against the defendant to recover damages for the malicious prosecution and false arrest of plaintiff, in that the defendant filed in the municipal court of Chicago an information charging that plaintiff stole “one stand lamp” of the value of $14, being the property of the defendant, and that upon a trial of the merits of the case in the municipal court the defendant was found not guilty and discharged. The case was tried before a judge and á jury and there was a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $1,275.

The record discloses that on November 7, 1923, the defendant, Lockwood, appeared before a judge of the municipal court of Chicago and made complaint against plaintiff, John E. Burch, and filed a verified information in the municipal court of Chicago charging him with having stolen a lamp of the value of $14, being the property of Lockwood; that a capias was issued and Burch was arrested November 25, 1923, and on the next day, after a hearing before the court, he was discharged.

The evidence further tends to show that plaintiff, his wife and two daughters were living in a furnished apartment on the North side of Chicago, and that he had rented it from Mrs. Miller; that on or about the 15th of October, 1923, Mrs. Miller sold her interest in the property to Mrs. Margaret Schultz, the defendant’s sister; that Mrs. Schultz thereupon took possession and she and the defendant were living in the building, the defendant attending to the furnace and collecting the rents; that on the morning- of November 2, 1923, plaintiff and his family moved out of the property and left the key to the apartment on a table but did not notify Mrs. Schultz or the defendant that they were going to move, nor did they give them their new address; that shortly after plaintiff and-his family vacated the apartment, Mrs. Schultz and the defendant entered it, and they testified that they found that some of the personal property belonging to Mrs. Schultz was missing, including the lamp. Five days thereafter defendant filed the information in the municipal court as above stated. The evidence further is to the effect that plaintiff was not arrested until November 25 by reason of the fact that neither Lockwood nor his sister, Mrs. Schultz, knew where he lived and were unable to inform the police officers so that he could be taken into custody.

Plaintiff testified in substance that he was arrested' on Sunday morning about ten o’clock, taken to the police station and locked up in jail, where he remained for about ten hours, when he was released on bond; that the case came up for trial the following day in the municipal court and that on the hearing at that time the defendant, Lockwood, called plaintiff a “dirty rat” and stated that he would “get” plaintiff. Plaintiff further testified that Lockwood there said, “I would bite my mother and I was a dirty rat and scum and my attorney should be ashamed to represent me”; that he did not take the lamp; that he and his family moved out of the furnished apartment on November 2, using a little Ford truck for the purpose of removing his belongings; that Lockwood requested him to move ; that he paid $35 to the attorney for defending him in the municipal court; that he was a patent attorney employed by a firm engaged in that line of practice, and that he recently came from Bridgeport, Connecticut. It further appears that he was not discharged by his employers on account of his arrest. Plaintiff further testified that a short time before he moved from the furnished apartment his wife put the lamp in a closet in the apartment. Plaintiff’s daughter, thirteen years of age, testified that she heard the defendant, Lockwood, call her father a “dirty rat” at the time of the trial in the municipal court. She further testified that the lamp was in the pantry when they vacated the premises. One of plaintiff’s employers testified that plaintiff’s reputation for honesty was good.

Lockwood testifed in his own behalf that at the time of the trial he was manager of a delicatessen store; that for thirteen years he had worked as a brakeman and conductor for the Illinois Central Railroad Company; that he first met plaintiff about October 17,1923, after his sister had taken over the apartment, and at that time he demanded payment of the rent for the apartment from plaintiff, which was payable weekly; that he made a similar request on the 24th and 29th of October and on November 1st, but that no payment was received, plaintiff stating that he was unable to pay it at that time; that when he called for the rent he saw the lamp in question on the library table in the center of one of the rooms; that on November 2nd he got up at the usual time, about 5:30 o ’clock, to start the steam; that about 7:30 o’clock when he was attending to his duties around the building, he noticed in the rear of plaintiff’s apartment indications that plaintiff was moving out; that shortly thereafter he and his sister, Mrs. Schultz, went over to the apartment, rang the bell at the front door and then the bell at the rear door; that both doors were locked; that they then' opened one of the doors with a pass key and then found the key to the apartment on the library table in one of the rooms of the apartment; that they then checked up on the furnishings and found some bed linens, silverware' and the lamp missing; that the lamp was not in the pantry; that the plaintiff owed $42.50 for rent and that it had not yet been paid; that a few days afterwards he went to the municipal court and signed the complaint because he believed that plaintiff had taken the lamp. He further testified that on the hearing in the municipal court he did not call plaintiff a rat several times but only twice; that he did not say that plaintiff was a man who would bite his own mother; that he did not say to plaintiff that he would get him, and that he did not see plaintiff move out of the apartment.

Margaret Schultz testified that she took over the apartment about the middle of October; that she heard her brother, the defendant, demand payment of the rent from plaintiff; that plaintiff said he was hard up and unable to pay at that time; that there was no quarrel between them; that Lockwood managed the place for her, his duties being to collect the rents, look after the building and do janitor work; that after plaintiff moved on the morning of November 2 she and the defendant went through the apartment as testified by her brother; that she found some knives, forks, sheets, pillow covers, a bed spread and the' lamp missing from the apartment; that she looked through all of the apartment and the lamp was not there. The evidence is further to the effect that no one was in the apartment from the time plaintiff vacated it until defendant and his sister, Mrs. Schultz, went through it.

In rebuttal plaintiff testified that he had rented the apartment from Mrs. Miller by the month and that he had paid all the rent; that when the defendant demanded the rent he told defendant that he did not owe any and that the defendant asked him to move by twelve o’clock.

At the close of the case the defendant requested the court to give a special interrogatory to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 Ill. App. 66, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burch-v-lockwood-illappct-1927.