Coughlin v. People

19 L.R.A. 57, 33 N.E. 1, 144 Ill. 140, 1893 Ill. LEXIS 1120
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 19 L.R.A. 57 (Coughlin 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
Coughlin v. People, 19 L.R.A. 57, 33 N.E. 1, 144 Ill. 140, 1893 Ill. LEXIS 1120 (Ill. 1893).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the 29th day of June, 1889, an indictment was presented in the Criminal Court of Cook county by the grand jury, against Daniel Coughlin, Martin Burke, John F. Beggs, Patrick O’Sullivan, Frank J. Woodruff, Patrick Cooney and John Kunze, charging them, and divers other persons to the grand jury unknown, with having conspired to kill and murder Patrick Henry Cronin, and that, in pursuance of such conspiracy, they did kill and murder said Cronin. At the August term, 1889, of said court, Coughlin, Burke, O’Sullivan, Beggs and Kunze were tried on the indictment, and at such trial Beggs was acquitted, Kunze was found guilty of manslaughter and his punishment was fixed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of three years, and Coughlin, Burke and O’Sullivan were each found guilty of murder, and their punishment was fixed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the terms of their natural lives. The verdict, as to Kunze, was set aside by the court and a new trial was awarded, and Coughlin, Burke and O’Sullivan were each sentenced to imprisonment for life, in accordance with the verdict.

To obtain a reversal of the sentence as to himself, O’Sullivan sued out a writ of error from this court returnable to the October term, 1890, and the cause thus brought here for review was submitted to this court on the printed arguments of counsel at the March term, 1891. Afterwards, and before the announcement of our decision, O’Sullivan died, and thereby, as we held in denying a motion by his administrator to enter judgment name fro tunc as of a date prior to his death, his writ of error was abated. O’Sullivan v. The People, post, p. 604.

Coughlin has now sued out a writ of error returnable to the October term, 1892, of this court, and has assigned numerous errors, and the cause thus presented having been submitted on the briefs and arguments of counsel, is now before us for decision.

A brief statement of the facts surrounding the homicide, and of the circumstances under which it is supposed to have been committed, so far as they were disclosed at the trial, will be necessary to a proper understanding of the questions raised by the assignments of error. On and prior to May 4,1889, Patrick Henry Cronin was a physician and surgeon, and was residing and having his principal office at No. 486, North Clark street, Chicago, and was engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery. He also had a down-town office in the Chicago Opera House Building, on the corner of Clark and Washington streets, that being about one and one-half miles south of his residence. At about 7.30 o’clock, p. m. of May 4, 1889, a stranger, driving a horse and buggy, called at 486, North Clark street, for Dr. Cronin, and presented a business card of Patrick O’Sullivan, who was an ice dealer, and said that one of O’Sullivan’s men had been seriously injured, and asked Dr. Cronin to go at once to render him professional assistance. The man who thus called seemed to be in haste, and Dr. Cronin thereupon hurriedly collected his utensils, bandages, cotton, and such other materials as he supposed might be needed, and got into the buggy with the stranger and was by him driven away rapidly in a northerly direction, towards the ice-house and residence of O’Sullivan. That was the last time Dr. Cronin was seen alive by any of his friends so far as is known. His body was found in a high state of decomposition on the 22d day of May, 1889, in the catch-basin „ of a sewer, in the north part of the city, several miles north of O’Sullivan’s residence.

The evidence tending to connect Coughlin and his co-defendants with the homicide is purely circumstantial. The theory of the prosecution is, that Dr. Cronin was put to death in pursuance of a conspiracy to take his life, entered into by the defendants and other parties who are unknown; that to accomplish the objects of such conspiracy, he was induced, in the manner already indicated, to go to a housemear O’Sullivan’s residence, known as the Carlson cottage, on pretense that the person who had been injured and who needed his professional services was there; that he was there met by all or a portion of the conspirators and murdered, and that his body was thereupon taken by those who had put him to death and deposited in the catch-basin where it was afterwards discovered.

It appears that Dr. Cronin and all the defendants who were tried, except Kunze, were natives of Ireland or of Irish descent, and were members of an organization composed exclusively of persons of Irish nativity or descent, known as the “United Brotherhood,” and commonly called the “Clan-na-Gael.” According to the theory upon which the defendants were tried, as such theory was outlined by the state’s attorney in his opening statement to the jury, the “ United Brotherhood ” was a secret, oath-bound organization, having a membership and subordinate bodies in all parts of the country; that the objects for which it was formed and kept in existence were, to assist, by force of arms or otherwise, in freeing Ireland from its dependence upon the government of Great Britain and in securing its national independence; that for the purpose of concealing its real purposes from the public, its subordinate bodies or “Camps” were called and generally known as literary societies; that the affairs of the organization were directed by an executive committee, that committee being originally composed of members from each district, but that at a meeting of the organization held in Chicago in 1881, the executive committee was reduced to five members; that this executive board had the power to command, and that no member had a right to disobey, and that whatever it commanded the members were required to do ; that the members were required by their oaths and by the laws of the organization to obey the executive committee, even in defiance of the government or any other authority; that three certain members of the executive committee, who constituted the majority, assumed control of the organization; that from year to year, large sums of money were raised to be used for the purpose of securing the independence of Ireland which came into their hands; that these three men, after assuming supreme control of the organization, adopted and put in force a line of policy which was disapproved by a considerable portion of the membership, and that dissatisfaction arose in relation to the accounts given by them of the society funds, and that thereupon a serious division arose in the organization, Dr. Cronin being one of the leaders of the opposition; that in consequence of his opposition to the three men in control of the organization and popularly known as the “ Triangle,” and of his efforts to subject them to discipline, a bitter feeling was created between him and them, which extended to the membership of the organization, and among others, to Camp 20, of which Coughlin, Burke and O’Sullivan were members; that Dr. Cronin was denounced as a traitor and a British spy, and that at a meeting of Camp 20, a committee, of which defendant Coughlin was a member, was appointed to try him, and that such committee afterwards tried him and ordered that he be put to death, and that his death followed in execution of that order.

We have deemed it necessary, in view of questions which will be hereafter discussed, to state thus far the theory of the prosecution in relation to the complicity of the “ United Brotherhood ” and especially of the members of Camp 20 in the alleged conspiracy to take the life of Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Moon
2022 IL 125959 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2022)
People v. Runge
917 N.E.2d 940 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2009)
People v. Pecor
572 N.E.2d 1064 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1991)
People v. Jones
559 N.E.2d 112 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1990)
People v. Wurster
403 N.E.2d 1306 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1980)
People v. Johnson
357 N.E.2d 151 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1976)
Nolan v. Venus Ford, Inc.
218 N.W.2d 507 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1974)
People v. Cole
298 N.E.2d 705 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1973)
State v. Pace
456 P.2d 197 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1969)
State v. McFall
354 P.2d 547 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1960)
Burke v. McKenzie
1957 OK 155 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)
State v. Musser
175 P.2d 725 (Utah Supreme Court, 1946)
Kuzminski v. Waser
41 N.E.2d 1008 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1942)
The People v. Fricker
151 N.E. 280 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1926)
McCarten v. Connecticut Co.
131 A. 505 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)
People v. Arrocho
33 P.R. 627 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1924)
Pueblo v. Arrocho
33 P.R. Dec. 657 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1924)
Remus v. United States
291 F. 501 (Sixth Circuit, 1923)
State v. Brooks
188 P. 942 (Montana Supreme Court, 1920)
Middleton v. State
1919 OK CR 261 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 L.R.A. 57, 33 N.E. 1, 144 Ill. 140, 1893 Ill. LEXIS 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coughlin-v-people-ill-1893.