Cunningham v. People

63 N.E. 517, 195 Ill. 550, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3213
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 517 (Cunningham 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
Cunningham v. People, 63 N.E. 517, 195 Ill. 550, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3213 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

An indictment was returned into the criminal court of Cook county, charging the plaintiffs in error, John Cunningham and John Callahan, and two other persons, namely, Harry A. Taylor and Patrick Kane, with the crime of murder in the killing of one Peter Hartman. Taylor and Kane were not apprehended, but the plaintiffs in error were placed on trial before the court and a jury in said criminal court, and were adjudged guilty of the crime of manslaughter, and condemned to be imprisoned in the State penitentiary at Joliet for an indefinite period. They allege that errors which greatly prejudiced their cause before the jury intervened in the hearing of the cause, and have sued out this writ of error to bring the record of their conviction into review in this court.

The indictment contained five counts, each charging the said plaintiffs in error and said Taylor and Kane with the murder of said Peter Hartman. The State’s attorney, however, elected to proceed to trial on the first and fifth counts only. The first count charged the said four parties accomplished the death of said Hartman by “striking, beating, pushing and shoving him” with their “fists.” The fifth count charged said indicted parties made an assault upon said Hartman “in some way and manner and by some means, instruments and weapons to the grand jurors unknown,” and killed and murdered him.

The testimony of Hattie Reed and Daisy Drummond was relied upon by the People to show the circumstances of the killing of Hartman, and that of Hattie Reed alone to identify the plaintiffs in error as the parties who took his life. Her ability to know they were the persons who assaulted Hartman, and, in brief, the reliability and value of her identification of the plaintiffs in error as the guilty parties, became of the utmost importance in the investigation before the jury. In the view we have taken of the case the cause must be again submitted to a jury for trial, and for that reason we shall refrain from commenting upon the testimony, except so far as it may be necessary in passing upon the matters assigned as for error, and nothing here said is intended to reflect the views of this court as to any matter of fact herein involved.

Hattie Reed, a colored woman, testified, in substance, that on Sunday, the 16th day of September, 1900, between the hours of twelve o’clock, noon, and one o’clock P. M., she was employed as a chambermaid in the Kensington Hotel, in the city of Chicago, and was engaged in “cleaning up” one of the rear rooms on the fourth floor of the building, known as room No. 48; that there were two windows in the room, both opening upon the alley which leads north from Harrison to VanBuren street, in the block bounded on the east by State street, on the west by Dearborn street, on the south by Harrison street and on the north by VanBuren street; that immediately adjoining* room No. 48 on the north there was another room of the hotel which also had a window opening on the alley, from which latter window an iron fire-escape led down into the alley; that while the witness was so engaged she testified she heard some one down in the alley cry “help,” and she looked from the north window in room No. 48, through the fire-escape, into the alley, and saw three persons on the west side of the alley some fifty feet to the north of her position. She then had no acquaintance with or had ever seen either of the plaintiffs in error. Her statements as to what she saw are abstracted as follows: “When I looked out of the window I saw three men. One was sitting against a barrel in the corner, one was sitting on the ground and had the old man down between his knees, and the other fellow had bis hands around the old man’s neck and was choking him. The two men I see here in court. This one (indicating Callahan) had the old man between his knees. He kept his hands around the old man’s ,neck, and this one at the chair was going into the old man’s pockets. He took something out of his pocket and put it in his own pocket, but I didn’t know what it was. The old man raised up his hands like this, and this man (indicating Cunningham) struck him once beside the head with his fist. After he put his hand in the old man’s pocket they ran down the alley, south. Then the old man got up and started to walk, and he staggered and fell in the middle of the alley. I stayed there until after the patrol wagon came. A crowd gathered, and before the wagon came some men picked him up and sat him against a barn door. The old man had on tan shoes, light overcoat and light hat. Cunningham had on a blue suit, and the other one had on light pants and black coat. When I saw Callahan. at the station he had on a dark suit. The man I saw in the alley had on a light suit. The old man’s head was to the north when he fell. When they had his head between the man’s knees he was facing north, towards VanBuren street, his back to me. They were there five minutes after I went to the window. Callahan was looking north and kept that position all the time. He was a settled man, the man I call the old man. I don’t know about how old be was. I don’t remember whether his hair was gray or not. He had a beard. I don’t know what color. I saw his face when he got up. I had a good view of it. There was no blood upon his face. When he first got up he started towards VanBuren street. I don’t know how far he walked before he fell in the middle of the alley. He fell forward on his face. He remained on his face while I was there. Nobody turned him over. I don’t know how long he lay there before they picked him up and set him against the wall. I could not recognize the persons who picked him up. I didn’t see whether the old man had a mustache or not. I only saw one blow struck with the fist. All the time I saw the men scuffling in the alley the other two men had their hats on.”

As before stated, the rear of the Kensington Hotel was provided with an iron fire-escape. It reached the fourth floor at a window immediately north of that through which the witness Hattie Reed was looking when she saw the occurrences in the alley fifty feet to the north of her position and across the alley. The fire-escape was composed of iron rods and supplied with an iron platform at the window. The floor of the platform was not solid, but there were small holes through it. The platform extended to within six or eight inches of the north side of the window at which the witness Hattie Reed stood, and at the same level as the bottom of the window. As to the obstruction to her view caused by this fire-escape the witness stated: “There is a fire-escape just north of the middle window, between me and the point I was looking toward at the time. I was looking to the right—north. I was looking through the fire-escape. The fire-escape extends from the top floor of the building to the first floor above the ground. The three men were on the west side of the alley, about fifty feet north of my window.” As further bearing upon her ability to recognize the plaintiffs in error she further testified: “About a half an hour after the patrol wagon took the body of the old man away the same two boys came back into the alley again and were inquiring what had taken place. They were pretty close to the man they spoke to, and just asked, ‘What had occurred?’ They were standing rig'ht under my window. They didn’t speak very loud when they asked the man the question. I was on the fourth floor of the building. I heard what they said. They were right under my window all the time. I saw their faces. They heard me talking and looked up. I was talking to Daisy Drummond.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 517, 195 Ill. 550, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-people-ill-1902.