Hayward v. People

96 Ill. 492, 1880 Ill. LEXIS 64
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 96 Ill. 492 (Hayward 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
Hayward v. People, 96 Ill. 492, 1880 Ill. LEXIS 64 (Ill. 1880).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Dickey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The plaintiff in error was convicted in October, 1879, in the Criminal Court of Cook county, upon an indictment charging him of murder, in the killing of James McMahon, on the night of December 7, 1878, and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for and during his natural life.

He brings the record of his trial and conviction to this court, and asks that the judgment be reversed.

As to the leading facts of the case there is but little discrepancy in the testimony.

The accused, at the time of the killing, was twenty years of age, and at the time of the trial was five feet and eight inches high, and weighed 167J pounds. This young man, (or boy as he was styled by the deceased,) was the son of an upholsterer, whose home was in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, where he had resided for many years. There, this young man was brought up, and his neighbors there concur in giving him an unexceptionable character for being peaceable and inoffensive.

In Fond du Lac the accused studied medicine with Dr. Bowers for about three years, and then came to Chicago to attend medical lectures, and had been thus sojourning in Chicago near two years when the killing of McMahon occurred.

The deceased at that time was, and for some years had b.een, a saloon keeper, was about fifty-six years old, about five feet and six inches in height, and weighed about 150 pounds. His saloon was, and had been, at the corner of 26th street and Cottage Grove avenue, being on the north side of 26th street, and on the west side of Cottage Grove avenue. His residence was in the upper rooms of the same building. Cottage Grove avenue intersects 26th street obliquely, bearing considerably east of south, as it extends to the southward. The front of the saloon of deceased was on the avenue, and the building extended westward along the north line of 26th street.

At the southwest corner of these streets was the saloon of By an. The" relative positions of these streets and buildings will be better understood by the inspection of a diagram.

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On this diagram is shown the relative location of McMahon’s saloon, and that of the witness Ryan, and that of the residence of the witness Weidell; also, the tracks^ of the horse railroad on Cottage Grove avenue. The star at “c” is intended to show the probable position of Hayward when the first shot was fired, (according to the supposed indications or marks of the bullet on the front of McMahon’s saloon;) the star at the letter “b” is intended to indicate the location of the contestants at the firing of the second shot—from the testimony of Gleason and Ryan—and the star marked “a” is intended to indicate about the place of the fourth and fatal shot—from a comparison of the testimony of Ryan, Gleason and Weidell.

The testimony shows that at the time of this transaction the accused was a medical student, attending lectures in Chicago, and that he boarded at that time within a few blocks* of McMahon’s saloon, and that on that night he was there, and that he and McMahon had been playing cards and drinking whisky; that Gleason, a police officer, at a little after midnight went into McMahon’s saloon, and there found Hayward and McMahon alone. They had ceased their game and were standing in front of the counter, and were disputing as to whether Hayward owed McMahon some 20 or 30 cents, which McMahon claimed, Hayward insisting it had been played off at cards.

On the arrival of Gleason, McMahon went behind the counter and treated Gleason, and as soon as Gleason had taken this drink McMahon came round from behind the counter and demanded of Hayward to settle the amount. Hayward said there was nothing on him to settle for. McMahon then became violent, and at once assaulted Hayward and thrust or pushed him back three or four feet and “chucked him” up against the blinds or screen at the front dpor of the'saloon, saying, “You get out of my place,” and reaching out to catch or grab him by the shoulders. At this instant Gleason, the policeman, interposing, seized McMahon and pulled him back, exhorting him to have no trouble about such a trifle, McMahon replying, “ I want him to get out of my place,” etc. Hayward offered no resistance to this assault and battery, and used no violent words, but quietly opening the front door went out of the saloon, saying to McMahon he would see him to-morrow “for this,” or “about this.”

Gleason testifies that in thrusting Hayward against the screen, McMahon either struck him or pushed him. Soon after Hayward left, Gleason went out of the saloon, by the side door, on Twenty-sixth street, leaving McMahon alone in the saloon closing for the night. He had turned off one gas burner before Gleason got out of the door. When Gleason had walked westward some eight or ten steps he heard, a shot fired. He ran back to the corner of the saloon, and about the time he reached the corner he heard another shot and saw McMahon and Hayward in the street. They were both off the sidewalk and between the curbstone and the track of the street railroad on Cottage Grove avenue, and about thirty-five or forty feet from the corner of the saloon, but whether nearer to the curbstone than to the track witness can not tell. Hayward was backing up with his back to the eastward, and McMahon was pursuing him trying to grab him, and was within a few feet of him. Hayward was retreating with a pistol in his hand. Meanwhile, two other shots were fired, the last of which took effect upon McMahon, producing a wound of which he died.

At the time of the firing of the last shot, Hayward and McMahon were within three or four feet of each other, and Gleason was at McMahon’s right hand. McMahon staggered back. Hayward fled to the north-west, pursued by Gleason, and in about seventy steps was halted, by the firing of two shots by Gleason, who arrested him and took him to the police-station near by.

That McMahon was shot and mortally wounded by the fourth shot from the pistol in Hayward’s hand,'is not questioned. The vital question relates to the circumstances which occurred after Hayward came out of the front door of the saloon, and up to the firing of the fatal shot. No witness for the prosecution saw either o.f these parties after Gleason left the saloon, until about the time of the second shot. The truth of what occurred in that interval is' left, by the testimony given against the accused, to inference, and very few facts shown have any bearing upon the question.

The theory of the prosecution is, that Hayward, smarting under the pain and indignity of the assault upon him in the saloon, lay in wait outside the front door, waiting for McMahon until he came out, and then, in a spirit of revenge, fired upon him, and that the vigorous pursuit of Hayward by McMahon, which followed, was for the mere purpose of disarming him, as a means of saving his own life.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Ill. 492, 1880 Ill. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayward-v-people-ill-1880.