Healy v. People

45 N.E. 230, 163 Ill. 372, 1896 Ill. LEXIS 1768
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 45 N.E. 230 (Healy 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
Healy v. People, 45 N.E. 230, 163 Ill. 372, 1896 Ill. LEXIS 1768 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the January term, 1895, of the Criminal Court of Cook county, the plaintiffs in error, Michael J. Healy and Thomas J. Moran, who had been jointly indicted for the murder of Swan Nelson, were convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to the penitentiary for a period of fourteen years each. At the time of the homicide, which occurred about three o’clock in the morning of the 25th day of December, 1893, the plaintiffs in error were policemen of the city of Chicago and were engaged in the performance of their duties as such officers. Their beats were adjacent to each other, and after twelve o’clock at night, in obedience to the commands of their superior officer, the^ were accustomed “to double up and travel their beats together.” At No. 3217 Archer avenue, upon one of these beats, was a saloon kept by one Nothelfer. Swan Nelson, the deceased, was unmarried, and lived and kept a small cigar store at 3205 Archer avenue, and in a house in the rear of his premises, and on the same lot, lived Otto Bjorkman and his wife, Josephine Bjorkman, and one Shay, who boarded with the Bjorkmans. Nelson, Shay and several other friends of the Bjorkmans had spent the evening of December 24, and up to a late hour (about two o’clock) in the morning of the 25th, at the latters’ house, passing11 the time in conversation, social amusement and beer drinking. Nelson left Bjorkman’s house about two o’clock Christmas morning. Bjorkman himself had retired to bed at half-past one and was not awakened until after five o’clock, and knew nothing of the circumstances of the tragedy in which Nelson lost his life. Where Nelson went immediately after leaving the Bjorkmans is not disclosed by the evidence, but some time between two and three o’clock,—there being some difference in the testimony of the witnesses as to the precise time,—Nelson entered Nothelfer’s saloon. A half dozen or more men who testified as witnesses on the trial had spent the night, up to the time of the tragedy, in the saloon, drinking and in such pastime as the place afforded. Some of these were asleep or intoxicated, and were apparently unable to give a very clear account of what occurred in the saloon, but according to the substance of the testimony as given by them, excepting that of Martin Wickert, which corroborated the version given of the affair by the plaintiffs in error, they, the plaintiffs in error, came into the saloon with Nelson and Nelson treated them, one of them taking a cigar and the other a glass of beer; that while they were standing at the bar Nelson took a pencil and piece of paper and seemed to be taking down the numbers of the policemen’s stars; that the policemen went out, and soon after one of them, Healy, came back and took Nelson by the shoulder and pushed him out of the saloon, and soon after some of the persons in the saloon, hearing a noise on the outside, went out at the front door and saw plaintiffs in error have Nelson under arrest and taking him along the sidewalk, when, after proceeding from one hundred, to one hundred and fifty feet, Nelson appeared to lie down and refuse to go, whereupon one of the officers went to the patrol box, leaving Nelson in charge of the other, when Nelson sprang to his feet and ran to the east along Archer avenue. He was pursued by the two officers, both of whom commenced firing their pistols in the direction of the fleeing man, who about that time disappeared in the darkness down the steps at 3205 Archer avenue, where it was afterward learned he lived, and which was about five feet below the level of the street. The officers returned without being able at that time to re-arrest or find Nelson. Soon thereafter Mrs. Bjorkman appeared on the outside of her residence with a lantern in her hand and was heard to call some one, who, upon going where she was, found Nelson lying under the steps at or near her house. On being taken out from under the steps he was found to be wounded and his clothes were bloody. He was removed to the street by Healy and Caspar Saeler, the bar-tender at the saloon, and laid upon the sidewalk, where he remained some minutes surrounded by a number of persons who, attracted by the affair, came up and remained until he, Nelson, was taken away by the patrol wagon to the Deering street station, from whence he was afterward taken to the hospital, where he died that day. The post-mortem examination showed that a bullet had entered his back, about six inches above the lower end and a little to the left of the spinal column, ranging slightly upward, and had penetrated the body through the stomach and intestines and had lodged under the skin of the abdomen. The bullet was slightly flattened at one end, as if it had struck some hard substance and been deflected from its course. It was what was called a 38-caliber short, and weighed 122.6 grains. One witness testified as an expert that it was a deflected bullet but had lost no material part of its substance; that a bullet 38-caliber short, fired from Colt’s 38-caliber revolver, would be sufficiently strong to pass through two human bodies at the distance plaintiffs in error were from Nelson when the shots were fired. The pistols used by plaintiffs in error were Colt’s revolvers, 38-caliber, and adapted to 38-caliber long cartridges, the bullets of which weighed from 150 to 152 grains, and plaintiffs in error testified that they had and used no other kind of cartridges than the 38-caliber long.

There is a material conflict in the testimony as to what occurred at Noth elf er’s saloon relative to the question as to whether the arrest of Nelson by plaintiffs in error was a lawful or an unlawful arrest, and as to what was said by plaintiffs in error when Nelson lay mortally wounded, first at the steps at Mrs. Bjorkman’s, and next on the sidewalk after having been brought out upon the street.

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

Related

The People v. Cash.
157 N.E. 76 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1927)
People v. Smith
98 N.E. 281 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1912)
Stephens v. Neilson
142 Ill. App. 263 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)
Beidler v. King
70 N.E. 763 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)
Beedle v. People
68 N.E. 434 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1903)
Matthews v. Granger
63 N.E. 658 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1902)
Matthews v. Granger
96 Ill. App. 536 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 N.E. 230, 163 Ill. 372, 1896 Ill. LEXIS 1768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healy-v-people-ill-1896.