Henderson v. People

17 N.E. 68, 124 Ill. 607
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 17 N.E. 68 (Henderson 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
Henderson v. People, 17 N.E. 68, 124 Ill. 607 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the September term, 1887, of the Champaign circuit •court, the grand jury returned into open court an indictment, . founded upon the first section of the Criminal Code, against William Henderson, John Henderson, Carroll Shutt and Julia ■Shutt. The first count charges that the defendants, on the second day of September, 1887, unlawfully and feloniously enticed and took away one Joanna Carman, then and there being an unmarried female of chaste life and conversation, from her parents’ house, for the purpose of prostitution. In another count of the indictment the defendants are charged with enticing and taking away the prosecutrix for the purpose •of concubinage. In other respects the latter count is like the first. Upon consideration of the evidence, in the light of the charge of the court, the jury returned a verdict of guilty against .all the defendants, fixing their respective terms in the penitentiary as follows: William • Henderson’s at eight years, Carroll Shutt’s at two, John Henderson’s at one, and Julia Shutt’s at one. A motion for a new trial having been made and overruled, the court pronounced sentence and judgment upon the ■ defendants, in conformity with the verdict. The question to be considered is, whether the finding of the jury, and the judgment and sentence of the court, are warranted by the law and the evidence.

The defendants William and John Henderson are brothers. Julia Shutt is their sister, and the wife of Carroll Shutt. The prosecutrix, Joanna Carman, is the daughter of Benjamin F; and Eliza Carman, and at the time of the alleged abduction was about fifteen years old. The Shutts and Carmans lived near each other in the city of Urbana, and had been on visiting terms some three years prior to this occurrence. ’ William Henderson, the principal in the affair, is a barber by trade, and a dissolute, drunken character, who spent most of his time .in the vicinity of Urbana, and was frequently at Shutt’s house, with whom his brother, John, was temporarily stopping at the time in question. About the first of July, 1887, William Henderson commenced making calls at Carman’s house and paying his attentions to the prosecutrix. It was not long before Mrs. Carman, her mother, became acquainted with his dissolute habits and bad reputation, and forbade his coming to her house any more. He nevertheless managed to meet with her daughter at Shutt’s and other places, and finally, by means of promises, threats, etc., induced her to consent to an elopement, for the purpose, as he put it, of getting married, and she, doubtless, so understood it. In settling the preliminaries, he told her that they could start from Mrs. Shutt’s, his sister’s, —“that she would not give them away.” They accordingly did start from there on the evening of the second of September, a little after dark. John Henderson, about dusk of that evening, went to Carman’s house, where he found Joanna out in the yard, and, without attracting the attention of any of the family, told her that William was ready to go, and was up on the corner of the street, waiting for her. After joining him on the street, the, two repaired to Shutt’s house, where all four of the defendants met together and talked over the matter of the elopement, which was accelerated by the approach of Joanna’s-sister, upon discovering which, John remarked, in the presence of them all: “Will, I tell you what is the matter: you want to hurry up and get out of here, because here comes Stell, and she is long-nosed, and will give it away.” It was understood by all present, that the two were to go to the Doyle House, in Champaign City, but a short distance from Shutt’s, for the purpose, as was stated to her, of waiting for the night train, but nothing seems to have been said about where they were to go beyond there, or their ultimate plans or purposes. On arriving at the hotel, about eight o’clock, instead of sitting up for the train, or ordering separate rooms, and making arrangements to be called for the train, Henderson engaged a single room, “for,” as he put it, “himself and wife,” and the two were at once conducted to it, where they lodged together as husband and wife. They remained at the hotel together, under that assumed relation, until next evening about five o’clock, when they returned afoot to Shutt’s house, John Henderson going back with them. They reached Shutt’s house some time before night. John had visited them at the Doyle House three times that day,—in the morning, at noon, and in the evening,—and told them that they would have to keep hid or they would be found. After their return to Shutt’s, on Saturday evening, Joanna’s father came to the front gate, and was engaged in a conversation with Carroll Shutt. Joanna was, at the time, in the back yard, though she recognized her father’s voice, and heard him make the remark, “That girl is in this town, and I am going to find her.” The parties, however, were . not speaking sufficiently loud to enable her to understand anything else that passed between them. While this conversation was going on, Mrs. Shutt, and John and William Henderson, were most of the time out in the hack yard with Joanna, all of whom knew of the conversation, and that the object of Car-man’s call there was to find his daughter. Occasionally John Henderson would go round in front and participate in the conversation for a short time, and then return and caution the parties to speak lower, or they would be discovered. After Carman had left, and about eleven o’clock at night, the party out of doors, being informed the coast was clear, went into the house, whereupon Mrs. Shutt brought some bedding into the back room adjoining the kitchen, and threw it down on the floor, telling William to fix his bed, and he and Joanna were left in that room by themselves, where they slept together until about two o’clock in the morning, when John Henderson, Mrs. Shutt, her daughter and mother, rushed into the room where William and Joanna were sleeping, and told them to jump up,— that her father and mother, with the police, were at the gate. Being thus warned, they hastily retreated through a door lead- ■ ing'to the rear of the building, whence, by means of an alley, they made their escape, John accompanying them to the fair grounds, but a short distance from the house. The latter, on parting with them, remarked, “I will bet, before to-morrow night I will be taken up for this.” The two fugitives, after parting with John, proceeded afoot to Tolono, thence to Sadoris, thence to Ivesdale, and thence towards Bement. On Sunday night they lodged in a cornfield within about a mile and a half of that place. Monday morning Henderson went into the town, and brought back with him a young man, who, by his direction, took Joanna to Bement, and left her at a hotel, where, in a short time afterwards, she was taken into custody by an officer. Henderson, who had gone to town by another route, was soon afterwards discovered and placed under arrest.

This statement presents the substance of the prosecutrix’ testimony, and we do not think its force or effect is materially impaired by the other evidence in the record.

The section of the statute above referred to, and on which the indictment is founded, is as follows: “Whoever entices or takes away any unmarried female of chaste life and conversation, from her parents’ house, or wherever she may be found, for the purpose of 'prostitution or concubinage, and whoever aids and assists in such abduction for such purpose, shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than one nor more than ten years.” '

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.E. 68, 124 Ill. 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-people-ill-1888.