Hintz v. Moldenhauer

243 Ill. App. 227, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 73
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 1, 1927
DocketGen. No. 30,956
StatusPublished

This text of 243 Ill. App. 227 (Hintz v. Moldenhauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hintz v. Moldenhauer, 243 Ill. App. 227, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 73 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fitch

delivered the opinion of the court.

In March, 1890, the defendant Mary Granpner, nee Moldenhauer, recovered a judgment for $2,000 in an action for slander against complainant’s intestate, John Hintz. This judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court in June, 1891. (Hintz v. Graupner, 138 Ill. 158.) Twenty years thereafter, in June, 1911, the bill in this case was filed by John Hintz, in the nature of a bill of review, seeldng to' have the judgment against him set aside upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence tending to show that certain testimony given in the slander suit was perjured and that the perjury was known to the plaintiff and fraudulently concealed from John Hintz until a short time before the bill was filed. John Hintz died in 1913, while a demurrer to the bill was pending. In 1916 his death was suggested and his granddaughter, the administratrix of his estate, was substituted as complainant. An amended bill was filed in 1917, to which the defendants filed answers, and the cause was then referred to a master in chancery who heard the testimony and reported in favor of the defendants. In December, 1925, the report was approved and a decree entered dismissing the.bill for want of equity. The complainant appeals.

The action for slander was based on statements made in 1888 by John Hintz to the effect that Mary Moldenhauer had stolen the money of Mrs. Kolberg. All the parties and witnesses lived at that time in Des Plaines. Upon the trial of that suit it appeared that in October, 1887, Mrs. Kolberg’s house had been entered in the daytime, while she was away, and $80 of her money stolen from a flour barrel in which it had been concealed by her. There was evidence tending to prove that Mary Moldenhauer had stopped over night at Mrs. Kolberg’s house the second night before the burglary and was told at that time.where the money was kept, and that on the day of the burglary she was seen by one of the neighbors (Mrs. Mary Schaefer) to enter and leave Mrs. Kolberg’s kitchen in the absence of the latter, and by another neighbor (Carl Schaefer) was seen to “come out of Kolberg’s gate” with one hand “covered with flour”; that when Mrs. Kolberg returned and discovered her loss, she went to the house of Mrs. Schaefer, who related what she had seen, and thereupon Mrs. Kolberg accused Mary Moldenhauer of the theft, but the latter denied it; that this story spread through the village and was the subject of much excited discussion, but no arrest was made; that Mary Moldenhauer was then engaged to be married to a minister named Graupner, and soon after the burglary her engagement was announced in church, whereupon John Hintz, with others, visited the clergyman who made the announcement and openly charged her with stealing Mrs. Kolberg’s money.

A man named Ira Barchard lived in Des Plaines at that time. He was a constable, a deputy United States marshall, a collector of debts, sometimes a detective, and altogether apparently a man of some local importance and influence. Miss Moldenhauer sought his assistance, with the result that he testified in the slander suit, in rebuttal, to facts which made it appear that Mary Schaefer, instead of Mary Moldenhauer, stole Mrs. Kolberg’s money. His testimony was to the effect that soon after the burglary “William T. Lee,” whom he did not otherwise identify, wrote Bar-chard’s name and address upon three envelopes; that “Lee” kept one of them, and that Barchard marked the other two, put stamps on them and delivered one to Mary Schaefer and one to Mary Moldenhauer, telling each of them in turn that he had been authorized by Mr. Kolberg to say that he would be satisfied if half of the stolen money was returned, and that she could use the envelope he handed her, for that purpose; that Mrs. Schaefer protested that she did not “have” the money, but finally took the marked envelope, and that the next day, in the presence of several persons whom he had called as witnesses, he took from the post office in Des Plaines the identical envelope he had delivered to Mrs. Schaefer, opened it and found in it $40 in money and a letter. He produced and identified the marked envelope, but when asked to produce the letter, he testified that he had “not seen it for some time,” that he had “put it some place” and could not find it. From the bill of exceptions in the slander suit, it appears that he was not asked to give and did not state the contents of- the letter; that he was not asked who “Lee” was, and that the only questions asked of him as to Lee’s whereabouts were: “Is he in court?” and, “He is not in the city?” and that Bar-chard answered both questions in the negative. Mrs. Graupner testified that Barchard gave her a similar envelope, which was produced on the trial, and that she saw him give one to Mrs. Schaefer. Mrs. Schaefer denied that she ever received such an envelope from Barchard and denied sending him a letter with money in it at any time.

The amended hill in the present case charges that the testimony of Barchard and of Mary Graupner in the slander suit, that he gave an envelope to Mrs. Schaefer for the purpose stated by him, was false and perjured; that Barchard never delivered such an envelope to Mrs. Schaefer and she knew nothing of it or its contents; that Barchard, Mrs. Graupner and August Moldenhauer, Mrs. Graupner’s father, conspired to manufacture and introduce the false evidence to make it appear that Mary Schaefer was the confessed thief; that in pursuance of such conspiracy, they drafted a letter reading as follows:

“Mr. Barchat: You find fourty dolars you Told me if I give this Bank you would make it al stil and I would get no truple if you do this and Choule dont find out I wil give you ten Dolers for you when is al still” and caused the same to be written “in imitation of the handwriting of the said Mary Schaefer” by William T. Low, Barchard’s confidential clerk, and placed in an envelope addressed by Low to Barchard containing $40 in money, and themselves caused the envelope so prepared and filled to be deposited in the post office in Des Plaines; that when Barchard testified that he had “lost or mislaid” this letter, he and they knew it was in Barchard’s possession and was wilfully suppressed by him for the reason that its production at the trial “would have established the perjury of Barchard and other witnesses in behalf of defendant and their fraud”; that Mary Schaefer could write nothing in English except her name, and if the letter had .been produced, “it could have been clearly demonstrated” that it was a forgery and that Bar-chard’s testimony with reference thereto was false; that “directly after” the burglary, Mary Moldenhauer admitted her guilt to Barchard, but at her request and that of her father, he proceeded to “unlawfully procure” as witnesses persons who were willing to testify that she was elsewhere at the time it was claimed she entered Mrs. Kolberg’s house, and to have such persons rehearse the testimony they were to give; that the alleged conspirators also caused Barchard to testify that the name of the man who addressed the envelopes was Lee, instead of Low, in order that Hintz might not be able to locate him; and that because of these matters, Hintz was prevented from discovering the alleged perjury and fraud and “the necessary evidence thereof” until August 19, 1910 — 20' years after the trial, six years after Barchard’s death and nearly a year before this suit was commenced — at which time, it is alleged, John Hintz learned, from a son of Bar-chard and from his divorced wife, that the latter could testify that the real facts were as charged in the bill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 Ill. App. 227, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hintz-v-moldenhauer-illappct-1927.