Howell v. People

52 N.E. 873, 178 Ill. 176, 1899 Ill. LEXIS 2790
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 52 N.E. 873 (Howell 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
Howell v. People, 52 N.E. 873, 178 Ill. 176, 1899 Ill. LEXIS 2790 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an indictment against the plaintiff in error for forging a bond. The plaintiff in error pleaded not guilty, and was tried by a jury, who returned a verdict finding him guilty of forgery, and fixing his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary. After the jury was polled and the verdict was entered of record, the defendant made a motion for a new trial, supported by affidavits. This motion for new trial was overruled, and exception was taken by defendant’s counsel.

No objection is made to the action of the court below in admitting or refusing to admit evidence, or in giving or refusing to give instructions. The sole grounds, upon which it is sought to reverse the judgment, are, first, that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence; and, secondly, that a new trial should have been granted on the newly discovered evidence, as shown by the affidavits filed on the motion for new trial.

First— As to the point that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence.

In March, 1896, plaintiff in error, George W. Howell, entered into the service of Merriam, Collins & Co., wholesale grocers in Chicago, as a traveling salesman. Plaintiff in error then was, or had been a resident of the State of Michigan, and was, by the terms of his employment, to sell goods and collect accounts for said firm. To secure the faithful performance of his contract with said firm he was required to give a bond. He entered into the employment at once, and, in the prosecution thereof, traveled in the northern part of Michigan. He executed the bond required of him on June 23, 1896, and delivered the same to Merriam, Collins & Co. about June 24,1896. The bond sets forth, that Howell had been assigned to the position of salesman by Merriam, Collins & Co., and in such capacity might, during the term of his employment, handle money or other valuables belonging to said firm, and, in order to secure them against loss, furnish them a bond for $2000.00. The bond is signed by George W. Howell and “Benj. D. King,” with a seal opposite each name.

The signatures to the bond purported to have been witnessed by one Prank Joslyn. The indictment alleges that Howell, on June 23,1896, feloniously, fraudulently and falsely forged and counterfeited said bond.

After" giving the bond, plaintiff in error continued to perform services for the firm until about the month of .August, 1897, at which time it appeared that he was in default on the bond to the amount of $700.00. Plaintiff in error, however, denied that he was in default and refused payment of the bond. Thereupon, the firm notified the surety on the bond, Benjamin D. King, of Muskegon, Michigan, and demanded from him payment of the sum due. When the bond was given to the firm with the name of King upon it as surety, they made inquiries as to the responsibility of King, and, finding that he was responsible, accepted the bond and filed it away. When demand was made upon King by the firm for the amount of the shortage incurred by Howell under the bond, King replied that he had never executed any such bond, and refused payment thereon.

It is conceded, that the bond was executed in Muskegon, Michigan, and that King was a physician in active, practice in that place, and had been the family physician of Howell prior to the time of the alleged making of the bond. King swore upon the trial, that he never made any such bond, and never signed his name to the same. Six witnesses living in Muskegon swore, that they were acquainted with the handwriting of King, and that the signature to the bond, pmporting to be the signature of King, was not in his handwriting. One of these witnesses was the cashier of a bank in Muskegon where King had _ done business. Another was the teller of a savings bank where King had done business. Two of these witnesses were druggists in Muskegon, who had put up'prescriptions for King as a physician. One of them was the secretary of a building and loan association, in which King" was a director; another was the secretary of the Curtis Automatic Gate Company of Muskegon, of which King was the president.

The defendant took the stand, and swore that the bond was signed by King" in-his presence. Joslyn, a lawyer in Muskegon who signed the bond as a witness to the signatures, swore that Howell came into his office, and handed him the bond with his own name and that of King attached to it,, and asked him to witness the signature of King. Joslyn says, that he took the bond, and told Howell that he would see King about it, Joslyn’s office was j ust across the street from King’s in Muskegon. Joslyn says that, when he met King in the street and asked him if he had signed a bond for Howell, King answered “Yes.” The evidence shows that, before the time when the bond in question is alleged to have been executed, King- had signed two other bonds for Howell. One of these other bonds had befen given by Howell to a firm in Chicago by the name of Puhl & Webb. The other of the prior bonds, signed by King, had been given to a part;r by the name of Lynch, and is spoken of in the testimony as the Lynch bond. Howell had become liable on the Lynch bond on account of a shortage incurred thereon by him, and King, in June, 1896, had been called upon to make up the shortage upon this Lynch bond, and at that time was having trouble in reference to the same. The matter of the Lynch bond, it appears, was settled in some way by King. Dr. King swears that, when Joslyn asked him if he had signed a bond for Howell, he supposed he referred to the Lynch bond, about which he was at that time having trouble, and that he answered “yes” for that reason, knowing nothing at that time about the Merriam, Collins & Co. bond. King swears, that he never heard of the Merriam, Collins & Co. bond, until he was called on by Merriam, Collins & Co. in August, 1897, to pay the shortage upon that bond.

The defense sought to show by the testimony of two witnesses, to-wit, a brother and a brother-in-law of Howell, that Dr. King had made admissions prior to August, 1897, tending to show that he had knowledge of the bond given to Merriam, Collins & Co. The object of this testimony was to contradict the statement of King that he never heard of the latter bond until August, 1897. It clearly appears from the cross-examination of one of these witnesses, that the bond referred to in his conversation with Dr. King was not the bond here in question, but one of the previous bonds that had been given by King. We do not regard the testimony of these witnesses, introduced for the purpose of contradicting" King by showing prior admissions inconsistent with his testimony on the stand, as establishing the admissions claimed.

We have thus stated the material portions of the testimony in the case. We are unable to say, that the verdict is so clearly contrary to the weight of the evidence as to justify us in setting it aside. The jury are the judges of the facts and of the weight of the evidence. They saw the witnesses, and heard their testimony, and evidently believed that the bond was not executed by the surety, as claimed by the plaintiff in error. “The question of the credibility of witnesses is one peculiarly for the jury, and we think their finding in that respect must in this case be accepted as final.” (Bean v. People, 124 Ill. 576).

The objection that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence cannot be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 873, 178 Ill. 176, 1899 Ill. LEXIS 2790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-people-ill-1899.