Jennings v. People

59 N.E. 515, 189 Ill. 320, 1901 Ill. LEXIS 2529
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 59 N.E. 515 (Jennings 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
Jennings v. People, 59 N.E. 515, 189 Ill. 320, 1901 Ill. LEXIS 2529 (Ill. 1901).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

On a trial before the court and a jury in the criminal court of Cook county the plaintiff in error was convicted of the crime of murder in the killing of one Thomas H. Levers, and he has prosecuted this writ of error to reverse the judgment of conviction. He was sentenced to be confined in the penitentiary for the term of twenty-five years.

The said Levers was killed by a pistol shot fired by the plaintiff in error. The defense sought to be established was that of self-defense. But a brief reference to the ’testimony is required in order to demonstrate we can not interfere on the ground the verdict is not supported by the evidence.

The plaintiff in error, a physician in the city of Chicago, rented the basement at No. 2210 Wabash avenue for a laboratory, a window whereof opened on the alley at the side of the building. The deceased lived in the second story of the building across the alley opposite said window, and had long been accustomed to drive his horse, attached to a light wagon, into the alley at the noon hour and feed his horse near this window. On the day in question the deceased drove into the alley, hitched the horse at the accustomed place and fed him there. Plaintiff in error objected and demanded that the horse be removed. The deceased insisted the horse should remain in the alley. Angry words followed, and according to the testimony of two or more witnesses the plaintiff in error threatened the life of the deceased. The parties separated, the deceased going to his rooms on the second floor of the building adjoining the alley and the plaintiff in error to the office of the agent in charge of the building in which he had his laboratory, and then to his own office in a building a short distance from that in which he had his laboratory. Within a few minutes the plaintiff in error returned, entered the alley, unt;ied the horse, and led him, with the wagon, into the street. At this time deceased came down to the street from his rooms, seized the bridle and undertook to force the horse and wagon back into the alley. Plaintiff in error also seized the reins of the bridle or the driving lines of the harness, and resisted to the extent of his physical strength the attempted return' of the horse and wagon into the alley. He also drew a revolver and threatened to shoot the deceased if he did not desist from his efforts to return the horse into the all ey. The deceased, however, succeeded in backing the horse and wagon to the position he had left them in the alley notwithstanding the efforts of the plaintiff in error to return the horse and wagon to the street. About this time the plaintiff in error drew a revolver, a shot was fired and the wound inflicted from which the death of Levers ensued. Levers was unarmed.

The plaintiff in error testified that during the struggle in the alley the deceased struck him with his fist; that he gave back, but that deceased -followed aud repeated the blow; that he drew his revolver, ordered Levers to stand back, and intended to disable him by shooting him in the leg; that Levers attempted to get the revolver, and that the weapon.was fired either unintentionally, or at least without intention on his (plaintiff in error’s) part to shoot the deceased in any other part of his body than in his leg. There was also sworn testimony tending to show that while the parties were pushing and pulling the horse Levers struck or struck at the plaintiff in error with his clenched fist, and that plaintiff in error ordered Levers to “stand back” three times before the shot was fired, and that the shot was fired by the plaintiff in error to protect himself against the assaults of Levers. The testimony on the part of the State tended to show that the deceased, did not strike or attempt to strike plaintiff in error, but oqly pushed the plaintiff in error in order to break his hold on the bridle and release the horse, and that when the shot was fired Levers was endeavoring to prevent the plaintiff in error from firing the pistol. The deceased was unarmed, and when shot was in the alley near the mouth thereof, as was also the plaintiff in error, both having moved in the struggle from the street, where they were when it began.

There is no reason the findings of the jury that the shot was fired intentionally and not in self-defense should be rejected by this court. Twenty-nine instructions were given on behalf of the plaintiff in error. The right of self-defense, even to the taking of human life, though the danger should prove only apparent and not real, and though the accused be the assailant, if he afterward ceased to fight and in good faith withdrew from the conflict, was so distinctly announced and so frequently reiterated in the instructions that it is idle to contend the jury could have misapprehended the law of self-defense or any phase thereof. We have carefully read and considered all the testimony. Our conclusion from the evidence is, that, according to the plaintiff in error every reasonable doubt, the jury were warranted in entertaining the belief the plaintiff in error was the aggressor in the affray; that he entered upon the difficulty armed with a deadly weapon; that he fired the shot intentionally; that he did not at any time in good faith decline further conflict before firing the fatal shot; that he did not fire the shot under the influence of honest and real fear that he was in danger of receiving any great personal injury, and though upon heat of passion, yet without provocation sufficient to excite ungovernable anger, and from the prompting of unreasonable rage and in a spirit of revenge. The verdict, therefore, Was fully justified by the proof.

We have considered the contention of counsel for the plaintiff in error that the judgment of conviction should be reversed because of the alleged erroneous rulings of the court as to the admissibility of certain testimony. The plaintiff in error produced testimony tending to show he enjoyed a good reputation as a peaceable and law-abiding citizen. One A. R. Porter, who, together with others, was introduced as a witness for the People, in rebuttal of such proof of good character testified in his examination in chief that such general reputation of the plaintiff in error was bad. On cross-examination counsel for plaintiff in error asked the witness the following queston: “Were you arrested by the doctor—on complaint of the doctor—on the charge of robbery?” to which the witness answered, “Yes, sir.” The court, over the objection of the plaintiff in error, permitted the witness to state that he was a justice of the peace and in that capacity issued two criminal warrants against plaintiff in error, and that the plaintiff in error was brought before the witness, as such justice, and tried and fined, and also fined for contempt of court in the course of the hearing, and that he paid the fines to the witness in his capacity as a justice of the peace, and that the plaintiff in error caused the witness to be arrested on the following day on a charge that the money so paid as fines had been obtained from him by the witness by robbery. The witness, in the course of this explanation, mentioned, in part, the facts of the criminal charges for which the plaintiff in error was arrested and fined by him, otherwise the explanation was not improper. It is clear to our minds the verdict should and would have been the same had this witness confined his explanation within proper limits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.E. 515, 189 Ill. 320, 1901 Ill. LEXIS 2529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-people-ill-1901.