Little v. People

42 N.E. 389, 157 Ill. 153, 1895 Ill. LEXIS 1411
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 389 (Little 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
Little v. People, 42 N.E. 389, 157 Ill. 153, 1895 Ill. LEXIS 1411 (Ill. 1895).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was convicted in the Criminal Court of Cook county of the larceny of a diamond stud, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for one year.

It is first objected that the evidence was not sufficient to authorize a verdict of guilty. No reason is pointed out, and we see none, why the jury should not have believed the testimony of the witnesses for the People, and if the jury did believe their testimony the evidence was sufficient to convict.

It is next objected that the value of the property stolen, at the time and place of the taking, was not proved. Some carelessness seems to have been exhibited in framing the bill of exceptions, as well as in adducing the evidence, on this branch of the case. The prosecuting witness detailed the circumstances of the larceny of the stone, and then the record proceeds as follows :

Q. “What did you do then?
A. “I put my hand up and my stone was gone.
Q. “How much is it worth?
A. “Two hundred or two hundred and twenty-five dollars.
Mr. Donahoe: “I move that it be excluded.
Mr. Dwight: “We object to it.
The court: “On what ground?
Mr. Donahoe: “I don’t wish to argue it. (Motion overruled, and defendant excepts.)”

Technically the form of the question was incorrect, and had not counsel refused to point out the objection to it the court would doubtless have required the attorney for the People to so frame his question as to call directly for the value of the stolen property at the time of the theft. The defect was one that could have been cured, had it been pointed out, by a mere change in the form of the question. Plaintiff in error is therefore in no position to insist on a point of this character in this court, which he not only failed but refused- to make in the court below.

But counsel insist that, the value proved not being the value required by law, there is, in legal contemplation, no value proved. This position is untenable. Prom the nature of the property stolen and the value as given by the testimony of this witness, there being no other evidence on the question, the jury were warranted in fixing the value of the property at $200.

The next contention of plaintiff in error is, that there is a variance between the name of the party injured, or the owner of the property, as laid in the indictment and as shown by the proof, the name stated in the indictment being “John P. Hinckley,” and as shown by the evidence “J. P. Hinckley.” Counsel say it cannot be known whether Hinckley’s Christian name is John, James or Joseph, and that the judgment should be reversed because of this alleged variance1. The indictment was properly framed, even under the strict rule laid down in Willis v. People, 1 Scam. 899. But the question is whether the proof sustains the allegation that the property stolen was the property of John P. Hinckley. It is a question of identity. In Shepherd v. People, 72 Ill. 480, Shepherd was indicted for the murder of Wesley Johnson. Ho proof was made of the Christian name of the deceased, and he was mentioned in the evidence by his surname only. But it was proved that he was a barber, and the only barber in the place where the killing took place, and it was held that his identity with the Wesley Johnson named in the indictment as the person killed was sufficiently established. In this element of proof that case was unlike the cases of Davis v. People, 19 Ill. 74, and Penrod v. People, 89 id. 150. The judgments in the latter cases were reversed because the surnames, only, of the persons killed were proved, no other proof of identity having been adduced. In civil cases this court has held that there is no substantial variance between an allegation of a name where the full Christian name is given, and the evidence where the surname is the same but the initials only of the Christian name are proved. (Greathouse v. Kipp, 3 Scam. 371; Ross v. Clawson, 47 Ill. 402.) It seems that the general rule is, that less strictness is required in giving the names of third persons than of the parties to the proceeding. (16 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 130, note.) The object in naming the injured person in criminal proceedings is to identify the transaction, so that the accused may not be twice tried for the same offense. (Shepherd v. People and Willis v. People, supra; State v. Angel, 7 Ired. 27.) The use of the initial letters in place of the full Christian name has become" general among all classes of people, and a judgment of conviction, otherwise free from error, ought not to be reversed because in the evidence the Christian name of the owner of the property stolen was proved only to the extent of the initials. No question was raised on the trial that the witness J. F. Hinckley, who testified to the theft of the diamond from his person, was not the John P. Hinckley named in the indictment. There can be no reasonable doubt as to the identity, and it will be presumed that the John F. Hinckley named in the indictment and the J. P. Hinckley mentioned in the proof as the owner of the property are one and the same person. There is no substantial variance, and an unsubstantial one cannot operate to reverse the judgment.

Complaint is made, also, of the refusal by the trial court to give certain instructions, fifteen in number, asked on behalf of plaintiff in error. These refused instructions were in the main plainly erroneous, and were properly refused.' The substance of others was embraced in those given. It is unnecessary to set them out and review them in detail here, but we have carefully examined them and the arguments of counsel respecting them, and do not find that the court below committed any error in refusing to give them to the jury.

We think it unnecessary to refer specially to any of the refused instructions asked by defendant below, except the fourteenth and fifteenth. They are :

14. “The court further instructs the jury that they can only agree to convict or acquit the defendant. Each juror should decide for himself, upon his oath, from the law and the evidence, as to what his verdict should be. No juror should yield his deliberate, conscientious convictions as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, either at the instance of a fellow juror or at the instance of a majority. No juror should surrender his honest convictions as to the guilt of the defendant for the sake of unanimity or to avert a mis-trial.
15. “The court instructs the jury that a reasonable doubt is that state of the case which, after a careful comparison of all the evidence and a deliberate consideration of the law, leaves the minds of jurors in that condition that they cannot say that they have an abiding conviction, to a moral certainty, of the truth of every necessary fact as charged in the indictment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 389, 157 Ill. 153, 1895 Ill. LEXIS 1411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-v-people-ill-1895.