Marzen v. People

50 N.E. 249, 173 Ill. 43, 1898 Ill. LEXIS 3076
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 50 N.E. 249 (Marzen 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
Marzen v. People, 50 N.E. 249, 173 Ill. 43, 1898 Ill. LEXIS 3076 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is an indictment against the plaintiff in error for the murder of one Fritz Holzhueter. Plaintiff in error was found guilty by the court below and sentenced to be executed on May 15, 1896, but a supersedeas was granted and the execution stayed.

The deceased, Fritz Holzhueter, was seen for the last time between six and seven o’clock on the morning of January 30, 1895, at the saloon of the plaintiff in error, at 3517 South Halsted street, in Chicag'o. On Monday morning, February 25, 1895, about nine o’clock, his body was found by two boys, named Joseph Zeeder and William Fleming, aged, respectively, sixteen and eighteen years. These boys were at that time driving on Western avenue, from Ninety-fifth to Ninety-third street, and while so driving discovered the body of an unknown man lying five or six feet west from the road, under a large willow tree. The mother of the boy Zeeder lived on Western avenue, north of Ninety-third street. On the Monday morning in question the boys had driven to a school house about a mile and a half south of the Zeeder home to take young Zeeder’s sister to school. It was on the way back, and after leaving the girl at school, that they discovered the body under the tree. They at once reported their discovery to one Foley, the president of Evergreen Park. The body was that of a stout man, with hair of sandy color. The man wore a blue flannel shirt, which was burned, and a red flannel shirt inside, which was also burned around the side and breast. The man had on pants and vest, and his face and legs, as well as his clothes, were burned. There was a smell of kerosene oil about him. The top of his head was cut and there was blood in his hair. The body was lying over the root of the tree, the hips reclining" on the root. The tree was large and thick. The deceased was lying on his back, with his face up. The body was burned very much in front, mostly on the left side,—in some places on the skin, in others clear through into the flesh. At three places on the left side the flesh was eaten in to the bone, apparently by animals, probably dogs. It was the body of a young man weighing about 180 pounds. The coroner’s physician, who examined the body on February 27, 1895, at the county morgue, testified that the burns were not more than two or three days old, and that in his opinion the man had been dead for some time,—more than two weeks at least. The head showed three scalp wounds, one on the right side above the ear, the other over the left eye, and the third on the back of the head. The wounds on the back of the head were caused by a blunt instrument, while that in front would appear to have been caused by something with a sharper edge than the instrument which inflicted the other wounds. The death was caused by shock and hemorrhage, resulting from these fractures in the skull. The testimony shows that the body thus found was the body of the deceased, Fritz Holzhueter. It was identified by his sister and by his business partner.

The theory of the prosecution is, that the deceased was killed by the plaintiff in error on the morning of January 30, 1895, and that his body was concealed in the barn of plaintiff in error until the night of Saturday, February 23, 1895, and was on that night taken by the plaintiff in error in his wagon to the place where it was found on the following Monday morning. There is no direct aud positive evidence that the deceased was murdered by the plaintiff in error. The testimony tending to establish the guilt of the plaintiff in error is altogether circumstantial in its character. The facts and circumstances relied upon to establish the guilt of the plaintiff in error are substantially as follows:

The deceased, Holzhueter, at the time of his death, was in partnership with one Otto Retzlaff. They formed a partnership on October 23, 1894, and at the time of Holzhueter’s death had a saloon and market at the southeast corner of Thirty-eighth and Honoré streets. Retzlaff tended the saloon and Holzhueter the market. Their saloon and market was about eight and one-half miles distant from' the corner of Western avenue and Ninety-fifth street, where the body was found. The saloon of the plaintiff in error, which was on Halsted street a few doors from Thirty-fifth street, is about ten miles from the place where the body was found. The plaintiff in error and Holzhueter were acquainted and appeared to be friends. They were talking together in Retzlaff’s saloon on Saturday, January 26, 1895, and on Sunday, January 27,1895, and on Monday, January 28,1895. They were also together at the same place on the afternoon of Tuesday, January 29, 1895. Some arrangement was made between them at that time, by which, on the next morning-, January 30, they were to go into the country to the farm of a man named Fisher, who lived at Manhattan Park, for the purpose of buying some cattle from him. Retzlaff testifies that Marzen parted with Holzhueter at his place after four o’clock on Tuesday, January 29, and that he heard him say, “Now, Fritz, don’t be late to-morrow morning.” The deceased did go the next morning from his place at the corner of Thirty-eighth and Honoré streets to the saloon of the plaintiff in error, Marzen. He was in Mar-zen’s saloon as early as a quarter to six on the morning of January 30, 1895. The testimony shows that while Holzhueter and Marzen were in the saloon that morning the following persons were also there: Joseph Wetzler, a meat peddler, August Buchal, a tenant of Marzen, who, with his son, occupied a few rooms above the saloon, and Charles Rust, a watchman. During the morning two teamsters came in. Wetzler says that when he came in Marzen was behind the bar and Holzhueter was sitting in front of the stove, facing the bar. Marzen and Wetzler were treated by Holzhueter to liquor. Wetzler then had some conversation with Holzhueter, in which the latter told him that he wanted to buy some cows. Wetzler says that he told Holzhueter that he had seen a cow at the corner of Emerald avenue and Thirty-sixth street which was for sale. Holzhueter then replied that he thought he would go and buy the cow referred to by Wetzler. Wetzler also says that at the same time Holzhueter showed him “a big leather bag with leather strings on it, with paper money and silver in it.” He also says that the two teamsters came in after that and Holzhueter treated all to whisky; that the teamsters then went out and Eust came in. Wetzler left at about six o’clock. Buchal came in about five minutes before six, and speaks of seeing Wetzler, Holzhueter, Eust, Marzen and the two teamsters there. After Wetzler and the two teamsters left, Buchal, Eust, Marzen and Holzhueter were in the saloon. Buchal says that Marzen and Holzhueter had another drink together and then went out of the back door. Marzen said to Buchal, “G-us, stay here till I come back.” Eust also says that he proposed to go home, but Marzen asked him to stay a while till they should come back, and said that they were going- over to Thirty-sixth street and Emerald avenue to see a cow that Wetzler had told them about. Marzen and Holzhueter then went out through the back door of the saloon that leads into the kitchen. In about ten or fifteen minutes Marzen came back again through the same door alone. When he came back both Buchal and Eust were in the saloon. They both agree in the statement that Marzen was not gone from the saloon more than ten or fifteen minutes, and that he re-entered the saloon by the back door. When he came back he had a brown -woolen jacket on and a plush cap, and an overcoat on his arm. He had his left hand in his pocket, and with his right hand he opened the door and shut it ag-ain.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E. 249, 173 Ill. 43, 1898 Ill. LEXIS 3076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marzen-v-people-ill-1898.