Nowacryk v. People

28 N.E. 961, 139 Ill. 336, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1219
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 961 (Nowacryk 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
Nowacryk v. People, 28 N.E. 961, 139 Ill. 336, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1219 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the May term, 1890, of the Circuit Court of Will county,. Joseph Nowacryk was indicted by the grand jury for the murder of Stasia Sokolovski. A trial of the defendant upon said indictment was had at the September term, 1890, of said court, resulting in a verdict finding him guilty in manner and form as charged, and imposing the death penalty. A motion by the defendant for a new trial, and also a motion in arrest of' judgment, being overruled, sentence was pronounced upon him in accordance with the verdict, and he now brings the record to ■ this court by writ of error, which has been made a supersedeas.

Stasia Sokolovski, a girl about fifteen years of age, was. killed by a pistol shot fired through one of the windows of the room in which she was sleeping, at about eleven o’clock at, ■night, March 17, 1890. At that date, and for several years prior thereto, Anton Sokolovski, the father of the deceased, lived with his family, consisting of himself, his wife, one son, and his daughter Stasia, in a small one-story frame house on the south-west corner formed by the intersection of two highways in the outskirts of Braidwood, in said county of Will. Said house consisted of a main part fronting north on the east and west highway, and a small addition in the rear, used as a kitchen. The main part was divided into two rooms by a partition running east and west, the north or front room being used as a family sitting room, and the south or rear room as the sleeping room for the entire family. The east wall of the kitchen was some seven feet west of the east line of the main building, and close to the main building there was a door opening from the kitchen on to a landing, from which two steps led down into the yard. Just south of said door was also a window looking” out into said yard. In the sleeping room were three windows, one on the east side, one on the west, and the third on the south side looking out on to said landing. In the room were two beds, one in the north-east and the other in the south-east corner, with their heads standing against the east wall, the east window being between them, the bed in the south- east corner of the room being close to or against the south window. The lot on which the house stood was enclosed by a fence, that on the east line having a gate opposite to the kitchen door opening out into the highway.

Until a few months prior to the homicide Anton Sokolovski and his son occupied the bed in the south-east corner of the room, but on the night of March 17, 1890, and for some, months prior thereto, that bed was occupied by his wife and daughter, the latter sleeping on the side next to the south window, while the father and son occupied the other bed, the father sleeping on the front side of the bed.

Sokolovski and his son were coal-miners, and both worked in the mines on the 17th day of March, 1890, returning home about five o’clock in the afternoon, and neither seems to have left the house that evening until after the homicide. Between seven and eight o’clock in the evening the family retired, the daughter going to bed first, the father and son next, and the mother last. The mother upon retiring left a light burning on the kitchen table near the window on the east side of the kitchen, so as to throw more or less light out upon the landing in front of the kitchen door. At about eleven o’clock some person appeared at the south window of the bed-room and called out to Sokolovski to come out and he would shoot him, and immediately thereafter several shots were fired in rapid succession through the window, one of which struck the daughter and inflicted upon her a mortal wound, of which she died in a few minutes.

It is insisted that the evidence does not sufficiently identify the defendant as the person who fired said shots. Sokolovski, his wife and son all testify that they were able to identify the defendant by the sound of his voice, and Mrs. Sokolovski also claims that she saw and recognized his features as he was standing by the window. Their credibility in this respect is assailed in various ways, but as the conviction must be set aside on another ground and the case be again submitted to a jury, we forbear to discuss the questions of fact involved in this branch of the case.

It is also claimed that there is a fatal variance between the indictment and the evidence in respect to the name of the person alleged to have been murdered, her name being laid in the indictment as Stasia Sokolovski, while, as counsel for the defendant insist, the evidence shows that her real name was Stansilowa Sokolovski. Whether such variance actually exists is a question of fact which must be determined by another jury, and which for that reason we deem it unwise to discuss at this time.

The defendant and Anton Sokolovski were brothers-in-law, their wives being sisters, and the evidence tends to show that for a long time an ill feeling had existed between them. At the trial the counsel for the defendant offered and sought to introduce evidence tending to show, among other things, that in the evening of March 16, 1890, the day prior to that on which the homicide was committed, Sokolovski, armed with a knife, visited various places in Braidwood in search of the defendant, with the avowed purpose and intention of killing him the instant he found him; that among other places he called at the defendant’s house where the defendant was concealed and inquired for him; that after the defendant had left his house, Sokolovski called there again twice, and then and there declared his purpose to kill the defendant on sight; that later and during the evening, Sokolovski’s daughter, the deceased, called upon the witness and asked him to help find her father who was somewhere concealed with a knife taken from his house for the purpose of killing the defendant; that on such request the witness went in search of Sokolovski and failed to find him, but afterwards found him at his own house, and that he then declared his said purpose in the presence of the witness and in the presence of his own family.

This evidence was first offered during the cross-examination • of one of the witnesses for the prosecution, the jury having been previously directed to retire so as to enable counsel to make the offer and discuss the materiality of said evidence out of their presence. Defendant’s counsel made the offer saying that he proposed to prove said facts by said witness then or at a subsequent stage of the trial, and so far as the record shows, the only objection to the evidence made and the only question in relation thereto considered by the court was as to its materiality. Subsequently the defendant’s counsel, while examining a witness on behalf of the defense, put to him various questions manifestly intended to lead up to and elicit from such Avitness substantially the same facts. These questions being objected to by the state’s attorney as immaterial were all excluded. Defendant’s counsel then made an offer of substantially the same nature, though léss circumstantial and explicit than before. This offer also was excluded.

While the exclusion of said evidence when first offered may be justified on the ground that the offer was not made at a proper stage of the trial, although that objection does not seem to have been suggested at the time, yet when the entire record is considered, we'think the question of the materiality of said evidence is properly and sufficiently presented, so as to be subject to review.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 961, 139 Ill. 336, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nowacryk-v-people-ill-1891.