Ochs v. People

25 Ill. App. 379, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 135
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 16, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 25 Ill. App. 379 (Ochs v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ochs v. People, 25 Ill. App. 379, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 135 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinions

Bailey, J.

On the 2d day of April, 1887, Adam Ochs, Michael Leyden, John E. Van Pelt, Michael Wasserman, Daniel J. Wren, Harry A. Varnell, John Hannigan, George C. Klehm, James J. McCarthy, Charles F. Lynn, Richard S. McClonghrey, Christian Casselman, Richard M. Oliver, Christian Geils, William J. McGarigle, Frederick W. Bipper, Charles L. Frey and Edward S. McDonald were indicted by the grand jury in the Criminal Court of Cook County for the ¡ crime of conspiracy. McGarigle, McDonald, Hannigan, Bip- f per and Frey were not put on trial, and Klehm and Lynn each entered a plea of guilty. At the June term, 1887, of said court, the other eleven defendants were tried and convicted, the jury, by their verdict, fixing the punishment of Ochs, Leyden, Van Pelt, Wasserman, Wren, McClonghrey and Varnell at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of two years) and imposing upon McCarthy, Casselman, Oliver and Geils a fine of §1,000 each. Judgment was pronounced on all the defendants tried in accordance with the verdict of the jury, and Ochs, Leyden, Van Pelt, Wasserman, Wren and Varnell, six of the defendants sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary, have brought the record to this court by writ of error.

At the June term of the Criminal Court, and prior to the commencement of the trial, the defendants entered their motion to be discharged for want of prosecution, in accordance with the provisions of section 438 of the Criminal Code, which motion was overruled, and the decision of the court overruling said motion is assigned for error. Said section is as follows:

“ Any person committed for a criminal or supposed criminal matter, and not admitted to bail and not tried at or before the second term of the court having jurisdiction of the offense, shall be set at liberty by the court, unless the delay shall happen on the application of the prisoner. If such court, at the second term, shall be satisfied that due exertions have been made to procure the evidence for and on behalf of the people, and there are reasonable grounds to believe that such evidence may be procured at the third term, it shall have power to continue such case till the third term. If such prisoner shall have been admitted to bail for a crime other than a capital offense, the court may continue the trial of said cause to a third term, if it shall appear by oath or affirmation that the witnesses for the people of the State are absent, such witnesses being mentioned by name, and the court shown wherein their testimony is material.”

The Criminal Court of Cook County has twelve terms each year, commencing respectively on the first Monday of each month. April 2, 1887, the day on which the indictment in this case was returned into court by the grand jury, was the last day of the March term. The next term, which was the April term, commenced on the 4th day of April, and of the plaintiffs in error Ochs, Vasserman, Yarnell and Wren were arrested and admitted to bail April 6th, Leyden April 8th and Yan Pelt April 9th.

The first question that arises is, whether the April or the May term is to be regarded, as the first term within the meaning of the statute above quoted.

This question is not settled, so far as we are aware, by any decision in this State, and we are, therefore, compelled to adopt such interpretation of the statute as seems to us most reasonable, aided by such light as may be derived from decisions in other States giving construction to the provisions of similar statutes. The object of the statute, manifestly, is to fix and limit a time within which the prosecution must bring to trial persons committed or admitted to bail upon criminal charges, and to give all prisoners not tried within the time limited, unless the delay happens on their application, a right to a discharge from their imprisonment or bail, for want of prosecution. The time thus given is two terms of court, and to this may be added a third term, where sufficient grounds for a continuance to such term on account of the absence of material witnesses, is made out by the prosecution. It would thus seem to be the intention of the statute to give the prosecution at least two full terms to bring prisoners to trial before discharging them for want of prosecution. This can be done only by reckoning the term of court convening next after the commitment or admission to bail as the first term. The commitment or admission to bail may take place during a term, and at any period of the term, even to the very last day or the very last moment before final adjournment, or it may take place after the grand jury has been discharged, so that no indictment against the prisoner can be presented until the next following term. If the then existing term is to be regarded as the first term, the prosecution would, in such cases, he given only one term within which to bring the accused to trial.

The view we have taken is supported by the decisions of the Supreme Court of Virginia upon a statute similar to ours. The statute of Virginia provided that “every person charged with felony and held in any court for trial, shall be forever discharged from prosecution for the offense, if there be three regular terms of such court after he is so held, without a trial,” unless the delay shall be caused by the prisoner. In Bell’s case, 7 Gratt. 616, a prisoner was held for trial on the 6th day of a term of the Circuit Court, and the question arose whether that term was to be reckoned as one of the three terms specified by the statute. The court, in holding that said term should not he included in the computation, say: “Many mischiefs in the administration of criminal justice might arise, if the term of the Circuit Court, though only an hour before its adjournment, or however engrossed with its business on hand, shall he counted for a term at which the prisoner is held to answer, because the accused has, at that period of the term, been remanded by the examining court. It is very true that potentially the prisoner might be tried during the remaining term of the Circuit Court, when he is remanded by the examining court after the first day of the term. The court may cause another grand jury to he impaneled, though the regular grand jury summoned to the first day may have been discharged, and it may award a venire facias for petit jurors, and it may cause the witnesses to be summoned; and the preparatory certificate of the clerk of the examining court may be accepted as satisfactory, though brought in at a subsequent day of the term. It seems much better to take some fixed and uniform rule from the language and meaning of the statute, than a rule derived from what the Circuit Court may be supposed, on a presumed state of its business, to have the capacity to do. In England the term, according to the common law, is understood as the term of a day, and that day is the first day of the term, to which all the after proceedings have reference. This interpretation is there given in criminal as well as civil proceedings. The same notion has been recognized in our own courts, when the date of a judgment rendered during the term has always had reference to the first day of the term.”

In Sand’s case, 20 Gratt. 800, which arose under the same statute, the prisoner was brought into court on the first day of the term, and the record of his recognizance to appear was the first entry upon the records of the court for that day, and it was held that said term could not be counted as one of the three terms which must elapse before the prisoner would be entitled to his discharge. See, also, Jones v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ill. App. 379, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ochs-v-people-illappct-1888.