Paulsen v. People

63 N.E. 144, 195 Ill. 507, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3210
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 144 (Paulsen 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
Paulsen v. People, 63 N.E. 144, 195 Ill. 507, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3210 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

On the 3d day of October, 1896, being one of the judicial days of the September term, 1896, of the criminal court of Cook county, the grand jury within and for said county returned an indictment against the plaintiff in error, charging in two counts, both being in substance the same, that on the 2d day of March, 1896, in said county of Cook, the said plaintiff in error was president of a certain incorporated banking company, namely, the Central Trust and Savings Bank, and as such officer of said bank did, receive for said incorporated bank from one Jacob Bice, for deposit in said bank and not for the payment of any indebtedness of said Bice to said bank, certain treasury notes of the United States of America of different specified denominations and values, and also certain current bank bills, commonly called national bank bills, issued by national banks, of specified value and denominations, and also certain gold and silver coins of the United States of specified values; that said incorporated bank was, at the time of making such deposit, insolvent, ■ and that by reason of such insolvency of the said bank the moneys so deposited therein by the said Bice were lost to him, the said Bice, etc. The indictment was framed under the provisions of section 1 of the act approved June 4, 1879, entitled “An act for the protection of bank depositors,” and the sufficiency of its allegations is not challenged.

On the 16th day of March, 1899, the plaintiff in error was furnished with a copy of the indictment, a list of the names of the witnesses, also a list of the jurors, was duly arraigned, and for plea said he was not guilty. On the same day the plaintiff in error filed a written statement that he waived trial by jury and submitted the cause to the court for trial without the intervention of a jury. The State’s attorney consented that a jury might be waived, and an order was entered of record that the cause be submitted to the court for trial and that the intervention of a jury was waived. On a later day of the same term, as appears from the record of the court, the People, by the State’s attorney, and the plaintiff in error in his own proper person and by counsel, appeared in said criminal court, the Hon. Charles G. Neely presiding, and entered upon the trial of the issue of not guilty, made under said indictment, before the said judge without a jury, and the said judge heard the testimony of witnesses produced in the cause. No further entry of record appears as to any further proceedings under such submission of the issue, if any further proceedings were had.

The cause was placed on the trial calendar of the said criminal court at the July term, 1900, and on the 9th day of July, 1900, was called for trial before the Hon. Theodore Brentano, the then presiding judge of said court. The plaintiff in error interposed a special plea, in which he set forth the facts appearing in the record relative to the submission of the cause for trial to the Hon. Charles G. Neely as presiding judge of the criminal court, without a jury, and the hearing of witnesses under such submission, and averred that “said trial of this defendant upon said indictment continued until the 20th day of March, 1899, when, after the said William A. Paulsen had completed the introduction of his testimony, upon the representation of the State’s attorney that he needed time in which to produce testimony in rebuttal, and at the request of the State’s attorney, said court continued the further hearing of said matter without fixing any time when it would resume the hearing thereof, and although the said William A. Paulsen, through his attorney, has requested the Hon. Charles G. Neely, judge of this court, to complete the hearing of this case and render a final judgment therein, the said court has failed to do so, as by the records thereof in said court remaining more fully and at large appears; and the said William A. Paulsen further says that the William A. Paulsen so indicted and placed upon trial are one and the same person and not other or different persons, and that the indictment upon which he was placed upon trial, as aforesaid,-is the same indictment on which he is now arraigned; and this the said William A. Paulsen is ready to verify.” The plea concluded with a prayer for judgment if the People ought to be permitted to further prosecute said indictment, on the ground the defendant had once been placed in legal jeopardy of a conviction in the cause. The People interposed a demurrer to the plea, which the court sustained, and the plaintiff in error excepted. Against the protest of the plaintiff in error a jury was émpaneled to try the issue raised under the said indictment against him, and he was required to proceed to the hearing and trial before said court and a jury. He was adjudged to be guilty, and sentenced to pay a fine in the sum of $80 and to be confined in the penitentiary of the State at Joliet for an indeterminate period.

After the evidence in behalf of the State had been submitted to the jury, the plaintiff in error tendered in evidence the records relative to the submission of the cause to his honor, Judge Neely, for tidal without a jury, hereinbefore stated, and also the written waiver of trial by jury by him signed at the time the proceedings referred to were had, and by his counsel offered to produce testimony as follows: “I offer to prove by the witness Paulsen that he was put upon trial in this case under this indictment before Judge Neely in the criminal court of Cook county, Illinois; that a jury was waived in writing and filed with the clerk; that the trial proceeded by the prosecuting witness, Jacob Rice, giving his testimony, and such other testimony as the State desired, and that the State rested, and afterwards the defendant placed witnesses on the stand who testified in the case, and the defendant rested; that these proceedings took several days of the court, at which times the State’s attorney asked to have the case continued for the purpose of procuring further evidence, to-wit, certain books that were then not available, and from that time on the case was continued from time to time, and that this was the last proceedings had in the case, and that there was no reáson why the trial should not have proceeded to completion so far as the defendant was concerned or the court was concerned, to the knowledge of the defendant.” The court sustained an objection interposed by the State’s attorney to such proffered testimony, and plaintiff in error then and there duly excepted to such ruling of the court.

The holding of the court that the special plea purporting to set up the defense that the plaintiff in error had once been “in jeopardy” was obnoxious to a demurrer, and the ruling that the evidence so offered to be produced by the plaintiff in error relative to the proceedings before Judge Neely was incompetent to be heard, will be considered and disposed of together.

It is unnecessary to advert to the question whether the defense that the plaintiff in error had been once placed in jeopardy must be specially pleaded, or whether the testimony in support of the defense is receivable in evidence under the oral plea of not guilty entered at the time of the arraignment of the plaintiff in error, for the reason that it is our opinion neither the facts alleged in the special plea nor the facts sought to be proven by the evidence which was rejected were sufficient to establish the defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 144, 195 Ill. 507, 1902 Ill. LEXIS 3210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paulsen-v-people-ill-1902.