People v. Anderson

272 Ill. App. 93, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 105
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 10, 1933
DocketGen. No. 36,482
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 272 Ill. App. 93 (People v. Anderson) 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
People v. Anderson, 272 Ill. App. 93, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 105 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant, William G. Anderson, was found guilty of an alleged direct contempt of court, and was sentenced to serve a term of imprisonment of six months in the county jail.

The judgment order finds that on February 23,1932, the case of People v. Hall came on for hearing before the court on an amended information filed on January 21, 1932, which charged the defendant with infractions of sections 41 and 41a of the Motor Vehicles Law of the State, Cahill’s St. ch. 95a, |fíf 42 and 42(1); that on February 23, 1932, the court, after hearing the testimony of witnesses, found the defendant guilty as charged in the information, and sentenced him to ninety days in the Bridewell; that the amended information charged the defendant with infractions of sections 41 and 41a, but the original information filed in the cause did not so charge; that a writ of error was sued out of the Appellate Court by the defendant and that a transcript of the record in the cause was procured from the clerk of said municipal court “by, or on behalf of said Hall, and delivered to the defendant William G. Anderson-, . . . about April 5, 1932, which said transcript was thereafter filed in the said Appellate Court ... by said Anderson . . . acting as the attorney for the said Hall .... That Anderson . . . is an attorney . . . and an officer of this Court. That subsequent to the delivery of said transcript . . . to Anderson and prior to the time the same was filed in the Appellate Court Anderson altered or caused said transcript to be altered and changed, by transposing the original and the amended informations in said cause so that said transcript did not speak the truth but was false and fraudulent in that by said transcript it was thereby represented that the defendant . . . had been tried ... on the original information .... That said Anderson knowingly, wilfully and fraudulently presented said forged and altered transcript to the said Appellate Court ... on April 11, 1932, and then and thereby falsely represented to said Court that said transcript so presented by him to said Court was a true and correct transcript of the proceedings in said cause in this Court. That when Anderson procured said transcript from the Clerk of this Court and . . . fraudulently changed or caused to be changed from their proper places in said transcript the original and amended informations . . . and presented the said transcript to the said Appellate Court as so altered and changed Anderson was then and thereby guilty of direct contempt of this Court. And the Court doth .find that the said Anderson . . . did in the manner aforesaid, contemptuously impede, interrupt, harass, obstruct and interfere with this Court in the due administration of justice. And it further appearing to the Court that on November 11, 1932, while this Court was in session, and had under investigation the conduct of the said Anderson in changing the records as aforesaid in said cause, the said Anderson was called and sworn and testified as a witness in his own behalf and as such witness stated that he did not order said transcript in said criminal proceeding from the Cleric of this Court, but that the same was delivered to him by the defendant, Hall, and thereafter and on November 17, 1932, to which time said investigation was continued by this Court, said Anderson again being called as a ivitness, under oath stated in open Court while said Court was in session that he went with other persons to the Cleric’s office of the Municipal Court and there ordered said transcript and that the same was afterwards delivered to him by one Kelly in the presence of said Hall, and the said Anderson thereby admitted to the Court that he, said Anderson, had been guilty of deceiving the Court by making the statement hereinbefore mentioned on November 11, 1932, that he did not order said record in said criminal .proceeding from the Clerk of this Court as aforesaid, and that the transcript was delivered to him by said Hall. The Court finds that .said Anderson did thereby by the deceit contemptuously impede, interrupt, harass, obstruct and interfere with this Court in the due administration of justice. And the Court further finds that on November 11, 1932, Anderson, under oath, during said hearing before this Court did testify that said transcript in said case of Hall was in his, said Anderson’s, possession for about a week or ten days immediately prior to April 11, 1932, at which date the same was filed in the Appellate Court . . . by him, said Anderson, and that he examined every word in the said transcript at said time, and Anderson then and there on said, November 11th, falsely stated under oath as aforesaid to this Court that when he received said transcript from Hall that the copies of the original and amended informations were in the same place in said transcript at the time he, said Anderson, received it as they were when he filed the same in said Appellate Court; and further then and there falsely stated, under oath, as aforesaid to this Court that he did not know at the time he filed the same in said Appellate Court that the two informations were displaced in said transcript so that the amended information appeared therein as the original information and the original Information appeared therein as the amended information; and the Court further finds that Anderson did then know that the said informations were so displaced in said transcript. That it was then and there the duty of Anderson as an officer of this Court to call the attention of this Court thereto to the end that a truthful record might be presented to said Appellate Court in said cause; that Anderson .wholly failed so to do, but on the contrary concealed from it the fact that a false transcript of the record in said cause was so presented to said Appellate Court; and on said false transcript of said record Anderson secured a reversal of said judgment of this Court in said cause of People of the State of Illinois against said Hall. That upon an examination of said false transcript similar to the one Anderson admits having made as aforesaid at the time the same was in his possession as aforesaid (which examination has been made by this Court) it is apparent that the two informations are displaced as aforesaid and said transcript could not have been examined by Anderson without his becoming aware thereof. Both the original and amended informations appear therein to have been filed on January 21, 1932, while the cause was pending before another branch of said Municipal Court than the one presided over by this Court; the case did not come before this Court until February 23, 1932; at that time this Court signed the statement attached to the amended information that he had examined the same and found it sufficient and fixed bail therein at the sum of $1,000, and while it is not stamped or marked as the amended information such endorsement by the Court is sufficient to identify it as the information upon which Hall was tried on February 23, 1932, before this Court; and said transcript of record has other unmistakable evidence therein by which it would be apparent to Anderson that the said informations were displaced in said transcript which would not appear in a printed abstract thereof.” (Italics ours.) The order then recites that the court finds Anderson “guilty of direct and criminal contempt of this Court in open Court and it is adjudged by the Court that the said William Gr. Anderson ... is guilty of direct contempt of this Court in open Court,” and then follows the sentence.

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Bluebook (online)
272 Ill. App. 93, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-anderson-illappct-1933.