People v. Bond

118 N.E. 14, 281 Ill. 490
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1917
DocketNo. 11601
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 118 N.E. 14 (People v. Bond) 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
People v. Bond, 118 N.E. 14, 281 Ill. 490 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error, Isaac Bond, colored, was indicted, tried and convicted in the criminal court of Cook county on a charge of murdering Ida J. Leegson, a white woman, and his punishment was fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for life. A writ of error has been sued out to review said judgment.

Plaintiff in error insists the judgment should be reversed because the proof does not show him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and for the further reason that the court erred in admitting improper testimony.

Ida J. Leegson was an artist, art student or teacher and was also a practical nurse. She lived at 122 East Twenty-fifth street, in Chicago. On October 5, 1913, her dead body was found on the prairie in the neighborhood of Forty-eighth avenue and Seventy-first street. She had been ravished, and murdered by being choked. Her clothing was torn from her body and was scattered around for some distance. There were evidences of a fierce struggle and the body bore numerous bruises. Near the body there was a track made by a No. 11 shoe. Miss Leegson had caused an advertisement to be published in the Daily Nezvs on October 4, 1913, that she was a practical nurse, maternity cases preferred, and giving her telephone number. Some time after 2:30 o’clock P. M., October 4, while Miss Leegson was absent from home, there was a telephone call for her and the woman at whose house she was living answered it. A voice she recognized as that of a man inquired if there was a nurse at that place. Witness replied that the nurse was out but would be back shortly and suggested to the man that he leave his telephone address. He said his wife needed a nurse and said something about maternity; that he had come far and that he would call another nurse and if he could not get another would call again. Miss Leegson returned about fifteen 'minutes later and shortly after her return the telephone rang. Miss Leegson answered it. The witness heard her say, “Fifteen dollars without washing and twelve dollars with washing.” She said she would come within an hour, and repeated an address given her on the telephone. She repeated, “Go by Western to Seventy-first street.” She said something to the person with whom she was talking over the telephone about a long walk after she should leave the car, and that she would have to bring a suit-case. She left witness’ home to keep the engagement, and the next day witness saw her dead body at an undertaker’s rooms, where it had been taken after its discovery on the prairie.

The morning of October 5 a colored man pawned for a loan with Eli A. Nierman, a pawnbroker at 3020 South State street, a lady’s watch upon which was a monogram.1 The pawnbroker inquired of the man as to the ownership of the watch. The colored man said it belonged to his sister, whose name was Ida Leegson, but that he did not know what the middle initial stood for. He said his own name was A. J. Leegson. The pawnbroker put the watch and the pin attached to it in an envelope and placed them in a safe. The next day he saw a report of the murder of Miss Leegson in the newspapers and notified the police he had taken in a watch with the name Leegson on it and surrendered it to the police department. At the trial the woman at whose house Miss Leegson lived was shown the watch and the pin produced by the police department and identified them as the property of Miss Leegson. The pawnbroker identified them as the articles pawned to him by the colored man the morning of October 5, which was the day the body was found.

Defendant denied his guilt and sought to prove that he was in Gary, Indiana, October 4 and 5. He is a tall man,— about six feet two inches,—and has large, square shoulders and apparently rather small legs for the size of his shoulders and body.

On the part of the prosecution James E. Connolly, a car inspector for the Wabash railroad, testified that about five or six o’clock in the evening of October 4 he left his home and drove across the field to the Wabash yards. While driving he saw a colored man and a white woman on Seventy-first street coming toward him. The man was large and powerful—about six feet tall. He gave his impression and recollection of the clothing worn by them or a part of it. The man carried a hand satchel which resembled in color and shape the one shown him at the trial as Miss Leegson’s. It was about dark when the witness saw the parties. He was driving east and they were walking west. The man kept his head down and witness could not see his face. He particularly noticed the man’s shoulders and thought they were as square as he had ever seen, but the lower limbs were small and did not seem in proportion. It struck witness as unusual to see a colored man and a white woman there together.

Thomas Bursach testified he finished painting his residence, 5324 Hoyne avenue, on Saturday, October 4, and while standing in front of his house, somewhere about five o’clock in the evening, a colored man came up to him. A white woman was with the colored man. The man was tall, not black but brown, and had a small black mustache. He stood within four feet of the witness and inquired where Fifty-fifth and Seeley streets were. The woman was about twelve feet away. Witness directed the colored man to the place he inquired for. He testified positively that he recognized defendant as the man he saw the evening of October 4 with the white woman. He had previously identified a picture of defendant shown him by a policeman as the picture of the colored man he saw with the white woman October 4, and later saw and identified defendant at the coroner’s inquest.

Willis H. Mays, special police officer for the Wabash railroad, testified he was stationed between Seventy-fifth street and Western avenue, in the Wabash yards, and that his duties were to patrol the yards. He worked between six in the evening and six in the morning. The night of October 4 while witness was patrolling the yards back and forth, he ran across a colored man. The man had his hands in his pockets and “was a great big fellow,” Witness drew his revolver and inquired of the man where he came from and where he was going. The man said he had come from St. Louis and was going to Gary, Indiana. Witness made him put up his hands and searched him. He found three ten-cent pieces and a watch. The man told the witness a very good story, and the witness took him to the office, where he turned the light on and again questioned him. The man said he came on a freight train from St. Louis. Witness asked him what he was doing with a lady’s watch in his pocket, and he said it was his dead sister’s watch. After keeping him about thirty minutes witness told him to go about his business. There was a little three-pointed pin attached to the watch the colored man had. On being shown the watch and pin of Miss Leegson the witness testified the pin resembled the one attached to the watch which he found on the colored man but that he could not say as to the watch. The colored man was over six feet tall and had square shoulders. Witness looked at his face. He testified that to his best belief and knowledge defendant was the man he encountered in the Wabash yards the night of October 4.

William Maher was a motorman. On Sunday, October 5, while driving his car, he saw near the corner of Sixty-third street and Forty-eighth avenue a tall colored man who was looking at the sign on the car.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.E. 14, 281 Ill. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bond-ill-1917.