People v. Boykin

298 Ill. 11
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1921
DocketNo. 13786
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 298 Ill. 11 (People v. Boykin) 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. Boykin, 298 Ill. 11 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court :

On September 30, 1920, an inforriiation was filed in the municipal court of Chicago by a police officer of Chicago charging plaintiff in error, Ralph Boykin, with the offense of pandering. The charging. part of the information is, “that Ralph Boykin heretofore, to-wit, on the 29th day of September, A. D. 1920, at the' city of Chicago aforesaid, did then and there unlawfully and knowingly, without lawful consideration, take, accept and receive money from one Grace LaMont, a female person, from the earnings of her prostitution, for providing, procuring and furnishing another person for the purpose of illicit sexual intercourse with the said Grace LaMont, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the People of the State of Illinois.” The information was signed by James W. Coleman and was verified by his affidavit stating “that he has read the foregoing information by him subscribed and that the same is true.” Plaintiff in error had previously been arrested by the officer without warrant, and when taken before the court on the 6th of October, 1920, filed his motion to quash the information and to dismiss the proceedings on the ground that the amendment of 1917 to the' act of 1908, under which he was prosecuted, was unconstitutional and void because said amendment amended an act which did not exist, the act of 1908 having been repealed by implication by the act of 1909, which also amended the act of 1908. It was further urged in the motion to quash, that the municipal court has no jurisdiction of the offense of pandering, if this act is valid, because it is an offense that must be' prosecuted by indictment, as the punishment for the offense charged may be by imprisonment in the penitentiary if it should appear on the trial that the accused had been previously convicted of pandering, and that therefore prosecution by information was a violation of sections 2 and 8 of article 2 of the constitution of 1870 and of the fifth amendment to the Federal constitution. The motion to quash was considered and overruled by the court on October 20, 1920. Plaintiff in error then excepted to the ruling of the court and moved that a bill of particulars should be furnished him because the information did not state the amount or character or value of the money received by him, and did not state the names of any per-' sons from whom Grace LaMont so earned money, or the name of any person provided, procured and furnished her by him for the purpose of illicit intercourse, or any other facts or terms equivalent thereto. The court overruled this latter motion on the ground that it had not been raised at the proper time and immediately proceeded to the trial, and plaintiff in error saved his exceptions. Plaintiff in error signed a written waiver of trial by jury, and the trial was before the court without a jury. At the conclusion of the evidence the court found the defendant guilty in manner and form as charged in the information. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled by the court, and the court sentenced the defendant to the house of correction of the city of Chicago for one year and to pay a fine of $300 and costs of prosecution. The record is brought to this court for review on writ of error.

It appears from the evidence that Grace Ruud, known by the name of Grace LaMont, was. a girl seventeen years of age. On.September 29, 1920, she was, and for four months had been, occupying room 212 at the Carleon Hotel, at the corner of Twenty-second street and Wabash avenue, in the city of Chicago, and was not engaged in any legitimate occupation during that time but was engaged in prostitution, or selling her body to men for money, as she expressed it. On said date officers James W. Coleman and Peter J. Bernacki, of the second precinct of Chicago, were called to the hotel, where they arrested Miss LaMont on the charge of stealing a watch from a guest of the hotel. She pointed out the plaintiff in error, William Turner, Joseph Sullins and William Tyler, four bell-boys who worked at the Carleon Hotel, and the officers took all four. of them and Miss LaMont to the Harrison street police station and there kept them under guard or imprisonment, for investigation. Miss' LaMont was not prosecuted for the theft of the watch or for any other charge, so far as the record shows. She testified that she received $5, and sometimes $10, for entertaining men in illicit intercourse, and that she paid the bell-boys $2 of every $5 that she so received when they procured and brought to her a patron in her occupation, and that she so divided with Boykin ten or fifteen times,—$2 each time he procured a patron for her,—and that he also had sexual intercourse with her. It also appears from the testimony of Miss LaMont that she paid the proprietor of the hotel $15 per week for her room out of the money that she earned in illicit intercourse, and that she was taken to the Carleon Hotel by a bell-boy of the Lexington Hotel, and that that bell-boy had an understanding with the clerk who permitted her to register, as to the business that she had come to the hotel to follow, and that she was at no time asked to leave the hotel by the proprietor. She occupied the room alone, which was a room with bath, and had no trunk but just a hand bag as baggage. There were about eighty-five rooms in the hotel, and many of the occupants of the rooms of the hotel were women, but there is no evidence that any of the other women were engaged in the same occupation as Miss La-Mont. Both of the officers testified positively, in substance, that at the police station Miss LaMont said to them, in the presence of plaintiff in error, that he (Boykin) had brought men to her room at that hotel on numerous occasions and that she had had intercourse with the men, for which she received $5, and that she paid Boykin $2 out of every $5 that she received, and that they asked Boykin, in her presence, if that was the truth, and he said it was. Officer Bernacki further testified that he took Boykin into the lieutenant’s room, and that in the presence of Miss LaMont he said that he knocked at room 212 and took Grace to the room where Sheean was, (the guest whose watch was stolen,) and that he received $2 or $4 “out of $10 she got from Sheean from intercourse.”

Plaintiff in error testified that he had been employed at the Carleon Hotel since April, 1920, as a bell-boy and assistant clerk, and that his duties were to wait on guests, serve orders and to rent rooms at times when the clerk was not there; that he only knew Grace LaMont when he saw her, never had any talk or conversation with her, never received at any time any money from her for procuring or bringing to her room men for illicit intercourse, never procured or took any men to her room or directed any men to her room, and never received any money from her whatever, except a ten-cent tip for carrying to her on one occasion a twenty-five cent chocolate ice cream soda, and that he knew nothing about her business. He also positively denied ever stating or admitting to the officers at the police station that he had received from her any money for procuring and taking men to her room or taking her to Sheean’s room.

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Bluebook (online)
298 Ill. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-boykin-ill-1921.