People v. Busch

228 Ill. App. 11, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 190
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 13, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 228 Ill. App. 11 (People v. Busch) 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. Busch, 228 Ill. App. 11, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 190 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Barnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in error were convicted upon an indictment charging them and others with a conspiracy, among other things, to defraud, the gravamen of the charge being that the defendants conspired to set fire and burn a stock of goods belonging to the Associated Polish Traders & Importers Corporation, of which plaintiffs in error were members and officers, for the purpose of collecting the insurance thereon.

The indictment was returned April 21, 1921. The verdict was rendered July 6, 1921. The motion for a new trial then made was continued to the September term, and after various continuances it was overruled on March 11, 1922.

It is urged that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict, and that the court erred in rulings npon evidence and instructions and in refusing to grant a new trial.

While the motion for a new trial rests upon these various contentions, it is also predicated upon an affidavit of one of the indicted parties who testified for the People, in which he alleges that he perjured himself and was suborned so to do by persons acting in behalf of the insurance companies that insured the property.

The question presented by such affidavit is a serious one, because to recognize the affidavit as furnishing sufficient ground for a new trial may establish a dangerous precedent, and to disregard it would cast grave doubt upon the justice of the conviction. Consideration of its importance requires a brief statement of the facts.

Plaintiffs in error Ulanowski and Busch, were president and vice president, respectively, of, and stockholders in, said corporation, which conducted a grocery store in Chicago. A fire was discovered in the basement of the store about nine o’clock in the evening of January 26, 1920, which was put out by a fire company in about an hour. The insurance on the goods was carried in various companies, and aggregated the sum of $123,000. Defendants claimed a loss of about $82,000. The value as estimated by a witness for the People, a grocer familiar with the stock, was several thousand less.

It was the theory of the People that the officers and others of the Traders corporation arranged with John A. Hintzke, active manager of the store, and Fred A. Beyer, who did hauling for the concern, to set the fire, for which Hintzke and Beyer were to be paid $2,000 after the insurance was paid, and that pursuant to the arrangement Hintzke placed a lighted wax candle in the basement between boxes of matches, from which the blaze broke out about three hours afterward.

Included with plaintiffs in error as defendants to the indictment were Markowicz, the company’s sales manager, Hapiorkowski, its secretary, Barys, its shipping clerk, and said Hintzke and said Beyer. Markowicz seems to have been the only defendant put on trial with plaintiffs in error. All three were found guilty, but he did not join in suing out this writ.

Hintzke and Beyer turned State’s evidence and each testified to conversations had at different times with one or more of the defendants within a week or two before the fire. There were six of these alleged conversations before the fire and three after it. Both Hintzke and Beyer testified that the first conversation was had with Ulanowski, during which he proposed to them the setting of the fire; that the second was had a few days later when Ulanowski offered them $2,000 to set the fire, at which Busch, Markowicz and Napiorkowski were present, the two former expressly concurring in the proposition; the third, fourth and sixth conversations were testified to by Hintzke alone, and the fifth by Beyer alone. Hintzke claimed that the third was had with Ulanowski and Markowicz, at which he assented “to do the job”; that the fourth was had with Busch alone, who then suggested the use of benzine, and the sixth with Ulanowski, between the time of placing the candle and the breaking out of the fire. While Hintzke claimed that Beyer was present at the fourth conversation, the latter testified that he had no further conversation with Busch after the second conversation. Beyer’s testimony as to the fifth conversation was to the effect that Ulanowski suggested smashing the gas meter to make the fire larger. No one else was present. Beyer testified to three subsequent conversations with Ulanowski relating to what had been done and the expected remuneration, at two of which he claimed Hintzke was present. We do not find that Hintzke testified with regard to them.

Aside from the testimony as to these conversations, all of which were expressly denied by the other parties alleged to have been present, the evidence on the part of the People consisted mainly'of the testimony of the captain of the crew of firemen who put out the fire, with respect to conditions he found there, of said witness who estimated the value of the goods as inventoried, and of a brother of Hintzke who testified in effect to subsequent admissions by Ulanowski of his complicity in the conspiracy.

While the evidence tends strongly to show that the fire was of incendiary origin and there were circumstances, though not very persuasive, tending to show motives on the part of plaintiffs in error, yet without the conversations there was little evidence upon which to rely for a conviction. The jury, therefore, must have given credence to the People’s evidence as to the conversations. We would not be disposed to disturb their conclusions, however, if there was no reversible error in the record and the peculiar facts presented on hearing the motion for a new trial were not before us.

The effect of Hintzke’s affidavit and testimony in support thereof was to impeach his own testimony, and as a rule a new trial will not be granted merely to give an opportunity to impeach a witness. But an exception to the rule has been made where it appeared that a- material witness admitted that he committed perjury. Several cases recognizing the exception were referred to in People v. Heinen, 300 Ill. 498, and need not be here reviewed. In that case the prosecuting witnesses, who identified the defendants, subsquently wrote to the State’s Attorney, saying in effect that they were convinced that they should not have identified them and would not do so on a rehearing. The court said, in substance, that the whole structure of the case rested upon their testimony, and that as the letters showed that they thought they were mistaken as to the identity of the defendants, and thus destroyed the probative force of their testimony on that point, the trial court erred in not vacating the judgment and granting a new trial. While there was no wilful perjury in that case and what was stated in their letters was not questioned, as is the affidavit here, and the conviction depended upon the correctness of the identification, yet the decision was grounded upon considerations not inapplicable to this case. Among other things the court said:

1 ‘ Surely it cannot be said that another jury hearing these statements from the prosecuting witnesses would nevertheless.return the same verdict. * * * Can we, therefore, say * * * that a court in reviewing their testimony, together with their subsequent letters, could have a feeling of confidence that their identification was correct?”

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Bluebook (online)
228 Ill. App. 11, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-busch-illappct-1923.