People v. Colvin

128 N.E. 396, 294 Ill. 196
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1920
DocketNo. 13367
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 N.E. 396 (People v. Colvin) 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. Colvin, 128 N.E. 396, 294 Ill. 196 (Ill. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

On July 28, 1919, race riots between the white and the black people were in progress in the vicinity of Thirty-sixth and State streets, in what is called the° “black belt,” in Chicago. At about 4:30 in the afternoon of that day Morris Lazzeroni, a banana peddler, who was driving his horse and wagon south on State street, was murdered near No. 3626 by stabbing him in the abdomen in two places, cutting into his stomach through the center to the breast bone, and he was also cut on the right arm, right wrist and" right thigh and on the corner of his mouth. He fell from his wagon, and at about 4:50 a police wagon came to the place and took his dead body to an undertaker’s place. The coroner’s physician found two deep incised wounds in the abdomen and one deep incised wound in the right thigh. The plaintiffs in error, Walter Colvin and Charles Johnson, together with John Green and Frank Coachman, were indicted for the murder. The plaintiffs in error were tried and found guilty and their punishment was fixed at life imprisonment, with a finding of the jury that Johnson was eighteen years of age and Colvin sixteen years of age.

No error was committed on the trial. There was testimony that the defendants admitted their participation in the murder to an assistant State’s attorney and police officers in the presence of two other witnesses, and that Colvin described the manner in which the murder was committed. This evidence was received without objection, but at the close of the evidence for the People a motion was made to strike it out for the reason that the statements were made under duress. There had been some cross-examination of the witnesses for the People as to whether there were any threats, misconduct or inducements to obtain the admissions from the defendants and all such conduct had been denied, so that there was no evidence which, if true, tended to prove duress, and the motion was denied. At the conclusion of all the evidence the motion to strike out all testimony relating to statements of the defendants on the ground that they were made under duress was renewed and again denied. The defendant Johnson testified that he was called vile names; that the police threatened to beat him to death if he did not tell the truth and confess that he committed the murder; that he was struck On the head with a club, beaten with clubs, struck in the mouth, and otherwise mistreated until he admitted that he took part in the murder. Colvin testified that he was told if he did not say that he killed the man it would go hard with him; that he was struck in the face, choked, locked up and kept on, bread and water three days and nights. If this testimony, or a considerable part oj it, was true a gross outrage was committed, which not only deserves the severest condemnation, but which would exclude as evidence any admissions obtained by such means. The claim that there had been any improper conduct to obtain the admissions had, however, been contradicted on cross-examination of witnesses testifying to admissions, and although Johnson testified that he was beaten with clubs, there was no evidence whatever of any physical signs of injury which might have been expected, and it is evident that the court did not believe the defendants. The question, however, was afterward submitted to the jury on instructions requested by the defendants. In one instruction the court advised the jury that an admission, to be admissible in any criminal case, must have been made freely and voluntarily by the defendants; that it must not have been induced by any person or persons by the remotest fear or injury or duress or the slight hope of benefit or reward of anything whatsoever and must have been freely and voluntarily made, otherwise the jury should disregard the alleged admission on the part of the defendants. These rules were amplified in another instruction, in which the jury were told that it was their right and duty to determine for themselves whether the alleged admission or admissions of the defendants, or either of them, were made freely and voluntarify, without any influence or hope or fear or violence, and that any, the slightest, menace or threat, or any hope aroused or encouraged by any of the officers that the prisoner’s case would be lightened or more favorably dealt with if he would confess, was enough to exclude the admission or admissions, if any, thereby obtained, with much more to the same effect. There is, of course, no way of knowing whether the jury disregarded the admissions and based their verdict solely on the direct evidence or not, but there is nothing in the record from which it can be said that their conclusion was wrong if they regarded the admissions as freely and voluntarily made.

The refusal of the court to strike out the testimony of admissions is the only alleged error occurring in the trial and there is no error assigned upon the giving or refusal of instructions, none of which are abstracted, the above mentioned instructions being taken from the record.

One error assigned on the sufficiency of the evidence is that the record contains no evidence that the ^deceased, Lazzeroni, who was murdered, was the Morris Lazzeroni mentioned in the indictment. The police officer who found the body lying in the street where the murdered man fell from his wagon learned his name from receipts in his clothing. The body was taken to the home of Morris Lazzeroni at 2012 East Eighty-third street on July 29 and was there identified by his daughter, Jennie Lazzeroni, and the argument seems to be that he was not proved to be Morris Lazzeroni because she called him “Mr. Lazzeroni,” which is trifling with evidence. An inquest on the body was held by the coroner, and although the deceased was sometimes called Lazzeroni, without his full name, there is not a particle of doubt of identity.

Concerning the commission of the crime, Dollie Herman, who kept the Alamo laundry, at 3626 State street, testified that she was in her laundry office looking out of the window and saw the peddler’s wagon in the street about twenty feet from her building; that there were four boys on the wagon attacking the peddler; that Colvin was standing on the hub of the left front wheel, facing her, and was cutting the peddler on the shoulder or arm; that Johnson was cutting him in the body in front and the other boys were back in the wagon; that she turned away from the horror of the thing and did not see the peddler fall from the wagon. She recognized and identified the defendants. The admissions of the defendant Colvin at the police station were also .testified to by her and by Laura Dixon, who was called to the police station on account of the killing of Eugene Temple at about the same time in front of her home, at 3640 State street.

The credibility of Dollie Herman is attacked on the alleged ground that at the coroner’s inquest she testified that Johnson was not engaged in the murder of Lazzeroni and she did not then identify him as having anything to do with it. The coroner held an inquest at the same time on two bodies,—one of them that of Eugene Temple, who was killed about the same time and near the same place as Lazzeroni, and the other upon the body of Lazzeroni.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 N.E. 396, 294 Ill. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-colvin-ill-1920.