People v. Connors

97 N.E. 643, 253 Ill. 266
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 97 N.E. 643 (People v. Connors) 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. Connors, 97 N.E. 643, 253 Ill. 266 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vicicers

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs in error, William Connors, Peter Gentleman, Arthur O’Connor and Edward Storgaard, were jointly indicted, together with Walter Stevens and Joseph Kane, at the June term of the criminal court of Cook county, for an unlawful assault upon Morgan H. Bell. In the first count of the indictment the plaintiffs in error and others were charged with making a felonious assault upon Morgan H. Bell with a certain revolver, to then and there unlawfully, willfully and with malice aforethought kill and murder the said Morgan H. Bell. There were six other counts in the indictment, but since the verdict found plaintiffs in error guilty in manner and form as charged in the first count of the indictment it will not be necessary to refer to the other counts. At the August term of said court, Connors, Gentleman, O’Connor and Storgaard were found guilty by a jury of assault to murder, and after overruling a motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment they were sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary upon the verdict of the jury. Stevens and Kane were granted a change of venue and were not put upon trial with plaintiffs in error. The alleged errors in the application of the law to the undisputed facts are relied on by all of plaintiffs in error for a reversal. Plaintiff in error Arthur O’Connor contends that the verdict as to him is contrary to the clear weight and preponderance of the evidence and the motion for a new trial should have been sustained as to him for that reason.

The facts out of which the legal questions arise, which all of plaintiffs in error contend were erroneously decided against them, are, in substance, as follows: It appears from the evidence that on and before April 20, 1911, in the city of Chicago, there were two rival labor unions of steam-fitters and associated employments. One of these org-anizations was known as the International Association of Steam-fitters. The other organization was known as the United Association of Plumbers, Gas-fitters, Steamfitters and Steam-fitters’ Helpers. For convenience the United Association of Plumbers, Gas-fitters, Steam-fitters and Steam-fitters’ Helpers will hereafter be referred to as the “United Association/'’ and the International Association of Steam-fitters will be referred to as the “International Association.” On April 20, 1911, a large two-story building was being erected for the use of the Hygienic Ice Company, facing west on South Park avenue, which runs north and south. Just north of Park avenue, running east and west, is Twenty-sixth street, which is occupied, in part, by the tracks of the Illinois Central Railroad Company. The building being constructed had two stories or two floors. On the lower floor there was a large room about 65 by 150 feet, and a boiler room and an engine room, from which a stairway led to the second floor.' The second or upper floor of the building- was substantially one. large room. At the time of the occurrences out of which this prosecution grows the walls of the building were up, floors laid, and the doors and some of the windows were in place. On April 20, 1911, there were at work upon the two floors of this building about thirty steam-fitters and steam-fitters’ helpers, who were engaged in installing steam pipes on the two floors of this building. There were also a few other workmen of other trades employed at the time on the building, making a total of some forty workmen who were employed in completing the building. The steam-fitters employed upon this building at the time in question were members of the International Association. Joseph Kane, who is jointly indicted with plaintiffs in error, had been a member of the International Association for many years, but on April 18, two days before the alleged assault was committed, he had left the International Association and become a member of the United Association and at once became a business agent for the United Association, acting jointly in that capacity with Maurice (or Moss) Enright, who had been a business agent of the United Association for some time previous. The headquarters of the United Association were in the Bush Temple building, and a man by the name of Burke was the secretary of the general association of the United Association. The evidence shows that the United Association was seeking to absorb the membership of the International Association, and that for this purpose Burke, as secretary, had sent out a communication to all of the steam-fitters advising them to desert the International Association (which is also called the old association) and join the new one, known as the United Association. It is a fair and reasonable inference from the proven facts that the “business agency” of the United Association to which Kane was appointed immediately upon his desertion of the International Association was given him, in part, as a reward for his desertion of the International and going over to the United Association, and with the expectation that his former connection with the International Association and acquaintance among the membership of that organization would make him a useful man in proselyting members from the International Association. About ten o’clock in the forenoon of April 20, 1911, three or four men, led by Joseph Kane, appeared on the lower floor of the Hygienic ice plant. Kane spoke to some of his old associates and informed them that he was now the business agent of the United Association. Kane and his associates remained in the building a minute or two, and then either went to- the outer door or stepped out of the door and in a few seconds re-appeared on the lower floor with some fifteen or twenty other men. There is no dispute as to the presence of all of the plaintiffs in error on this occasion except as to Arthur O’Connor. The evidence shows that a large portion of the men who appeared in this building were armed with pistols. Their purpose in going there armed with revolvers is made manifest by what was done and said. Pistols were displayed and the members of the International Association were commanded to take off their overalls, cease work and go down and obtain cards of membership in the United Association and then return to their work. The men who were working on the lower floor went up-stairs, where they were followed by the attacking party. When the men were all gotten together on the upper floor they were lined up by the command of Kane and his associates and then commanded to take off their overalls and go down and get cards from the United Association. Naturally, in the excitement consequent upon a sudden attack of-this character, the witnesses, honestly, no doubt, differ in describing the occurrences that took place. There is, however, a general agreement among the witnesses that the plaintiffs in error and their associates, through threats of violence and by the presentation of drawn revolvers, sought to compel the members of the International Association to cease work, take off their overalls and go down and join the United Association, threatening that unless this demand was complied with they would shoot or kill the members of the International Association. Morgan H. Bell, upon whom the alleged assault to murder was committed, at the time of the attack was at work on the lower floor. The evidence shows that someone of the attacking party, approaching Bell and Lefevre, said, “Get that big son-of-a-b-.” The men walked up to Bell, and plaintiff in error Storgaard pulled a revolver partly out of his pocket, presented the point at Bell and told him to take off his overalls or “they would bore a hole through him.” Bell succeeded in getting away at that time and went up-stairs, followed by two of his pursuers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 N.E. 643, 253 Ill. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-connors-ill-1912.