People v. Flynn

135 N.E. 101, 302 Ill. 549
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1922
DocketNo. 14428
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 135 N.E. 101 (People v. Flynn) 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. Flynn, 135 N.E. 101, 302 Ill. 549 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court :

Plaintiff in error was indicted at the September term, 1919, by the grand jury of Warren county for larceny, and on trial before a jury was convicted and thereafter sentenced on the verdict of guilty under the charge of the indictment, and the case has been brought here for review by writ of error.

The evidence shows that during October, 1918, plaintiff in error was living in Monmouth, in said county, and was acquainted with Hugh Clayton. A short time before the alleged crime, Ora Perry, a blacksmith at Monmouth, accompanied by plaintiff in error, had left an automobile owned by Perry at LaHarpe, in Hancock county, Illinois, and Perry had arranged with plaintiff in error to go back to LaHarpe by train and get the car and run it to Monmouth. Clayton having learned that the plaintiff in error was going to LaHarpe, desired to go along, with a view of going from there to consult his attorney at Carthage, also in Hancock county. Upon arriving at LaHarpe the condition of the roads was such that the plaintiff in error thought it inadvisable to go to Carthage, and Clayton agreed. They then started back toward Monmouth, Flynn driving the car, the afternoon of the same day, leaving LaHarpe about four o’clock and arriving at Terre Haute, in Henderson county, Illinois, about five o’clock P. M. After getting supper they started on to Monmouth, going in a northerly direction out of Terre Haute, passing what is known as the Chandler farm and there turning east. The Chandler property was rented by Ed Sparrow. After passing Sparrow’s place after dusk it was ascertained that they needed water for the car, and Clayton went back and brought some from the Sparrow place. They drove on east, stopping at several farm houses on account of trouble with the car, until they finally arrived at the residence of William Bricher, where, with the permission of Bricher, they stayed all night in his barn. Apparently Clayton was introduced by plaintiff in error to Bricher next morning as being a man named Smith, from Galesburg. While they were at Bricker’s a garage man from Raritan was called on the telephone, who came out and fixed the car. Bricker and the garage man testified that while working on the car they looked all through it and saw nothing of a harness. Flynn and Clayton started for Monmouth, where they arrived in the afternoon of that same day. On the night that the plaintiff in error and Clayton drove in the car by the Sparrow place the evidence tends to show that a set of double harness disappeared from Sparrow’s barn, and this same harness, about the middle of November following, was traded or sold by the plaintiff -in error to Archie Murphy, who in turn sold the same to John Sheridan about February 20, 1919, and the same day was found in Sheridan’s possession by the sheriff of Warren county and kept in Sheridan’s custody until the following September, when it was taken into the custody of the officers for the trial.

The evidence on the part of plaintiff in error was to the effect that he knew nothing of the larceny of the harness, but, on the contrary, he had purchased it from some horse traders in the tie-yards at Monmouth in October or November, 1918; that he had no knowledge that it had been stolen until the- latter part of January, 1919, when Clayton informed him that he and his brother had stolen the harness and traded it to the horse traders; that this information came to him after he had disposed of the harness. The testimony of Clayton on this trial was to the effect that the harness was stolen by himself and plaintiff in error on the night they drove from LaHarpe by Sparrow’s place in the car; that before arriving at the Bricher house that night plaintiff in error hid the harness in a cornfield, and that two or three days thereafter plaintiff in error and Clayton drove out from Monmouth to the cornfield and secured the harness and brought it to Monmouth.

Plaintiff in error’s testimony that he purchased the harness from horse traders was corroborated by his son, James Flynn, a fourteen-year-old boy, who testified that his father brought the harness, or one that looked like it, to their home on the day that he testified he bought it from horse traders, and by Perry, who testified that on a certain day in November the horse traders, whom he identified as did plaintiff in error, were at his place of business, and that he heard them talking with Flynn about his trading a blind horse to them for the harness. Two women, Mrs. Anastasia Dailey, a married sister of plaintiff in error, and Miss Elizabeth Harvey, a neighbor, testified that they were present in January when Clayton told Flynn that the harness was stolen by him (Clayton) and his brother and had been sold to the horse traders. The evidence tended to show that Clayton for some reason had expressed very bitter feelings against plaintiff in error; that he had been in the penitentiary and was out on parole at the time of the trial.

We find in the record no positive testimony corroborating Clayton as to plaintiff in error having anything to do with stealing the harness from Sparrow’s farm. His counsel argue strenuously that the evidence against plaintiff in error does not justify his conviction. It is clear that Clayton’s testimony as to the guilt of plaintiff in error is not directly corroborated in any way by any other testimony in the record and that his testimony is in conflict with the testimony of Mrs. Dailey, Miss Harvey and that of plaintiff in error himself. In view of our conclusion on other branches of this case we do not deem it necessary to pass directly on the question of the weight of the evidence, except to say that the testimony as to the guilt of plaintiff in error is of such a character that the ruling on the legal questions involved in the trial of the case should have been accurate.

The indictment under which plaintiff in error was convicted by its first count charged, in part, as follows: “One James Flynn, whose name to said grand jurors is otherwise unknown, late of the county of Warren, in the State of Illinois aforesaid, one set of double harness of the value of forty dollars, ($40,) the personal goods and property of Ed Sparrow, in the said county of Henderson being found, did then and there feloniously steal, take and carry away, arid did then feloniously carry said set of double harness so stolen as aforesaid, into the said county of Warren and State of Illinois, where the same was thereafter found, all contrary to the form of the statute,” etc. The other two counts of the indictment, in substantially the same language, charged the plaintiff in error with stealing, in the county of Henderson, a set of double harness and bringing the same feloniously into Warren county, and that the said set of double work-harness was found in said Warren county, etc.

It is argued by counsel for plaintiff in error that the indictment is faulty in charging that the harness was stolen in the county of Henderson while the indictment was found in the county of Warren. They concede that under section 399 of the Criminal Code, (1 Hurd’s Stat. 1921, p. 1149,) where property is stolen in one county and carried into another the guilty person may be indicted, tried and convicted in the county into or through which the property may have passed or where the same may be found, but they argue that this indictment alleges only that the crime of larceny was committed in Henderson county and not in Warren county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 N.E. 101, 302 Ill. 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-flynn-ill-1922.