People v. Fryer

266 Ill. 216
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 266 Ill. 216 (People v. Fryer) 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. Fryer, 266 Ill. 216 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error, Sam Fryer, was convicted upon an indictment charging him with receiving for his own gain and to prevent the owners from again possessing their property, stolen property knowing it to have been stolen. The property alleged to have been stolen consisted of thirty-two pocket knives, the goods and chattels of the Reid Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Illinois, and one hundred and fifty pocket knives, six razors, two' safety razors, four Ingersoll watches, two Perfection watches, three pairs of scissors, and various articles ,of table cutlery and other table ware, the goods and property of Hugh H. Parks.

It is contended that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. The only evidence of the defendant’s guilt consists of the testimony of Silas Bender, the thief who stole the goods, and the fact that two Ingersoll watches, one Perfection watch and two razors were found in the possession of the plaintiff in error in his second-hand store about a month after the larceniés were committed. They were all articles of a character which the plaintiff in error frequently bought and sold in his business and there was no satisfactory identification of the razors or the Ingersoll watches. There were no marks upon them by which they could be distinguished from other articles of the same kind. The manufacturer’s numbers upon the watches were unknown. Parks identified the Perfection watch as one of those stolen from his store, by the fact that it was worn a little around the edge. The plaintiff in error testified that he bought this watch, not of Bender but of another person, about a week before he was arrested. He denied all of Bender’s testimony in regard to the purchase or receipt of these goods, although he admitted that he had had four separate transactions with Bender and had bought of him a second-hand watch and revolver, a new pair of rubber boots, a new sweater coat and a new pair of shoes within two or three months before the larcenies involved in this case. He proved a good reputation for honesty in Rock Island, where he had lived for nine years, though two witnesses testified that his reputation for honesty and as a law abiding citizen in Muscatine, Iowa, where he had lived for twenty-five years previously, was bad. There was also evidence tending to contradict in some particulars Bender’s version of the circumstances of his transaction with the plaintiff in error. The testimony was conflicting and the conviction rests substantially on the testimony of Bender, the thief. While testimony coming from such a source may be sufficient* even though contradicted in some particulars and denied by the defendant, to sustain a conviction, the trial in such case should be conducted without serious error, and in this case such errors occurred on the trial as require the submission of the case to another jury.

There was no legal evidence that the Reid Company was a corporation, as alleged in the indictment. Over the objection of the plaintiff in error two witnesses were allowed to state that the Reid Company was a • corporation, but this was not competent. One of these- witnesses testified that he was a member of the company, and the other that he was in the employ of the company as store manager and clerk and dressed the display windows. In criminal cases the statute provides that user shall be prima facie evidence of the legal existence of a corporation, but in this case no proof of user of corporate franchises was shown.

About a.month after the larcenies alleged were committed a search warrant was issued on the complaint of H. H. Parks to search the store of the plaintiff in error for the goods stolen from Parks, which was executed and returned, the return stating that the officer had found “the following articles described in said writ: One razor marked ‘Triumph/ ‘Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co. 1914, made in Germany/ one Ingersoll Yankee $1 watch and one Perfection watch.” The warrant and return were improperly introduced in evidence over the plaintiff in error’s objection. These documents were not legal evidence of any fact in the case. It was competent to< prove by the officers what they found and to identify by competent evidence the articles as those stolen. The warrant recites that the articles named in it were feloniously stolen, and the return, that the articles found were those described in the writ. Neither statement was evidence against the plaintiff in error of its correctness, yet they were submitted to the jury as tending to prove,the issue.

In connection with the warrant the officer was asked what he could say as to the thoroughness of the search he made and if he made a careful search of each and every part of the premises for articles mentioned in the warrant, and answered that he did not malee a very good search. It was competent to prove that the premises were searched, their condition, what was done in connection with the search and what was found, but the opinion of the officer as to the thoroughness of the search was not competent. It- was not proper as the basis for an inference of what might have been discovered by a more thorough search.

The cross-examination of the plaintiff in error was unfair. He was asked, and required to answer, whether he kept a record of any of the guns he sold and if he knew the law required him to keep such record, and whether he knew of the city ordinances which required him to make a record of all the property he bought, and he answered to all that he did not. Objections were sustained to the following questions: “Did you ever buy any stolen property?” “Did you buy some stolen corn from one Bud Howell last summer ?” “When you lived in Muscatine were you ever arrested?” “Were you ever convicted of any misdemeanor or crime while you lived in Muscatine?” “Were you charged and convicted for assaulting a mate on one of- the steamboats while you were in Muscatine?” These questions were all incompetent, and though objections were sustained to them and the defendant was not required to answer them, they were prejudicial. The only object in asking them was to induce the jury -to believe that the defendant was guilty of other crimes than that for which he was on trial and unfairly to prejudice him before 'the jury.

The second instruction given on behalf of the People is objected to. It referred to the weight to be given to the testimony of the defendant and is in substance the same as the instruction given in Hirschman v. People, 101 Ill. 568, which has been approved in many subsequent cases, some of which are cited in People v. Harrison, 261 Ill. 517.

The fourth instruction given at the instance of the prosecution directed a verdict. It was based upon the hypothesis, among others, that the defendant received “the property mentioned in the third count of the indictment, or any part thereof, and that the said property was the property of Hugh H. Parks and the Reid Company, or of either of said persons.” None of the property was owned jointly by Parks and the Reid Company. There was no legal evidence of the incorporation of the Reid Company, and therefore no conviction could be based upon the receipt of property alleged to be that of the Reid Company.

It is insisted that this instruction, even if erroneous, was not harmful, because the verdict of the jury was based only upon the receipt of Parks’ property.

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266 Ill. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fryer-ill-1914.