People v. Hubert

96 N.E. 294, 251 Ill. 514
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 N.E. 294 (People v. Hubert) 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. Hubert, 96 N.E. 294, 251 Ill. 514 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error was indicted, together with John McDaniels and Virgil Houck, for manslaughter. McDaniels was tried separately and convicted. On the first trial of the other two defendants the jury disagreed. A second trial resulted in the acquittal of Houck and a disagreement as to the plaintiff in error. A third trial was had and-the plaintiff in error was found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary. A reversal of the conviction is sought for alleged error committed in overruling the challenge of plaintiff in error to the panel of jurors, in rejecting competent evidence, in instructing the jury and in overruling a motion for a new trial.

The challenge to the array of jurors was based upon the fact that the board of supervisors, at the September meeting, 1910, made a jury list composed of not less than one-tenth of the legal voters of each town in the county, when they were not authorized by law to do so. It is insisted that the county board was not authorized to make this list because the list of 1909 had not been exhausted. The record shows that at the September meeting, 1909, the county board made a jury list in accordance with section 1 of the Jurors act, and that the same thing was done in 1910. The record does not, however, show from which list the jurors were actually drawn, and the challenge to the array was therefore properly overruled.

The homicide on which the indictment was based occurred in Frogtown, a hamlet of Clinton county, on the night of October 17, 1908. The plaintiff in error, whose home was near Carlyle, in Clinton county, was then, and had been for a short time, staying in Frogtown, engaged in performing a contract for hauling logs. He occupied a portion of certain property belonging to G. F. Maibaum, having a frontage of 290 feet on a road forming the north boundary of the premises. On the part of the premises not occupied by the plaintiff in error, and near the road, was a dwelling house occupied by Gustav Spittler, the deceased. In the north-east part of the premises, about seventy yards east of the dwelling house, was a blacksmith shop not used for that purpose. There were bams and other out-buildings and the south part of the premises was enclosed by fencing. The plaintiff in error had seven horses, and used the barns, the enclosed part of the premises except the enclosure of the dwelling house, and the blacksmith shop. McDaniels and Houck were in his employ. They were all unmarried. They used the blacksmith shop in which to do their cooking and slept in the hay-mow of the barn. The plaintiff in error was a vigorous young man of twenty-eight years, about five feet eight inches tall. McDaniels was a small man of about the same age, a cripple, and Houck was a boy of fifteen. Spittler was a strong man, about forty years of age and six feet tall. He and the plaintiff in error were on good terms. He had worked for the plaintiff in error and they had never had any difficulty. About four or five o’clock in the afternoon of the day in question the plaintiff in error, with Henry VanAlst, a neighbor, had gone to Beckemeyer, a village between four and five miles distant. They returned about eight o’clock. While they were gone a difficulty occurred between Spittler and his wife, and their young son summoned McDaniels and Houck, who went to Spittler’s place. While there McDaniels threw a brick at Spittler, hitting him on the head and knocking -him down. McDaniels and Houck then went back past the blacksmith shop, where they stopped and put out the light, and to Jaske’s grocery and saloon, between one hundred and two hundred yards further east. Spittler threatened to shoot McDaniels and Houck, and after they had gone got his gun and fired four shots. Upon his return from Beckemeyer with VanAlst the plaintiff in error was met by McDaniels and Houck, who told him what had occurred. The plaintiff in error went into Jaske’s store and tried to borrow Jaske’s revolver, but the latter refused to lend it because he did not want to get into trouble and be blamed. He did lend the plaintiff in error a small base-ball bat, a torch and a lantern. Several men were in Jaske’s place. One witness testified that the plaintiff in error said, “Let’s go down and get him,” and that “there was no use for a man like that around here.” The plaintiff in error denied saying these things, and insists that he was afraid of Spittler and asked Jaske to go down and see him and “see if he was mad at us or was going to have any trouble with us,” but Jaske refused. He then asked the others if they would go along down the road, and a party of seven or eight went down to Spittler’s house, taking the torch and lantern. The plaintiff in error called two or three times, “Oh, Gus!” but got no response. Water was drawn for the horses from the well close to Spittler’s house and they were turned into the pasture. The party then went over to the shop, where they all went in and sat talking for a few minutes while the plaintiff in error got his supper. There was a noise in the back yard and Houck and McDaniels went out to learn the cause of it. They returned in a few minutes, saying it was a horse rolling. Soon after, VanAlst, who had continued with the plaintiff in error, started to go to his home on the adjoining lot on the east. Near his house he met his wife, who told him that she had seen Spittler sneaking up to> the shop and peeping in at the window on the south side, and it looked as if he was up to some mischief. VanAlst returned and told the others in the shop that Spittler was out back of the shop looking in the window and he thought he had a gun. Four or five feet east of the shop, on the boundary line between that lot and VanAlst’s, was a fence extending, south past the shop. There was also a fence between these two lots coming up from the south, which turned to the west just before reaching a point opposite the south-east corner of the shop and extended past the south-east corner of the shop for five or six feet at a distance of two or three feet from it, leaving a" gap of this width between the fence and the south side of the shop. From the south-west corner of the shop a fence extended west, having a large gate next the shop. Along the south side of the building were piled scrap iron and broken remnants of vehicles. Spittler, when he was seen by Mrs. VanAlst, came around to the back of the shop and looked in the window. He was there when McDaniels and Houck came out and reported the horse rolling. He lay down close to the shop in the weeds, and when they went back he looked into the window several times again. He had something in his hand, which proved to be a piece of a buggy shaft. When VanAlst reported his presence on the south side of the shop, the plaintiff in error, McDaniels, Houck and VanAlst went out of the door on the north side and went around the building, Hubert going east, taking his base-ball bat, and the other three going west. VanAlst was behind, carrying a lantern. McDaniels got the handle of a broken hedge-trimmer, — a piece of wood an inch in diameter and eighteen to twenty inches long and with an iron socket on the end, — Houck a piece of fence paling. They all crawled through the fence where a board was off, back of the gate at the south-west corner of the shop. According to VanAlst, when he first saw Spittler the latter was at the opening of the gap between the fence and the shop-, facing east and trying to go east through that passage. When McDaniels and Houck found him they struck him with their clubs, and while they were doing so the plaintiff in error came around the south-east corner of the shop.

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The People v. Marsh
85 N.E.2d 715 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1949)
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115 N.E. 644 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.E. 294, 251 Ill. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hubert-ill-1911.