People v. Jennings

96 N.E. 1077, 252 Ill. 534
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by140 cases

This text of 96 N.E. 1077 (People v. Jennings) 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. Jennings, 96 N.E. 1077, 252 Ill. 534 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, Thomas Jennings, was found guilty in the criminal.court of Cook county of the murder of Clarence B. Hiller, the jury fixing the penalty at death and judgment being entered on the verdict February i, 1911. This writ of error is sued out to review the record in that case.

The errors assigned are in reference to two questions: First, the introduction of evidence of other distinct offenses alleged to have been committed by plaintiff in error; and second, the admission of evidence as to finger prints.

At the time of the murder, September 19, 1910, Clarence B. Hiller, with his wife and four children, lived in a two-stóry frame house facing north on West One Hundred and Fourth street, just east of Waldon parkway, in Chicago. Immediately west of Waldon parkway, which runs north and south, and separated from the street by a wire fence, are the suburban tracks of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company. East of the Hiller house was a vacant lot, and east of that was the residence of a family named Pickens. South of the Hiller house was a vacant space, beyond which were two houses facing west on Waldon parkway, the southern one being occupied by the McNabb family. The north or front door of the Hiller house leads into a hallway on the east side of the house, and from the south end or rear of this hallway a stairway leads up to the second floor. The south bed-room nearest the head of the stairs was occupied by the daughter Florence, thirteen years of age. Then came the bed-room of the daughter Clarice, fifteen years of age, and at the north or front end of the second floor was a bed-room occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Hiller and the two younger children. At the head of the stairs, near the door leading to Florence’s room, a gas light was kept burning at night. Shortly after two o’clock on Monday morning of September 19, 1910, Mrs. Hiller was awakened and noticed that this light was out. She called her husband’s attention to the fact and he went in his night clothes to the head of the stairway, where he encountered an intruder, with whom he grappled, and in the struggle both fell to the foot of the stairway, where Hiller was shot twice, dying in a few moments. Just a little before the shooting the daughter Clarice had seen the form of a man at her doorway holding a lighted match by his body but not so as to show his face. As it was the practice of her father to get up and see if the children were all right in the night she was not frightened. The form disappeared from her doorway and she heard footsteps shuffling toward the room of her sister Florence, after which she heard a little sound made by Florence. She next heard her father going through the hallway. Then came the struggle and the shooting. Florence was awakened by somebody on her bed whom she supposed was her little brother, and she asked, “Is that you Gerald?” No reply being made, she asked, “Who is this ?” and a man’s voice,— not her father’s,—answered, “It is me.” She testified that she tried to scream but was unable to do so; that the man pushed up her nightgown and felt of her bare limbs and body; that he also placed his prickly cheek upon her face and moved about in various ways upon the bed. The stranger then hurried out and met the father. The Pick-ens family were awakened by the screams of Mrs. Hiller and her children, and the father, John C. Pickens, partially dressed and ran to the Hiller house. He reached there at about the same time as his son, Oliver Pickens, and officer Beardsley. The son had been visiting friends on the north side in Chicago and had left the train at the suburban station, about a block away, and was walking towards home when he heard the screams from the Hiller house and ran there, meeting a police officer, Floyd Beardsley, who had also heard the screams and was searching for the cause. They were let in by the daughter Clarice, and found the body of Mr. Hiller lying near the bottom of the stairway, his nightgown saturated with blood. The shooting occurred about 2 :2g A. M. The witnesses who reached the house shortly after, found three revolver cartridges undischarged and two leaden slugs. Neither of the shots fired had lodged in the body of the deceased, one entering the upper part of the left arm and passing out through the shoulder and neck, and the other entering the right breast and passing out through the lung and heart. Shortly thereafter Mrs. Pickens, going up-stairs to get a cover for the body, found particles of sand and gravel on Florence’s bed near the foot.

About three-quarters of a mile east of the Hiller house is Vincennes road, running southerly, with a slight inclination to the west, and which is occupied by a street car line. This street is intersected at One Hundred and Third street by the tracks of the Panhandle railroad, which run southerly, with a slight inclination to the east. The street car line connects with the Chicago City railway system at Seventy-ninth street, and extends in a southerly direction from One Hundred and Third street through Blue Island to Harvey, about eight and a half miles south of One Hundred and Third street. On the west of Vincennes road, at One Hundred and Third street, is a crossing gate. Early in the morning on which the murder occurred, four police officers, who shortly before had gone off duty in that neighborhood, were sitting on a bench just north of the gate, waiting for a north-bound street '^ar. The gate was up, so that the officers were not easily seen by one approaching from the south. About 2 ¡38 A. M., Jennings approached the place from the south. The oébcers spoke to him, and lie continued walking for a few steps with his right hand in his trousers pocket, holding a loaded revolver. They searched him and took the weapon away. They did not know at this time of the murder. ' Jennings was perspiring, and the officers testified that fresh blood appeared at different places on his clothing. About three inches above his left wrist they found a slight wound, fresh and bleeding slightly. Jennings told the policemen that the blood came from a wound on his left little finger, received from falling off the street car at Seventy-ninth street the evening before, when he was on his way to Harvey. Dr. Clement, who examined Jennings about half-past three that morning at the police station, found the wound on the little finger scabbed over and not of recent origin. He also found the wound on the left arm fresh and bleeding, clean cut, with recent Mood coming from it, not coagulated. The doctor testified that it looked like a bullet wound and not like an injury received from falling off a street car. Dr. Springer also examined Jennings, and his testimony, so far as it covered the same ground, was practically to the same effect. It was testified that the holes in the sleeves of th.e shirts, which were introduced in evidence as exhibits, were continuous with this fresh cut in the arm. The officers took Jennings to the station on the street cars, and when examined there, sand was found in his shoes. Jennings, when arrested, first told the officers that he lived at 1244 State street, Chicago, and later 577 Twelfth street; that he left for Harvey about seven or eight o’clock the evening before to visit friends, and that when he started to return from Harvey, about twelve o’clock, not finding a street car, he had walked back to that point.-

In August, 1910, Jennings had been released on parole from the penitentiary a.t Joliet, where he had been sentenced on a charge of burglary. He had been paroled before but had been returned for a violation of the parole.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.E. 1077, 252 Ill. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-jennings-ill-1911.