People v. Kemming

142 N.E. 529, 311 Ill. 50
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1924
DocketNo. 15733
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 N.E. 529 (People v. Kemming) 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. Kemming, 142 N.E. 529, 311 Ill. 50 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, who is about twenty-two years of age and a resident of Chicago, was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county upon an indictment charging him with manslaughter. Motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled and he was sentenced on the verdict to an indeterminate period in the penitentiary. He has sued out this writ of error to reverse the judgment.

The assault mentioned in the indictment was made on December 13, 1922, with an automobile, upon the body of Anna Mclnerney, a child almost eleven years of age, who died very shortly after being struck by the car.

Some of the facts developed upon the trial were, that on Wednesday afternoon between 5:00 and 5:15 o’clock, Anna Mclnerney, while walking west across Crawford avenue on the south side of Thomas street, at the intersection of Crawford avenue and Thomas street, was struck by a Packard touring car being driven north on Crawford avenue. Crawford avenue runs north and south and Thomas street east and west. On Crawford avenue there are two street car tracks, one used for north-bound and the other for south-bound traffic. That avenue is paved with asphalt except between the car tracks, which space is paved with brick. Thomas street is paved with asphalt. The paved portion of that street is about thirty feet wide. There is a ten-foot vacant space or grass plot on each side of the street between the curb and sidewalk, and the sidewalks are six feet wide, making the width of Thomas street between the building lines on either side of the street about sixty-two feet. On the northeast corner of the intersection of said streets is a drug store, and immediately joining that on the north is an Atlantic and Pacific store. These two stores occupy about thirty-five feet on Crawford avenue north of the northeast corner of the intersection. Over the Atlantic and Pacific store was a doctor’s office. Near the northeast corner of the intersection are other stores, and residences are in the neighborhood. On the southeast corner of the streets, near where the accident occurred, is an electric light. After being struck by the touring car the body of the child was found on the north-bound car track a little distance north of the south crosswalk of the intersection.

The accident was observed by three or four witnesses, and from their testimony it appears the car that struck the child proceeded north across Thomas street and stopped at the east curb on Crawford avenue, about in front of the Atlantic and Pacific store, which was shown to be some eighty feet from the point of impact. One of the witnesses, Miller, who was on the northeast corner of the streets, heard a crash and saw the little girl lying on the car track. He ran and picked her up and carried her toward the doctor’s office over the Atlantic and Pacific store. When half way up the stairway he was told the doctor was out. He came back down, got into the re,ar seat of the touring car standing at the curb, which the State contends was the car of plaintiff in error, and was driven to St. Anne’s Hospital, where witness was helped into the hospital by the driver of the car. Witness carried the little girl up to the operat-' ing room of the hospital. The driver of the touring car then disappeared. It further appears that on the following Sunday evening, December 17, plaintiff in error, with Albert Fisher and a girl friend of Fisher’s, drove into a Standard Oil filling-station at Parkside and Chicago avenues. The car being driven by plaintiff in error was an old-type Packard, and while there he was taken into custody by officer Bazarek, and they drove to the Austin police station, where plaintiff in error was questioned by the police. Three of the witnesses to the accident were brought to the police station, and they identified plaintiff in error as the man who drove the car on the evening of the accident at Thomas street and Crawford avenue.

Counsel for plaintiff in error have assigned several errors. The most important of these are, that the court erred in permitting, over objection, a witness named Parker to answer a hypothetical question propounded, and in answer thereto give his opinion as an expert as to the speed of the car at the time of the accident; that the court erred in permitting officer Bazarek to testify as to what the mother of plaintiff in error said to the officer, not in the presence of plaintiff in error; that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the weight of the evidence.

The defendant denied he was the driver of the car which caused the death of the child, and proved by several employees at the place he worked, which was about eight miles from the place of the accident, that he worked there until 5 :3o P. M. the day of the accident, and also that his old model Packard car was not in running order that day and could not be driven. According to the testimony of officer Bazarek, who arrested plaintiff in error, the latter’s testimony on the trial was practically the same as the story told by him at the time of his arrest, at which time he denied having an automobile accident on December 13 at Thomas street and Crawford avenue and stated he was at work for the Donnelly Corporation at the time. The State produced three witnesses who saw the accident. They had never seen plaintiff in error before that time, but they identified him as the man who after the accident drove the Packard car up to the curb in front of the Atlantic and Pacific store and also drove the car when the little girl was taken to the hospital. The three eye-witnesses for the State who identified plaintiff in error were Miller, Cronin and Ryan. Miller testified he was on the northeast corner of Thomas street and Crawford avenue; that he heard a crash, turned around and saw a little girl lying on the street car track and ran out and picked her up. He saw the automobile, after it hit the little girl, skidding along with the brakes on, and the brakes were squeaking. He said it was an old, large-size touring car, but he didn’t know the model or make. He did not see the car before the accident and did not see the car stop. When he heard the brakes squeaking the car had gone past Thomas street. It was this car he rode in to the hospital. Cronin testified that he was on the west side of Crawford avenue, about eighty-five feet south of Thomas street. He heard glass break, saw the car, and it kept going about eighty feet after it hit the girl and stopped on the east side of Crawford avenue, right in front of the doctor’s office. He heard the squeak of brakes after the car hit the girl but did not see the car before he heard the glass break. Witness went over and stood by the car after it stopped. It was an old-time Packard car. Saw no broken glass on the car. Saw the driver. Witness opened the door of the car to let Miller in with the little girl. Ryan, a boy fourteen years old, testified that he was on the northeast corner of the intersection and heard the crash of glass and looked and saw the back of a machine passing over a little girl. The wheels did not run over her at all. After the car hit the girl it went about fifty feet on the car tracks and then turned in to the curb. Never saw the car till after the girl was struck. Heard the squeaking of brakes. The car was an old model Packard car and had the lights on as it stood at the curb north of the drug store. Saw the driver get out of the car and saw Miller get into the car with the little girl.

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Related

The People v. Gentile
158 N.E. 222 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
142 N.E. 529, 311 Ill. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kemming-ill-1924.