People v. Knight

139 N.E. 47, 308 Ill. 182
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1923
DocketNo. 14865
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 139 N.E. 47 (People v. Knight) 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. Knight, 139 N.E. 47, 308 Ill. 182 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Henry Knight, Edward Knight, John Smith and Ralph Lazelle were indicted by the grand jury of Edgar county, at the February term, 1922, for the larceny of one steer of' the value of $75, the property of Scott Baker. Henry Knight was tried and convicted under the indictment at the June term of the Edgar county circuit court, 1922, and has sued out this writ of error to review the judgment.

As the principal ground urged by defendant for a reversal of the judgment is that the verdict and judgment were not warranted by the testimony, it will be necessary to refer to the substance of the evidence.

Henry Knight (who will hereafter be referred to as defendant) was a farmer operating a farm of 120 acres owned by him and on which he lived. He is a widower with two children, — a daughter about fourteen years old, and a son, Edward, who, as we understand, was older than the daughter but was a minor. They lived with their father on the farm. He also had a hand employed, John Smith, and Ralph Lazelle seems to have been living with him at the time the alleged larceny was committed. Scott Baker is a farmer residing about four or four and one-half miles west of defendant and on the same public road. Baker had twenty steers on his farm, and on the morning of November 23, 1921, he discovered one of the steers was gone. He also discovered a gap was opened in the fence along the public road and that horse-tracks had • gone in and out of the gap, and there were tracks of a steer leading from the pasture through the gap into the public road. The horse-tracks had a peculiar dip in the toe in front unlike ordinary horse-tracks. Baker testified he followed the horse and steer-tracks east toward defendant’s farm, to the house of Ben Dwyer, which was a mile and a fraction west of defendant’s house. He there called Sol Berry, a constable and deputy sheriff, who lived between one and two miles from Dwyer’s. From Dwyer’s, Berry and Baker followed the horse and steer-tracks to the defendant’s house, where they arrived at about seven o’clock in the morning. The tracks went through the gate into the barn lot at defendant’s house. The road runs east and west on the north side of defendant’s barn. They found the steer in a shed on the south side of the barn. Berry opened the door and the steer came out. They let him out into the road and the steer went back to Baker’s farm. He had the appearance of having been heated up, had partly cooled off but was still damp. The steer weighed over 1000 pounds and was worth $75. Witness compared the tracks of the horse from his farm to defendant’s house with tracks made by a horse of defendant which they found in his barn and they were exactly the same. He described the peculiarity of the tracks which made them different from the ordinary horse-tracks. He did not measure the tracks of defendant’s horse with a rule but did with a pencil, and the tracks compared perfectly with those he had followed from his farm to defendant’s house. The horse of defendant which was found in the barn had been heated up during the night and was still damp.

Sol Berry testified he joined Baker at Dwyer’s house and he and Baker followed the horse and steer-tracks to where they went into defendant’s barnyard. He described the peculiarity of the horse-tracks which made them different from ordinary horse-tracks. When they arrived at defendant’s house they did not see him but found the steer in a shed bn the south side of the barn. When the witness opened the door of the shed the steer ran out, and when the gate from the barn lot to the road was opened the steer went out into the road and went directly to Baker’s farm. The steer looked like he had been driven pretty hard and was “frosty like.” Witness and Baker went down the road a fourth of a mile where they met Erwin Winn and Dwyer. They talked about the steer, how he looked, and figured he had been stolen. Baker and witness then went back to defendant’s house. They found him back of his house three or four hundred feet, fixing a fence, told him it was thought the steer had been stolen, and they would like to compare his horse’s tracks with the tracks that appeared to have followed the steer from Baker’s farm. Defendant said he thought there was no use of that, and witness told him thé steer had been stolen and defendant had better let them have the horse to examine his tracks, and defendant consented to do so. Defendant went in the barn, saddled the horse and took it out. It was the only horse then in the barn, his other horses being out in the pasture. The saddle was still wet. There was a cattle-whip lying on the saddle. Defendant rode the horse down the road about a mile and a half and back again. Witness measured both sets of tracks, and those made by the horse ridden by defendant and those by the horse which was followed from Baker’s farm to defendant’s house were just the same. Witness described the peculiarity of the tracks and said he had never seen any other hoof like it.

Erwin Winn testified he was present when the horse-tracks were measured, and the tracks made by the horse of defendant and those that appeared to have followed the steer from Baker’s farm were the same. He described the peculiarity of the tracks which distinguished them from ordinary horse-tracks.

Ben Dwyer testified he sold the horse to defendant, and that the tracks of defendant’s horse and the tracks that followed the steer from Baker’s farm were just the same. He described the peculiarity of the tracks of the horse he sold to defendant which made them different from the ordinary horse-tracks.

The foregoing, in brief, is the substance of the People’s testimony.

Henry Knight testified in his own behalf that he was a deputy sheriff for his township and had been assessor for six years. He was at home the night of November 22, 1921, and that his son, daughter, Smith and Lazelle were there. He did not go away from his house during the evening. His son, Smith and Lazelle left the house on horseback, riding the defendant’s horses, soon after supper. One of them, — as we understand it, Smith, — rode the horse which made the peculiar tracks. Charles Roberts, Ed Watkins and Ben Fennell came to his house early in the evening and they- played rook. His son, Smith and Lazelle returned about nine o’clock. All joined in the game of rook and played until 12 :oo or 12:3o, when Roberts, Fennell and Watkins went home and witness and the other three boys played until about 2:3o, when they went to bed. He got up about daylight the next morning, made a fire and went to the barn. The horse that made the peculiar tracks was in the barn, had been ridden but was not particularly warm. He went back to his house, and while eating breakfast he saw his cattle some distance down the road in the highway and with them was a steer. He called his cattle up to the barn and the steer came with them. He drove the cows in the lot and then into the back lot and left the steer in the barn lot. The steer jumped the fence and got in with the cows. He drove them all back to the barn lot and put the steer in what he referred to as the “jack pen,” which he said was the only place he could keep him. That was about seven o’clock in the morning, and he then went to fix his fence along the road where the cattle had broken through. He didn’t see Baker and Berry when they came and got the steer. He saw them when they came back and wanted the horse to make tracks in the road.

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Bluebook (online)
139 N.E. 47, 308 Ill. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-knight-ill-1923.