People v. Lloyd

121 N.E.2d 329, 3 Ill. App. 2d 257
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 10, 1954
DocketGen. 10,758
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 121 N.E.2d 329 (People v. Lloyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Lloyd, 121 N.E.2d 329, 3 Ill. App. 2d 257 (Ill. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

Patricia Ann Wilson, on September 15, 1953, was an employee of the William G. Burns Detective Agency and by that agency assigned to investigate possible bookmaking operations in Lee county, Illinois. On September 21, 1953, Miss Wilson arrived in Dixon and subsequently went to Peter Piper’s Cocktail Lounge and there became acquainted with Ed Piper. Mr. Piper introduced her to a man by the name of Tony who, on September 27, 1953, introduced her to the defendant in this proceeding, Frank Lloyd. The following afternoon Miss Wilson and Lloyd were together and had a few drinks, and that evening Miss Wilson met Lloyd again at Piper’s Cocktail Lounge in Dixon where Lloyd introduced her to some of his friends and they, with Lloyd and Miss Wilson, drove to Sterling, returning to Dixon about two o’clock, a. m., on September 29, 1953. On the evening of October 2, 1953, Detective Hartsell, also of the Burns Agency, met Miss Wilson, gave her a $20 bill, asked her to mémorize the serial number, and arranged with her to deliver it to Lloyd that evening. About seven o’clock that evening Miss Wilson phoned Lloyd to meet her at Peter Piper’s Cocktail Lounge. She arrived there about nine o’clock. Another investigator of the Burns Agency, Luke P. Colleran, accom panied by Henry Mortensen, a special deputy sheriff of Lee county, arrived at the Piper Tavern about thirty minutes after Miss Wilson’s arrival. Lloyd came in Piper’s Lounge fifty minutes later, and he was accompanied by a man and a woman. Miss Wilson was seated at the west end of a long booth on the north side of the tavern, and Lloyd came over to the booth where she was seated.

Upon the trial of this case, Miss Wilson testified to the foregoing and was then asked by the assistant state’s attorney: “Did Prank Lloyd have a conversation with you?” and the witness answered: “He said ‘Good evening,’ introduced the people, sat down on my left and asked me what horse I had. I handed him the piece of paper I had in my purse and the $20 bill. The race and horse were written on the paper. He examined it, folded it up and put it in his inside left hand pocket.” The paper which witness handed Lloyd was a letterhead of the Natchusa Hotel in Dixon upon which was written “7th Race Golden Trend Sat.”

Miss Wilson further testified that “Golden Trend” was a horse which was running at Hawthorne, located at Cicero, Illinois. Within a few minutes after Lloyd had received this paper and money from Miss Wilson, Colleran and Mortensen came over to the booth where they were seated. Lloyd was placed under arrest, and Mortensen asked Lloyd for the paper and money which he had just received from Miss Wilson and he gave them to the officer, and upon the trial of this case they were offered and admitted in evidence.

On October 5,1953, the state’s attorney of Lee county filed in the county court of that county an Information by which he informed the court that on October 2, 1953, the said Prank Lloyd “at and within the County of Lee and State of Illinois as aforesaid, did wilfully and wrongfully keep a certain book and instrument known as a book within the City of Dixon, County of Lee and State of Illinois, said book then and there being kept for the purpose of registering bets and wagers upon the result and test of speed of a beast, to-wit, a horse, and did receive and accept from one Patty Wilson the sum of $20.00 as a wager upon the result and test of speed of a beast, to-wit, a horse, contrary to the form of the Statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the same People of the State of Illinois.”

To this Information the defendant entered a plea of not guilty; a trial was had, and the jury returned its verdict finding “the defendant guilty of book-making in manner and form as charged in the Information” and fixed his punishment at imprisonment in the county jail of Lee county for a term of 120 days and imposing a fine of $2,000. Upon this verdict an appropriate judgment was rendered after the court had denied defendant’s motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial. To reverse this judgment the defendant, Prank Lloyd, brings the record to this court for review by a writ or error.

Counsel for plaintiff in error insists that the statute under which plaintiff in error was convicted was intended to reach the professional gambler who keeps a book for registering bets and wagers on horse races; that the book is his equipment and stock in trade in the pursuit of his business and that if one registers a single bet on a piece of paper and there is no repetition of such an entry or registration, one cannot be said to be a bookmaker within the provisions of the statute. Counsel for the People contend that the taking of a single bet, with a record of the name of the horse and the track, the date of the race and amount bet, constitutes the offense of bookmaking within the meaning of our statute; that the evidence shows that plaintiff in error recorded or registered a $20 bet on behalf of Miss Wilson on a horse named “Golden Trend” which was running on Saturday, October 3, 1953, at the race track at Hawthorne, Cicero, Illinois, and that, therefore, the jury were warranted in returning the verdict it did and that the court properly rendered judgment on that verdict.

Plaintiff in error did not testify and offered no evidence in his own behalf. The substance of the testimony of Miss Wilson has been heretofore set out. The other witnesses who testified were Charles H. Eedebaugh, acting postmaster of Dixon and former sheriff, who testified that while he was sheriff he had received complaints about bookmaking and that he employed the Burns Detective Agency to assist him in making an investigation and that Miss Wilson of that agency reported to him and on September 30, 1953, his duties ended as sheriff and he was succeeded by John Stouffer.

John Stouffer testified that he succeeded Charles H. Redebaugh as sheriff of Lee county; that Henry Mortensen was his deputy and at his direction Mortensen assisted Luke P. Colleran of the Burns Detective Agency in its investigation of bookmaking in Lee county. This witness also testified that following the arrest of plaintiff in error he was taken to the jail and searched and upon his person was $3,035.91, which was subsequently returned to him when he gave bond for his appearance. Henry Mortensen and Luke P. Colleran were the only other witnesses who testified on behalf of the People. These gentlemen testified that they were not acquainted with plaintiff in error, and the first time Mortensen had even seen him was on October 2, 1953, at Piper’s Cocktail Lounge. Both testified that they arrived at the tavern after Miss Wilson but before Lloyd came in. They corroborated Miss Wilson’s testimony as to the arrival of plaintiff in error at the tavern accompanied by a lady and a gentleman; that upon his arrival, Lloyd and his companions walked over to the booth where Miss Wilson was seated; that these witnesses observed Miss Wilson take a piece of paper out of her purse and hand it to Lloyd who opened the paper, took a bill out of it, and then put the bill and paper in his pocket. A couple of minutes later Colleran and Mortensen went over to the table where Miss Wilson and Lloyd and his friends were seated and Mortensen made himself known to Lloyd and placed him under arrest and took him to the county jail.

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Related

People v. Dugan
485 N.E.2d 315 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1985)
People v. Dugan
466 N.E.2d 687 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 N.E.2d 329, 3 Ill. App. 2d 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lloyd-illappct-1954.