People v. Maruda

145 N.E. 696, 314 Ill. 536
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
DocketNo. 16277
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 696 (People v. Maruda) 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. Maruda, 145 N.E. 696, 314 Ill. 536 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Upon the trial On an indictment in the criminal court of Cook county charging Mike Maruda in one count with larceny and in another with receiving stolen goods, he was found guilty of larceny and was sentenced to the penitentiary. He seeks by writ of error to reverse the judgment.

Maruda was a night porter in the retail store of Marshall Field & Co. His wages were $22 a week. He was first employed in August, 1922, and remained in that employment until December, when he quit of his own accord. He was again employed in July, 1923, and remained in that employment until his arrest, in September. His duty was cleaning in the different departments of the store, and his hours of work were from 5:30 in the evening until 2:00 o’clock in the morning. In the evening of September 13 Joseph Lillus, who was an employee of the McGuire & White Detective Agency, assigned to duty regularly in Marshall Field & Co.’s retail store, telephoned to John J. Hopper, another employee' of the detective agency, to come to the store. Nathaniel L. Crawford, who was the superintendent’s assistant in the store, was also summoned there. These three met during the evening in Crawford’s office in the department of the store known as the special service department. Maruda was there, with Hopper and Lillus and another man whose name does not appear. Crawford testified that he found Maruda sitting in his office with Hopper, who told Crawford that the man was under arrest. Crawford asked Maruda what he had been doing, and Maruda said he had taken a couple of dresses, which were at his home. Crawford asked, “How did you get them out?” He said, “I put them in my pocket and wrapped them around my body.” Crawford asked, “Have you got anything more at your house that you have taken?” Maruda answered, “No,” and Crawford said, “Well, Mike, we will have to go out and see whether you have got anything there or not.” Maruda said, “All right; you can come out.” Hopper testified that he asked Maruda if he had any merchandise at his home that was the property of Marshall Field & Co. or property which he had stolen from the stock. Maruda answered that he had; that about a month or two before he had taken two dresses and given them to his wife, and a little later had taken a third dress which his wife wanted, and he had perhaps taken some small articles from different places on the main floor. Hopper then said that they were going to search his home; that he could give them authority to search it or they would get a search warrant in the morning. Maruda said that he wanted them to search his home; that they would find nothing there but his own goods. Crawford, Hopper, Lillus, Maruda and the other man then about midnight went in a taxicab to Maruda’s home, on the second floor of a building at 3201 South Morgan street. Hopper testified that when they entered Mrs. Maruda was sitting on the floor with a quilt and a lot of small merchandise; that they also found there about twenty dresses, the same number of ladies’ bags and pocket bags, razors, opera glasses, shoes, and all sorts of merchandise; that he talked with Maruda while they were at the house and asked him where he got certain articles which Hopper had at the time in his hand, and Maruda said he bought some of the articles on Halsted street, some he stole at the store of Marshall Field & Co., and some he found. Crawford testified that they found there fifty or sixty dresses. The merchandise found at Maruda’s home was gathered up in bundles and taken out in suit-cases, bags and boxes to the taxicab in which the trip from the store •had been made. The parties returned to the store, and after leaving the merchandise inside the Randolph street door of Marshall Field & Co.’s store Maruda was taken to the detective bureau.

At the trial a large quantity of merchandise was produced before the jury, from what source the record does not show. None of it was identified as a part of the articles found at Maruda’s home except ten dresses which Crawford testified that he saw there, and some bags. None of these ten dresses were identified as the property of Marshall Field & Co. All the testimony of Crawford offered on this question was excluded. The State’s attorney was given permission to withdraw the witness for a moment. He left the witness stand and the court room and was not further examined on this question. In regard to the bags referred to above, Crawford testified that he found them in a trunk and in a bureau in Maruda’s home and asked him whose they were, and he said they were Marshall Field’s. Hopper testified, on cross-examination, that he could pick out three articles in the court room that he saw at Maruda’s that night: “A traveler’s watch, one of those bags or a bag similar to those, and two pairs of ladies’ white silk hose with a sort of a brownish tint at the heel.” The watch was not included in the indictment, the bag was only a bag similar to those in court, and none of the articles were identified as the property of Marshall Field & Co. Hopper testified that he left all the merchandise inside the Randolph street door of Marshall Field & Co.’s store and did not follow it beyond that point. There is no evidence in the record as to what became of the goods so left at the store and no evidence that they were the same goods produced at the trial.

The State introduced evidence to prove the ownership of Marshall Field & Co. of some of the articles produced on the trial. Mrs. Ryan, a saleswoman in the moderately7 priced dress section, identified four dresses and no more, saying that she recognized them as belonging to Marshall Field & Co. and had seen them in her section. Then she stated the value of them. The dresses were not identified as coming from the possession of Maruda, and Mrs. Ryan testified, only, “I know they were our dresses, but whether they were sold or not I don’t know.” Lena Ledrich, who had charge of the children’s hosiery section, identified hosiery as the property of Marshall Field & Co. and testified that similar hosiery was missing last summer, which was the summer of 1923, during the months of July and August. Jacob B. Schoninger was department manager and buyer in the cutlery and leather goods department. He identified various articles as the property of Marshall Field & Co. which were produced before the jury, — a shaving mirror, cigar and cigarette holders and pocket knives, — and testified to their value. He stated that they had no moré trouble last summer than they usually had in the way of missing property; that they were always missing things from time to time. Marie Lehmicke testified that some of the hand bags produced were the property of Marshall Field & Co. and some of them were not. She testified that goods were missing frequently. None of these last four witnesses from the store of Marshall Field & Co. had any knowledge of any larceny or crime, of any particular articles being missing, of anything being missing under circumstances indicating it might have been stolén, or identified any article as having been missing from the store or stolen.

There was no proof of the corpus delicti in this case,— that a larceny had been committed, — aside from the alleged statements, admissions or confessions of Maruda, which he wholly denied. The fact that property has been taken from the possession of the owner without his knowledge or consent is evidence of a larceny; that such property so shown to be stolen is soon afterward found in the possession of another is evidence that he is the thief.

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 696, 314 Ill. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-maruda-ill-1924.