People v. McCarthy

145 N.E. 133, 313 Ill. 303
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1924
DocketNo. 16045
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 133 (People v. McCarthy) 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. McCarthy, 145 N.E. 133, 313 Ill. 303 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Thomas McCarthy and Ben Trompeter, the plaintiffs in error, with James Julian and James Coleman, were indicted at the November, 1922, term of the circuit court of Tazewell county for attempting to commit burglary of a freight car. Plaintiffs in error were found guilty and sentenced to the penitentiary. They prosecute this writ of error to review the judgment.

The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis railway runs easterly from the city of Pekin, in Tazewell county. The east yards of the railway are situated a short distance east of the city and run parallel to the railway. Contiguous to the yards are the grounds of the Pekin Country Club. These grounds extend south from the railway about one-half mile to the Tremont road, which runs westerly to Pekin. The entrance to the country club is on Tremont road. Near the east line of the grounds is a wooded hill, which slopes to the north, east and west. The trees on it are well trimmed. About 100 yards east of this hill is a ravine. A fence separates the grounds of the country club from the railway yards. Within the yards, and approximately 150 feet east of the west line of the club grounds extended north, is a work or material-shed. Adjoining the country club on the west is a park, which also extends from the railway yards to the Tremont road. The rdew from this road across the park and country club grounds is unobstructed. To the north of the railway above mentioned are the tracks and a round-house of the Santa Fe railroad. Another highway runs easterly from Pekin which is north of the Santa Fe railroad and practically parallel to it.

On November 6, 1922, the American Distilling Company, at Pekin, loaded a car with five and ten-gallon cans and barrels containing non-beverage and denatured alcohol. About ten o’clock A. M. on the next day the car was placed on a switch-track in the yards east of Pekin, from which it was to be sent to Peoria an hour later. Chester McCalla, the yardmaster, testified that about half-past ten o’clock the seals on the doors of the car were intact; that later, from the Santa Fe round-house, about 80 rods north of the car, he saw five men near the material-shed; that at the same time he saw two other men, about 100 yards away, walking across the country club grounds, going north, but that he did not get a good view of them; that he then telephoned the chief of police; that on looking underneath the car he could see men on the south side of it; that they were moving, and finally one came to the north side, walked around and then returned; that he saw an automobile enter the country club grounds from the south, and that about the same time he saw five men, four car lengths away, walk across the grounds in a southeasterly direction toward the timber; that he approached the car and found that the door was open about four inches; that, walking along the cars, he saw Arthur Donahue, a deputy sheriff, come with a gun; that he pointed to the southeast, the direction in which the five men were going, and it was not long until shots were heard; that he did not know who did the shooting but saw Donahue with his gun up; that after the shooting the five men, then near the timber, about 800 yards from the car, started running over the hill; that he would not say that either of the defendants was at the car; that coal miners and others often pass through the yards and that persons other than the defendants might have interfered with the lock.

A. S. Whitmore, sheriff of Tazewell county, testified that he received a call to go to the railroad yards; that he took with him Guy McIntyre, chief of police of Pekin, and Clifford Whitmore, a deputy sheriff; that he sent by the other highway, north of the railroad, Earl Whitmore and Arthur Donahue, deputy sheriffs, and Jerry Maloney, a police officer; that he, with the two officers accompanying him, drove into the country club grounds, turned north, and when half-way across saw the other officers emerge from the yards pursuing someone across the club grounds; that one of the officers was shooting, and he heard shots from the hill but could not tell by whom they were fired; that he then drove over the hill and came upon three men running south and east across the club grounds toward a ravine just beyond, at a place where brush and weeds were growing; that he called on the men to stop but they kept on running; that when they failed to halt he shot at them; that they ran up the ravine and the officers continued shooting ; that they hid under the bank until the officers captured them; that a fourth man (Coleman) was lying down in the grass, and that the witness searched them for guns but found none.

William Mullick, who was with McCalla, testified that he saw certain men by looking underneath the car to the south; that they were moving about but that all he could see was their legs; that one of them came around to the north side of the car; that he saw five men cross the country club grounds; that they had been at the car and were compelled to go through a string of cars to get out of the yards; that he examined the door of the car and found the seal broken, but the door was not open nor was the cleat removed; that he had no idea who the men were, because he saw only their legs a little above the knees and their backs as they were leaving; that they walked away leisurely; that it is such a common sight to see people cross the club grounds from the highway that he would not even notice it, and that many coal miners pass on the tracks.

Earl B. Whitmore, a deputy sheriff, who went over the north road, testified that when he reached the round-house he saw three men walking at the top of the hill, about to enter the timber on the club grounds; that when he and his associates pursued them they started to run; that on reaching the top of the hill he shot in the direction of the men pursued and a shot was fired back; that he did not see them again until the sheriff and his officers came out of the ditch with them; that he would not say that any of the men pursued did the shooting; that the men were searched but nothing was found on them; that the seal to the car door was broken and the door showed signs of having been pried in an attempt to open it; that the door was open about one inch, — not four inches, — and that he did not see any cleats on the door.

Arthur Donahue, another deputy sheriff, testified that when the men were pursued he went around the northerly side of the hill and then into the ravine; that he arrested Trompeter, and that he saw four men, only.

Frank S. Mahoney, a motorcycle officer of Pekin, testified that when he reached the round-house he started, between and underneath the cars and over a fence, across the grounds of the country club in pursuit of four men; that when he went over the hill two or three of the men had been captured; that he, the chief of police and sheriff did much shooting, but he cannot say that the men pursued did any or that- they were near the car; that the seal of the car was broken and that the door was open from four to six inches.

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Related

People v. McKinney
261 N.E.2d 797 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1970)
The People v. Mulford
52 N.E.2d 149 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1943)
The People v. Brothers
180 N.E. 442 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 133, 313 Ill. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mccarthy-ill-1924.