People v. McKinney

267 Ill. 454
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 267 Ill. 454 (People v. McKinney) 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. McKinney, 267 Ill. 454 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Montis Butler, Lind LaFount and the plaintiff in error, John Cecil McKinney, were charged in the criminal court of Cook county with robbing Christopher C. Wilkins of money of the value of $14, a diamond ring of the value of $1200 and a diamond stud of the value of $600. The defendants were put on trial, and after evidence had been heard and the case for the prosecution closed the defendant LaFount withdrew his plea of not guilty, entered a plea of guilty and tendered himself as a witness for the State. The case was then re-opened and LaFount testified. The jury found the defendants Butler and McKinney guilty and they were sentenced to the penitentiary at Joliet. The plaintiff in error, McKinney, sued out a writ of error, and the record is in this court as a return to the writ.

The plaintiff in error was not present at the commission of the crime. Christopher C. Wilkins testified that on May 29, 1914, the defendants Butler and LaFount came into his drug store at 127 West North avenue, in Chicago, shortly after two o’clock in the afternoon; that Butler pointed a revolver at him and told him to take off his diamond stud, which he did; that Butler then told him to take off the diamond ring and to give the diamonds to LaFount; that Butler then told LaFount to clean the cash register and he would kill Wilkins if he moved; that Butler then ordered Wilkins back of the prescription stand and Butler and LaFount left the store, and that Wilkins chased the robbers and shot LaFount in the leg and recovered his ring and $13.35 taken from the cash register.

When the State concluded its case, before LaFount entered his plea of guilty and offered himself as a witness, all the evidence in any way. relating to McKinney was as follows: Wilkins testified that McKinney and his wife were patrons of the drug store, and three or four days before the robbery they were in the store, when McKinney made a small purchase and said, “Those are pretty nice rings you have there;” that Wilkins said, “Yes, they are pretty fair phonies;” that McKinney called the attention of his wife and said, “He calls them phonies,” and she said, “Well, you can’t fool me; I know what those are;” that McKinney verified her statement that they were real diamonds; that on the night of June 10, 1914, McKinney came into the drug store and asked Wilkins if he had caught Butler and if there was any reward for him, and said he had heard Wilkins had offered $50 reward for him, and Wilkins said he had not; that McKinney went out and came back and wanted to have a private talk with Wilkins, who said that he would talk where he was; that Wilkins had stationed a policeman behind the prescription stand, and they went back where the policeman could hear; that McKinney proposed that if Wilkins would put up $100 with a party to be mentioned later he would turn Butler over to him, but he did not want his name mentioned, and that Wilkins declined the proposition. The elevator conductor at 1508 LaSalle street, where McKinney lived on the sixth floor, testified that he took LaFount and Butler in the elevator up to the sixth floor on the day of the robbery, and that LaFount went away and returned the same afternoon with a package wrapped in a newspaper. A policeman testified that when McKinney was brought out of jail to the State’s attorney’s office he found LaFount there, and said, “You dirty little dope fiend, what are you doing here ?”

This evidence showed knowledge on the part of McKinney that Wilkins had valuable diamonds, but Wilkins said that McKinney was not the only one who commented on the brilliancy of his diamonds, which is not strange in view of the fact that Wilkins said the diamond stud was near three carats and the other diamond was of the value of $1200. That evidence would apply to a great many law abiding citizens. The evidence tended to show acquaintance of McKinney with Butler and LaFount, arid that McKinney thought he could locate Butler and was willing to do so for a reward. It would scarcely be contended that such evidence established the guilt of McKinney beyond a reasonable doubt.

When the case was re-opened LaFount testified that he had known McKinney about a month and a half before the robbery; that he and Butler went to 1508 LaSalle street, to the top floor, where McKinney lived; that McKinney asked Butler if he had the guns, and Butler said they were under the pool-room steps at Joe Fogarty’s; that McKinney sent the witness after the revolvers, and he brought them back and gave one to Butler and put the other in his own pocket; that McKinney asked him if he had nerve enough to do the job to hold up Wilkins; that McKinney said if they got the diamonds he would cut them out of the settings and they could do what they wanted to with the settings, and told Butler he had better throw them in the lake; and that Butler and the witness were to get two-thirds and McKinney one-third of the money for the diamonds. The witness said he did not wrap the revolvers in a package and did not have any package when he went to McKinney’s, contradicting the elevator man about having a package, which could only apply to the revolvers, as there wbuld be no newspaper package of diamonds and money.

On the cross-examination of LaFount he was first asked concerning various statements he had made, which he admitted to be false. It also appeared that he had told two policemen that McKinney was connected with the case and they had talked about his testifying for the People, after which the following occurred:

Q. “Now, then, have you an arrangement now, either personally or by your attorneys, that you would testify here on behalf of the People?—that you are to receive a lighter sentence or immunity of some kind?

The court: “Now, I will answer that for you, Mr. Foos, and tell you if you don’t know, that under the law there is not anybody in the world that can control the sentence now except the court, in view of the fact that he has made a plea, and that this court has not had one single, solitary word of conversation with any living soul about this boy’s sentence.

Mr. Foos: “No! no! your Honor. Not 'the court I don’t mean.

The court-: “I thought you might just as well end this talk about promises of immunity, because nobody else can give him anything and no living soul has told me about it.

Mr. Foos: “No, your Honor; but to induce this statement—not what the court can do.

The court: “I make this statement for the record. You know very well that nobody can make a promise of that kind except this court. You know that.

Mr. Foos: “No, your Honor. I mean the inducement for him to testify. Your Honor got me wrong on that,— you misunderstood me.

The court: “I understand you perfectly. I will be very glad to have you resume this cross-examination, but limit it to the questions of what took place in or about his crime and to questions tending to affect this boy’s credibility. That is all you are entitled to.

Mr. Foos: “I am not inferring anything as to the court, you know. I have an idea what the court will do under his plea, as far as that is concerned, but the question I am leading up to is what induced him to testify.

The court: “You have been leading up to it quite awhile. Now lead down awhile and get to business awhile.”

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Bluebook (online)
267 Ill. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mckinney-ill-1915.