People v. Melnick

274 Ill. 616
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 274 Ill. 616 (People v. Melnick) 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. Melnick, 274 Ill. 616 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the May term of the criminal court of Cook county, 1913, the plaintiff in error and Israel Tecotczky and Morris Cohen were jointly indicted in a count for larceny and also in a count for receiving stolen property knowing it to be stolen. The indictment charged that the property stolen or unlawfully received by the defendants was one lot of furs, consisting of muffs, collars, scarfs, coats and skins, the prop-' erty of Hyman Kinzelberg, each article being specifically described and valued in the indictment, the aggregate value therein amounting to $6122. The instant case grew out of the trial of the case for larceny and receiving stolen property, and the indictment was returned at the March term, 1915. It charged in one count, in substance, that plaintiff in error, while upon trial upon said former indictment, was himself duly sworn in that case by the clerk of that court, and falsely, knowingly, corruptly, wickedly, unlawfully and feloniously testified that he had not purchased nor had any dealings with the said Tecotczky and Cohen with reference to the purchase of any furs set forth in said former indictment, in the month of November or December, 1912; that he did not go to Kansas City, Missouri, in December, 1912, with said Morris Cohen; that he did not go to Kansas City, Missouri, in December, 1912; that he did not write his name on the register of the Hotel DeMore, in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1912; that he had not stopped at the Hotel DeMore in 1912; that he never gave said Morris Cohen any money on the train while said Cohen accompanied him, and that he, Barney Melnick, did not have any knowledge about the furs of said Hyman Kinzelberg; that it then and there became material to the issues in said former case whether or not plaintiff in error did do the several things aforesaid which he so falsely, willfully, corruptly and feloniously swore he did not do. On his trial he was convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary, after motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled. This writ of error is prosecuted by Melnick to reverse the judgment.

It is first argued by plaintiff in error that there is no evidence in the record tending to prove any assignment of perjury in said indictment, and a reversal of the judgment is asked on that ground. It was by the People’s evidence proved that plaintiff in error did testify, on oath administered by the clerk of said court in the former trial, to the very matters and things which are charged to be false, etc., and the giving of which testimony is charged to be perjury on his part. It is not denied by his counsel that he so testified, but their contention is that the testimony was not shown to be willfully and corruptly false. All of the assignments of perjury were proved, if the testimony of Morris Cohen is to be believed, who plead guilty to the former indictment and afterwards withdrew his plea and the indictment was dismissed as to him. The third and last assignments of perjury are proved clearly, conclusively and beyond all reasonable doubt by the People’s evidence when considered alone, for it is abundantly shown by the evidence of the People that plaintiff in error went to Kansas City, Missouri, just before Christmas in 1912, and sold some or all of the very same furs that were stolen to one Joseph L. Greenstone, manager of a cloak and suit store in that city, and that plaintiff in error knew that they had been stolen from Hyman Kinzelberg. Greenstone testified that he had known plaintiff in error sixteen or seventeen years, and that he saw him at Chicago in the place of Michael Tauber & Co., auctioneers, in December, 1912; that he there approached witness and said to him that he used to sell witness merchandise and asked him what he was doing in Tauber’s, and on replying that he was buying merchandise at the sale, plaintiff in error told him he bought and sold merchandise and asked if witness would be interested in a job of furs. Receiving a favorable reply, plaintiff in error told him he had shipped a case of furs to M. Goldberg, Denver, Colorado, C. O. D., and had the bill of lading but the man had not produced the money, and asked witness to remain over in Chicago until he could get the furs back. Witness told him he could not wait. Plaintiff in error then suggested that witness give him a check for $500 for the furs and that he would have them shipped to him at Kansas City, and if they were satisfactory he would cash the check and if not he would return it to witness or witness could stop payment on it; that the trade was so made, and that witness left that night for Kansas City and arrived there the next morning and wired plaintiff in error not to deposit the check,—that he had stopped payment on it; that plaintiff in error came the next day to Kansas City and returned the check but sent to Denver for the furs; that an express-man brought the furs over to witness’ place of business and witness bought them for $500 and offered him a check, which he refused. Witness then offered to borrow money from a pawnbroker, as the banks were closed, if plaintiff in error would pay the $10 charge for interest, which offer was accepted by plaintiff in error. Witness asked him to give a bill of sale, and he replied that he could not write. Plaintiff in error again called on witness about July, 1913, in Kansas City, and told him he had called witness on the long distance telephone from Tauber’s but that witness was not in town. He then asked witness if anyone had inquired about the fur transaction, and on being told that no one had, he asked the witness to say he did not buy anything from him, if any inquiry should be made, because he was in trouble; that he again called upon witness in Kansas City in March, 1915, and again about ten days after witness had testified in this case before the grand jury, and told witness he did not have to go to Chicago to testify, and witness replied that he sold witness a lot of stolen furs and that witness wanted to clear his name. Plaintiff in error then suggested that witness could fail to identify him; that he (Melnick) had headed a witness off from Duluth who was coming to testify against him and that the man never came. Witness then identified the People’s exhibit of furs in this case as part of his purchase from plaintiff in error, and on cross-examination located the date he purchased the furs from plaintiff in error in Kansas City as being in December, 1912, just prior to Christmas.

The witness Greenstone was corroborated by Hyman Kinzelberg, who identified the People’s fur exhibit and the goods so purchased by Greenstone as the property stolen from him, and testified that shortly after the goods were stolen from him he went to plaintiff in error and asked him to help him get his furs; that plaintiff in error asked him who sent him, and that he replied: “It don’t malee any difference; they told me you had possession of the goods; if you want to help me out I could help you out.” The plaintiff in error replied: “My case is in the Supreme Court -now; they will reverse it in the Supreme Court and it will cost me to fight the thing; I will give you $250 in cash and $250 in notes, and I’ll see that Cohen does something, too; you would have got your furs back if your wife had not had such a big mouth; treat me right, Kinzelberg, and I’ll treat you right.”

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Related

People v. Williams
563 N.E.2d 431 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1990)
The People v. Nash
222 N.E.2d 473 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1966)
The People v. Garamony
194 N.E. 320 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1934)
People v. Berry
141 N.E. 132 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1923)
People v. Niles
133 N.E. 252 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1921)
People v. Dubia
213 Ill. App. 341 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
274 Ill. 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-melnick-ill-1916.