People v. Niles

133 N.E. 252, 300 Ill. 458
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1921
DocketNo. 14107
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 133 N.E. 252 (People v. Niles) 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. Niles, 133 N.E. 252, 300 Ill. 458 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, Odd Niles, and Frank Haskell and Sylvester Jackson, were jointly indicted at the March term, 1919, of the city court of Mattoon for the larceny of and receiving as stolen property the Ford automobile of William Paxton. Haskell and Jackson pleaded guilty to the larceny of the automobile and testified on the trial of plaintiff in error that he bought the automobile from them with full knowlédge that it was stolen and that he - drove the automobile to East St. Louis and sold it. Plaintiff in error was found not guilty. At the September term, 1919, of the city court of Mattoon plaintiff in error was indicted for perjury, the charge being that he testified falsely as a witness in his own behalf on his trial for the offense of receiving stolen property. He was found guilty and the cause was brought to this court by writ of error and reversed and remanded for errors committed on the trial. (People v. Niles, 295 Ill. 525.) In the opinion filed on the ’former review we set out at length the allegations of the indictment and the testimony of the witnesses. Plaintiff in error was tried again on the same indictment and the* same evidence was introduced. He was again convicted, and prosecutes this writ of .error to review the judgment of the city court of Mattoon.

This record presents for decision this question: Can a person acquitted by a jury of an offense of which he denied his guilt as a witness in his own behalf be afterwards prosecuted for perjury predicated upon testimony given by him upon the former trial, where a conviction of the charge of perjury necessarily imports a contradiction of the verdict of not guilty in the former trial? While this court has acted, in at least two cases on the assumption that such a prosecution was authorized, (People v. Melnick, 274 Ill. 616; People v. Ashbrook, 276 id. 382;) the question has never been formally considered or discussed. Plaintiff in error contends that his acquittal of the charge of receiving stolen property is res judicata of the issue presented under this indictment for perjury, and cites authority to support his contention. The People have ignored this authority and have presented none to meet it, but we consider the question of such importance as to demand an independent investigation of the views entertained by courts of other jurisdictions. The Attorney General and the special State’s attorney who prosecuted this case content themselves with the statement made by us in People v. Niles, supra, to-wit: “If he secured or influenced his acquittal on that charge by giving false testimony his acquittal would be no bar or estoppel to his indictment and trial on the charge of perjury.” This does not answer the question. ' There is no contention that plaintiff in error cannot be indicted and tried for perjury predicated upon testimony given -by him on his trial for receiving stolen property where the conviction for the charge of perjury would not necessarily directly contradict the verdict of acquittal on the former trial, but it is contended that the evidence offered by the prosecuting attorney and the argument made by him on this trial show that he is, in fact, re-trying plaintiff in error upon the charge of receiving stolen property, and that the jury in the case at bar could not have found plaintiff in error guilty of perjury without finding that he was guilty of the charge of receiving stolen property. There is no escape from this issue, and unless we can answer in the affirmative the question presented by the record this judgment cannot be sustained.

Plaintiff in error relies on United States v. Butler, 38 Fed. 498, where it is said: “If this party could be convicted of perjury in swearing to a state of facts which a jury in another case against him has found to be true, it would result that every criminal case in which the defendant takes the stand and is acquitted could be practically re-tried upon an indictment for perjury.” Cooper v. Commonwealth, 106 Ky. 909, is to the same effect. In the latter case two justices dissented, saying in part: “In other words, it is held that if the defendant in a criminal case will swear to enough to secure an acquittal and does in this manner get a verdict in his favor in that case, he cannot, although clearly guilty, be punished for the perjury or false swearing by means of which he defeated justice. Such a rule puts persons charged with crime, when testifying for themselves, on a different plane from other witnesses, and offers an incentive not only to perjury on their part but to the corruption. of justice in other ways to secure a verdict in their favor which will protect them from punishment for both the offense for which they are tried and the perjury committed on the trial. It is certainly anomalous to say that if a criminal attempts by perjury to secure an acquittal and fails in the attempt he may be punished for the crime, but that if he is successful no punishment can be inflicted. Undoubtedly, it would seem that there is, at most, as sound reason for punishing this grave crime where the ends of justice have been thereby defeated as where the effort to defeat justice has proved abortive.” In Allen v. United States, 194 Fed. 654, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 385, the court refused to follow the rule laid down in the cases above cited, and held that the fact that the defendant had been acquitted at the trial at which the alleged false testimony was given did not bar a prosecution for giving false evidence on that trial. In Teauge v. Commonwealth, 172 Ky. 665, 189 S. W. 908, L. R. A. 1917B, 738, the Kentucky . Court of Appeals directly overruled the decision in Cooper v. Commonwealth, supra, and in a well-considered opinion lays down the rule that acquittal of one charged with crime is no bar to a prosecution for perjury for testimony given by him at the former trial.

The issue in the prosecution for receiving stolen property was, Did plaintiff in error for his own gain buy the stolen automobile knowing it to have been stolen? And the issue in the case at bar is, Did plaintiff in error knowingly and willfully testify falsely as a witness upon the former trial that he did not know the automobile was stolen at the time he bought it and that he did not have any dealings with Haskell and Jackson that would have led him to believe the automobile was stolen? The act for which he was tried in the former trial was committed September 24, 1918, and the act for which he was tried in the latter trial was committed March 28, 1919. The basis of the contention that the verdict of acquittal in the former case is a bar to the' prosecution of the latter case is, that the judgment of acquittal was an adjudication that plaintiff in error did not for his own gain buy the stolen automobile knowing it to have been stolen, and that' that question has ^been finally determined and cannot be inquired into again. ¡If this contention is sound it would logically follow that a judgment of conviction in the former case would likewise be conclusive evidence against plaintiff in error in the prosecution in the latter case. We do not think anyone would argue seriously that this is the law, and that being true, it demonstrates the unsoundness of the contention made.

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Bluebook (online)
133 N.E. 252, 300 Ill. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-niles-ill-1921.