People v. Quigley

185 N.W. 787, 217 Mich. 213, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 844
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1921
DocketDocket No. 163
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 185 N.W. 787 (People v. Quigley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Quigley, 185 N.W. 787, 217 Mich. 213, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 844 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Wiest, J.

Just before noon, on the 18th day of March, 1921, two men entered the bank of G. A. Blakeslee Company, in the village of Galien, where Theron N. Chilson, cashier, was on duty alone seated at his desk behind a glass partition, and one of them [215]*215covered the cashier with a revolver and commanded him to hold up his hands, and, remarking that he was not quick enough about it, fired through the glass partition. The bullet did not strike the cashier. The other man then climbed over the partition and opened the door and let his companion in, and at the point of the revolver the cashier was forced to unlock the day door to the money vault and open the burglar chest. In the cashier’s desk there was about $5,000 in cash and in the burglar chest about $60,000 in industrial, municipal, and liberty bonds, which they took; and after striking the cashier on the back of the head, causing a wound requiring medical attention and two stitches, they went to the street door where an automobile with a driver was awaiting them and drove away. Six days later defendants entered a brokerage office at the union stock yards, Chicago, and Quigley was there introduced under the false name of H. C. Walters, and he handed a package of bonds of the par value of $8,200, and a part of the bonds stolen from the bank, to the broker and requested that they be sold. A purchaser was found, and check drawn by the broker to IT. C. Walters, but, further identification being required, and both defendants being nervous and endeavoring to unduly hurry matters, the suspicion of the broker became aroused and he notified the police and defendants were arrested and brought to this State and tried, convicted and sentenced for the robbery.

Defendants bring the case here for review on writ of error, claiming the information was insufficient; that the testimony of identity of defendants should not have been submitted to the jury; that defendants should have been found not guilty under the evidence, and that the charge of the court was erroneous in several particulars. No motion was made for a new trial or to quash the information.

[216]*216Omitting formal parts the information charged:

“That Frank Quigley and Fred Hague, heretofore, to wit: on the 18th day of March, in the year one thousand nine hundred and twenty-one, at the county of Berrien aforesaid; did then and there feloniously, with force and arms in and upon one Theron N. Chilson make an assault, and him, the said Theron N. Chilson, did beat, maim, injure, and wound and feloniously did then and there put him, the said Theron N. Chilson, in bodily fear and danger of his life, and money, bonds, securities, bank notes, other valuables, personal property, goods and chattels, of the value of to wit: Sixty thousand dollars, of the goods, chattels and property of G. A. Blakeslee Company, bankers, in the bank, safe and depositories of said bank, then and there being found in said county and State, against the will of the said Theron N. Chilson, the cashier of said G. A. Blakeslee Company, feloniously did then and there, and by force and violence, steal, take, rob and carry away, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided,” etc.

The statute, section 15229, 3 Comp. Laws 1915, so far as applicable to the charge made, provides:

“That whoever, with the intent to commit the crime of larceny, or any felony, shall * * * injure or wound, * * *' or shall put in fear any person for the purpose of stealing from any building, bank, safe, or other depository of money, bonds, or other valuables, * * * shall, whether he succeeds or fails in the perpetration of such larceny or felony, be punished,” etc.

It is urged that the information is fatally defective as a charge of common-law robbery as it neither charges that property was taken from the person of the party assaulted or that it was taken by force. The statute under which this information was laid does not undertake to denounce the common-law offense of robbery. It creates an offense, and while it contains some of the elements of common-law robbery, it does not remit the pleader to the common-law definition [217]*217of what constitutes robbery. This statute does not make it necessary to charge that the property was taken from the person of the party assaulted, but only from any building, bank, safe, or other depository of money, bonds, or other valuables, and accomplished by confining, maiming, injuring or wounding, or attempting to do so, or putting in fear any person who might interfere with the plan. Such person so put in fear or assaulted might be a patrolman on the street or a customer in the bank or one just entering or leaving the bank, provided the assault was made in the perpetration of the offense. This information can be laid down upon the statute and be found to contain all the essential averments required. But it is said that the intent of the assault is not averred nor the purpose thereof, as required by the statute. The statute requires an intent to commit the crime of larceny, or any felony, or an assault or putting in fear for the purpose of stealing from any building, bank, safe or other depository of money, bonds or other valuables. An intent is, therefore, involved. Is such intent sufficiently charged in the information? To hold that an information charging two men with entering a bank and there feloniously assaulting the cashier and putting him in bodily fear and danger of his life, and then and there, that they did, by force and violence and against the will of the cashier, feloniously rob and carry away $60,000 in money, bonds and securities from the bank, safe and depository, does not charge that the assault was made with intent to commit a larceny or felony or for the purpose of stealing from the bank would offend common sense. There is no presumption or permissible inference that what they did do they did not intend to do; the presumption is the other way, and upon the trial, from what they did do, the jury could find the intent.

An intent, of course, is a secret of a man’s mind, [218]*218and he can disclose it by declarations or by his actions. And actions sometimes speak louder than words. It would seem that an intent to commit a larceny, or the purpose of stealing from a bank, sufficiently appears charged when it is charged that there was a felonious assault and as a part thereof a felonious stealing and robbery from the bank depository, and such is the law.

The information charges a felonious assault upon the cashier of the bank and a felonious putting of him in bodily fear and a felonious stealing and robbery of the money and bonds and securities from the bank. We do not commend this information as a model, but hold it sufficient after conviction when it is attacked for the first time in this court.

In State v. Hughes, 31 Nev. 270 (102 Pac. 562), the defendant was convicted of the crime of assault with intent to commit robbery, and .it was urged that the indictment was not sufficient because it did not allege that the acts done by defendant were done with the intent to commit the crime of robbery. In passing upon this question the court said:

“The record does not disclose that the indictment was demurred to or that a motion in arrest of judgment was interposed. The sufficiency of the indictment appears, therefore, to be questioned for the first time upon appeal. The indictment, it must be admitted, is far from béing a model.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 N.W. 787, 217 Mich. 213, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-quigley-mich-1921.