People v. Robertson

120 N.E. 539, 284 Ill. 620
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1918
DocketNo. 12228
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 539 (People v. Robertson) 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. Robertson, 120 N.E. 539, 284 Ill. 620 (Ill. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Arthur W. Robertson, John J. Campbell, Michael ICuchinski, Charles Maves, James E. Sullivan, Jack Domlce, Alphonso M. Shangraw and Charles G. Wilson were indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for conspiracy to commit the criminal offense specified in section 1 of the act entitled “An act to regulate the manufacture, transportation, use and sale of explosives, and to punish an improper use of the same.” (Laws of 1887, p. 180.) Charles G. Wilson was allowed a separate trial and James E. Sullivan was acquitted. The other defendants were convicted and the Appellate Court for the First District affirmed the judgment. A writ of error to the Appellate Court was sued out and the record brought to this court for review.

The defendants moved the court to quash the indictment but the motion was denied, and it is contended that the court erred for the reason that the name of the owner of the property which the defendants intended to destroy was not alleged in the indictment. The intent charged in the indictment was to use the explosives, and that the same should be used, for the unlawful injury to and the unlawful destruction of life and property, and the charge was in the language of the statute. An indictment setting forth an offense in the terms and language of the statute creating the offense, or so it may' be easily understood by the jury, is sufficient. (Strohm v. People, 160 Ill. 582; Honselman v. People, 168 id. 172; White v. People, 179 id. 356; Glover v. People, 204 id. 170.) An offense affecting life or property may be private in its nature and the person or the owner of property be so affected by the crime that his name becomes material to a statement of the offense and is an essential element of the charge, but the manifest purpose of the statute in question is the protection of property generally, and the name or names of the owner or owners of property destroyed or intended to be destroyed is not an essential element of the crime. The offense is the making, manufacturing, compounding, buying or selling or otherwise procuring or disposing of explosives with the. intent to use the same, or that the same may be used, for unlawful injury to or the unlawful destruction of life or property “in any place whatsoever.” It is not necessary' to state the name or names of the owners of property intended to be destroyed, and the indictment, which charged the offense in' the language of the statute, was sufficient.

It is next insisted that the conspiracy was merged in the completed offense and therefore the defendants could not be convicted of the conspiracy. This is upon the ground that the evidence for the People was that the defendant Charles Haves broke open the storehouse of the EEtna Explosive Company at Willow Springs and took therefrom a large amount of dynamite, safety fuses and caps, which he hid in some bushes in the timber, and that he and other defendants went to the place where the explosives were concealed and took them in an automobile to Chicago and actually destroyed property. A single transaction may include several independent crimes, and if there was anything left of the doctrine contended for after the decisions in the cases of Graff v. People, 208 Ill. 312, and People v. Darr, 255 id. 456, and 262 id. 202, it is certain that the conspiracy to commit a crime does not merge in the crime itself. The conspiracy is a crime of itself, and the offense is complete without the commission of the act for which the conspiracy was formed. A conspiracy may or may not precede the commission of an offense, but it is not a necessary element of the offense or included in it. The defendants were not relieved from punishment for the conspiracy by the fact that they committed the crime.

It is next contended that there was a variance between the evidence and the indictment from the fact that the indictment charged an intent to use the explosives for unlawful injury to or unlawful destruction of life or property, while the evidence showed that the property destroyed was the property of the Commonwealth Edison Company. No claim was made on the trial that there was a variance and the court was not called upon to rule concerning a variance, but the fact was that the property destroyed was not, alone, that of the Commonwealth Edison Company. The defendants were employees of that company and were on a strike, but there was no evidence that their purpose was to destroy only property of that company. The conspiracy was complete when the explosives were procured for the purpose of destroying property, and, in fact, posts, man-holes and cables in streets and alleys were destroyed and the motors and machinery of other companies and persons were stopped. Not only was the question of variance not raised at the trial but there is no merit in it.

The People introduced evidence of confessions by the several defendants of their participation, respectively, in the conspiracy, but no question was asked nor answer given on direct examination as to what either defendant said about other defendants or their acts and the statements were confined to what each defendant said about himself and his own acts. On cross-examination counsel for the defendants asked for the whole statement of each defendant, stating his purpose to bring out the testimony so that if the entire statement incriminated other defendants he would move to strike out the whole statement as incompetent. The court refused to permit such cross-examination, and it is contended that the court erred in the ruling under the general doctrine that where a witness states a part of a conversation on direct examination he may be required on the cross-examination to state the whole conversation. (Phares v. Barber, 61 Ill. 271; Black v. Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Co. 111 id. 351.) It is, however, a fundamental rule of cross-examination that it is to be confined to what was brought out on the direct examination, and where a party examines a witness as to a conversation, the opposing party can only cross-examine him upon the conversation as to the same subject matter. (Chicago and Aurora Railroad Co. v. Thompson, 19 Ill. 578.) The court is not warranted in admitting, on cross-examination, statements about other persons or matters because they were included in the conversation. If the defendants had been permitted to cross-examine the witnesses with the effect of incriminating themselves, they could not have had the testimony which was perfectly competent and proper, introduced on the direct examination, excluded, and the refusal of the court to permit the defendants to show that they were included in the conspiracy was in no way injurious to them.

Much complaint is made of the refusal of instructions offered by the defendants. The first six instructions were repetitions of directions to find the defendants not guilty because the evidence did not, as a matter of law, sustain the indictment. The evidence did, as a matter of law, sustain the indictment. But aside from that fact the court was justified in refusing all such instructions. People v. Zurek, 277 Ill. 621.

Instruction 7 stated that if the jury believed from the evidence, beyond all reasonable doubt, that the defendants procured the explosives with the intent to use the same for the unlawful injury to and destruction of property they should acquit them of the conspiracy charged in the indictment,—i. e.j if the defendants were proved guilty beyond all reasonable doubt the jury should find them not guilty. Nothing more need be said of that instruction.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 539, 284 Ill. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-robertson-ill-1918.