People v. Rosenberg

267 Ill. 202
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 267 Ill. 202 (People v. Rosenberg) 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. Rosenberg, 267 Ill. 202 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

An indictment was returned into the criminal court of Cook county charging Hyman L. Rosenberg, the plaintiff in error, and Harry Brown, Joseph Clarke and John Danies with arson by burning the building of Joseph Matteson at 1304 West Madison street, Chicago, on December 20, 1909. Upon a trial it appeared that the defendant Joseph Clarke had no connection with the crime, and the court instructed the jury to find him not guilty. The defendants Harry Brown and John Danies testified on behalf of the People, and the State’s attorney entered a nolle pros, as to them. The defendant Hyman L. Rosenberg was found guilty and was sentenced to the penitentiary.

It is assigned for error and contended in argument that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the verdict. The building at 1304 West Madison street was 22½ feet wide, divided by a board partition through the middle, covered with wall paper. There had originally been a double door in front and the partition ran from the center of the door, so as to make a single door on each side. The building fronted south on Madison street and the west room was occupied ás a jewelry store by a man named Janover. The defendant Rosenberg occupied the east room as a restaurant, with a cigar case, lunch counter,, tables, stools and chairs. The door to the alley in the rear was in the. east room, and there was a door through the board partition, which was used by Janover for access to the alley. The defendant Rosenberg had been conducting a losing business and he had discharged the cook and the cook’s wife and closed the restaurant several days before the fire, which occurred at six or seven o’clock in the evening of December 20, 1909. The fire was an incendiary one, started at the same time in the two rooms by the explosive ignition of something like gasoline, and it burned with a thick, black smoke, which could not have come from anything in the rooms. It burned on both sides of the partition in such a way that it could not have commenced on one side and burned through to the other, and the partition was not burned through.

The direct evidence offered by the prosecution to prove the connection of the defendant Rosenberg with the crime consisted of the testimony of John Danies. Harry Brown had been engaged in the business of a fire insurance adjuster, and he testified that he told John Danies, who was engaged in the business of setting, fires, that he knew a man named Janover who .had a jewelry store at 1304 West Madison street and'told Danies to go over there on business to make a fire. Danies testified that he was advised by Harry Brown to go to Janover’s place, and he went there and met Janover and told him that Harry Brown said Janover wanted á fire; that Janover said he had a friend right alongside with a restaurant who wanted a fire, and he wanted them to go together, so as to get it cheaper; that Rosenberg came in and wanted a fire right away, because . his business was poor and he could not exist any longer; that Janover, in the jewelry store, wanted to do business until Christmas and sell all that he could before the fire; that the witness wanted to accommodate both parties and waited until about four or five days before Christmas; that Rosenberg agreed to pay $100 for his fire and gave the witness a note for that amount and Janover gave him a note for $150; that in the meantime, after the agreement and before the fire, the witness brought gasoline, which he had bought at different paint stores, and put fifteen gallons in cans in each room and they covered up the cans in Rosenberg’s place; that Rosenberg was not to be present at the' time of the fire; that on the evening of the day of the fire the witness emptied the gasoline out of the cans into vessels or pails and carried the cans out into the alley and put them in the ash boxes; that he then poured the gasoline on the floor in the two rooms, ignited both places at once and got out of the rear of Rosenberg’s room; that there was not over $50 worth of property in the Rosenberg place, and that after the fire he gave Rosenberg’s note to Julius Zar, who was in the habit of collecting such notes for him on commission, but Zar told him that there was a mortgage on the Rosenberg place, and he never got anything from Rosenberg and the note was destroyed.

There was other evidence relating to the transaction, as follows: The defendant Rosenberg had been in business on Twelfth street, where he had, in addition to the prop- ' erty in the restaurant, three pool tables, which he had sold. The property on Twelfth street was insured for $900, and the policy was transferred, on his removal from Twelfth street, to the place on Madison street, and he had been on Madison street less than a month and a half, where, as above stated, the business had proved a failure. After the fire Janover brought an insurance man in the employ of Joseph Clarke to Rosenberg and a schedule of property destroyed was made up, amounting to $975.40. The insurance company made an investigation and checked up the inventory and valued the property at $288 and settled at $300,—a result of a compromise with the adjuster for Rosenberg.

The defendant Rosenberg denied any connection with the fire or any knowledge of it until after it had occurred, or any acquaintance with Danies, and testified that he was taken home to his sister’s house from the restaurant about December 17, 1909, sick, and was there until some time after the fire; that his business was very poor and he had closed the restaurant; that he saw Janover the day after the fire but had not seen him in six months before the trial, and that he settled his loss as a compromise. William Anixter testified that he came into the restaurant in December and Rosenberg told him that he was sick and the witness took him home. Robert Dan testified that Rosenberg was living at his house at the time of the fire and had been brought home sick by some of his friends about December 16 or 17 and was there when informed that his place had been destroyed by fire. Two witnesses testified that the reputation of Rosenberg was good. Julius Zar was beyond the jurisdiction at the time of the trial, and counsel say that Janover was a fugitive from justice.

The People were not only required to prove the commission of the crime, which was conclusively proved, but were also required to establish the connection of the accused with it, beyond a reasonable doubt. The direct evidence connecting Rosenberg with the crime was that of an accomplice, and the law is that the testimony of an accomplice is legal and competent, and a conviction may be had on such testimony, although uncorroborated, if it is of such a character as to satisfy the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, of the guilt of the defendant. (Gray v. People, 26 Ill. 344; Cross v. People, 47 id. 152; Kelly v. People, 192 id. 119.) The evidence of an accomplice is liable, however, to grave suspicion and should be acted upon with great caution, and only when the jury are satisfied from it, together with all the circumstances in evidence in the case, that it is true. (Hoyt v. People, 140 Ill. 588; Campbell v. People, 159 id. 9; People v. Feinberg, 237 id. 348.) An accomplice may testify with a worthy or an unworthy purpose. He may be prompted by remorse, or to uphold the law, or for the purpose of fixing a crime upon another for which he himself is alone responsible, and whatever the motive, his testimony may be so connected with circumstances and facts proved by other evidence as to satisfy the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, of its truth.

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267 Ill. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rosenberg-ill-1915.