People v. Ross

242 Ill. App. 221, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 95
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 13, 1926
DocketGen. No. 30,852
StatusPublished

This text of 242 Ill. App. 221 (People v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Ross, 242 Ill. App. 221, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 95 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 14, 1925, a jury in the criminal court of Cook county returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty of assault with a deadly weapon as charged in the second count of the indictment, and that the assault was committed with an intent to inflict upon the person of another a bodily injury. After overruling the motion for a new trial the court sentenced the defendant to confinement in the house of correction for six months and a fine of $100 and costs amounting to $317.90 was imposed.

On January 31, 1923, the Grand Jury returned an indictment against the defendant which contained two counts. The first charged that the defendant on August 22, 1919, committed an assault with intent to murder one Frank E. Rhode, and the second count charged that the defendant committed an assault with intent to inflict bodily injury upon Rhode. Each count alleged that the defendant since the 22nd of August, 1919, “was not usually and publicly a resident within the State of Illinois.”

The People offered evidence to the effect that about one o ’clock in the morning of August 22, 1919, Frank E. Rhode, who was a motor cycle policeman for the city, was on duty near the northwest corner of Kedzie Avenue and Lake Street, Chicago, Lake Street runs east and west and Kedzie Avenue north and south. There is a double line of street car tracks in Lake Street, and while Rhode was standing near the northwest corner of the street intersection, he saw two automobiles, one behind the other going east in Lake Street in the eastbonnd track. One automobile was towing the other. After they had passed, Rhode saw that the rear automobile did not have any lights and that they did not stop at the boulevard. Rhode thereupon mounted his motor cycle and drove east after the two automobiles and called to the driver who was in the front automobile to stop. There were two men in the driver’s seat. The two automobiles came to a stop and officer Rhode dismounted from his motor cycle and he was adjusting it on its stand when one of the men from the automobile shot Rhode three times with a pistol. Rhode was struck once in the left shoulder and twice in the calf of the leg. The assailant then turned around and ran in front of the automobiles and turned west in Lake Street pursued by officer Rhode. Other police officers came to his assistance. Two men ran from the automobiles, one toward the northwest of the street intersection and jumped over a fence into a vacant lot. When Officer Rhode had pursued this man to the fence he apparently became weak from wounds and was taken by another officer to a hospital. Other officers went through the hole in the fence and searched through the grass and weeds that were growing in the lot and found the defendant lying on his face with a German Lueger gun in his hand, or by his side. They placed him under arrest. About a half an hour after the shooting, the officers that arrested the defendant learned that Rhode had been taken to a nearby hospital, and they took the defendant to the hospital for the purpose of having Rhode identify him. When they entered the hospital Rhode was on the operating table and the surgeon was just about to perform an operation. When the defendant was brought in Rhode raised up from the operating table, looked at the defendant and said: “That is the son of a bitch that shot me.” The defendant said nothing and was immediately thereafter taken to the police station.

The People also offered evidence that the defendant was not publicly a resident of the State since the 22nd of August, 1919. The only evidence offered on behalf of the defendant was that given by Otto Marosek, who testified that he was a gun mechanic employed by Yon Lengerke & Antoine, who were engaged in the selling of sporting goods in Chicago which included guns and ammunition; that he had been a mechanic for about 15 years and was familiar with the various foreign makes of guns and revolvers; that he was familiar with the German type of gun called Lueger; that it carried eight bullets or shots, and that when a shot is fired the shell is ejected automatically; that it was not possible to put eleven bullets or shots in such a gun; that eight was all it would hold. This evidence was offered to dispute that offered on behalf of the. People to the effect that the defendant had fired three shots, and the police officers testified that they examined the gun when they captured the defendant in the vacant lot and that the gun then contained eight bullets. A reading of the testimony in the record given by the witness Marosek does not convince one that he was an expert gun mechanic, or that he was familiar with the various foreign makes of guns and revolvers as he testified when he was being qualified.

The defendant contends that the State wholly failed to prove the allegation of the indictment, that the defendant was not usually and publicly a resident of the State, and that since the defendant was found guilty of a misdemeanor, which was barred in 18 months under the statute, and since he was not indicted for more than three years after the act was committed, the judgment must be reversed. While the testimony given by the several witnesses on this question, called on behalf of the State, and that is the only evidence in the record, is not specific at all times, yet we think it is sufficient to sustain the allegation of the indictment. Five officers on behalf of the People testified on this point. Three officers testified that they had been assigned to the Warren Avenue and Des Plaines Street stations and had been performing their duties at these stations as police officers and had not seen the defendant from September, 1919, to March, 1923. Officer Freemuth testified that between 1918 and 1919 he saw the defendant two or three times a week in the neighborhood of Madison, Paulina and Wood Streets (which is on the west side of the city and where the Warren Avenue and Des Plaines Street stations are located) but that he had not seen the defendant since September, 1919, until March or April, 1923.

Defendant further contends that the court erred in instructing the jury concerning the penalty in the event of conviction under the second count of the indictment since the jury had nothing to do with the fixing of the punishment, and in support of this contention the case of People v. Johns, 190 Ill. App. 367, is cited. There is but an abstract of the opinion in the printed report of that case, but since the filing of the briefs we have been furnished with a copy of the opinion by the State’s attorney of Cook county. A reading of the opinion discloses the fact that the judgment in that case was reversed for a number of reasons. And all that is said in the opinion on the point in question is: “The court in instructing the jury told them what the penalty was for the offense charged. That was a matter with which the jury had nothing to do.” Whether the instruction in that case merely told the jury what the penalty was without quoting the statute defining the offense we are unable to say. But in the instant case the instruction complained of is substantially a copy of paragraph 37, ch. 38, Cahill’s Statutes, which defines assault with a deadly weapon and provides a penalty for such offense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 Ill. App. 221, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ross-illappct-1926.