People v. Sapp

118 N.E. 416, 282 Ill. 51
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1917
DocketNo. 11583
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 118 N.E. 416 (People v. Sapp) 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. Sapp, 118 N.E. 416, 282 Ill. 51 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the September term, 1916, of the circuit court of Mercer county the grand jury returned an indictment against plaintiff in error, Bert Sapp, for the murder of Emma Larkins. At the April term, 1917, of that court plaintiff in error was tried by a jury and found guilty of murder in manner and form as charged in the indictment and his punishment fixed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of twenty-two years. After motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled judgment was entered on the verdict. This writ of error was sued out to review the proceedings of the trial court.

In the first week of September, 1916, a fair was held at Winfield, Iowa, at which Emma Larkins was employed at an eating stand as a waitress. While there she met C. D. McPherson, with whom, apparently, she had become acquainted at some fairs previously held in Iowa. McPherson was in charge of and showing trained ponies at these fairs. Some time Sunday forenoon, September* 10, 1916, McPherson and Emma Larkins started to drive in a spring wagon from Winfield east to Aledo, Mercer county, Illinois, about fifty miles from Winfield. They crossed the Mississippi river at Keithsburg, Illinois, and remained at that place over night, registering at Mrs. Porter’s hotel as man and wife and occupying a room together. The next morning after breakfast they drove in a northerly direction to a farm known as the Dixon pony farm, and from there drove to Aledo, where they arrived about four o’clock P. M. on September xi, xgx6. They drove directly to the fair grounds and were shown the stalls that had been assigned to McPherson for his horses. Here Emma Larkins left McPherson and went to look for some people she had worked with at the fair at Winfield and other places. She returned in a short time to where McPherson was and engaged in a conversation with Ed. Greer, whom she had met at the Winfield fair and who was acting as stall man for the Mercer County Eair. Later in the same day Emma Larkins and McPherson took a hack and drove to Aledo and to the Janes restaurant for supper. After supper they went to the hotel across the street, where McPherson wrote some letters while Emma Larkins went down near the post-office to listen to a band. She returned in a short time to the hotel and she and McPherson took the same hack back to the fair grounds, where McPherson remained all night. Emma Larkins obtained her two suit-cases and rode back in the same hack to Aledo, where the driver took her to his sister, Mrs. Russell, where she remained all night. The next morning this same hackman again took her and her suit-cases back to the fair grounds, where they arrived about eight o’clock A. M. on Tuesday, September 12. Shortly after reaching the grounds that morning she met Greer, the stall man, and he assisted her in carrying her suit-cases to the secretary’s office, where they were left. These suit-cases were never taken out or called for by Emma Larkins but remained there until taken away by the sheriff of Mercer county during the investigation of the alleged crime.

The plaintiff in error, Bert Sapp, had brought a racing mare (Helen S) to the Mercer County Eair on the Saturday evening previous, for racing purposes. Mike Ferguson was employed by him as care-taker of the mare. Plaintiff in error was given by the fair authorities stalls Nos. 20 and 21. They placed the mare in stall 21 and used stall 20 as a bunk-stall, for sleeping purposes. They slept there Saturday, Sunday and Monday nights. About half an hour after Greer had gone with Emma Larkins to the secretary’s office with her suit-cases he passed along by stalls 20 and 21, occupied by Sapp, which were located under the amphitheater. Greer testified that he saw Emma Larkins seated with plaintiff in error in one of the stalls, apparently the bunk-stall, which had been assigned to plaintiff in error. Greer had some conversation with plaintiff in error in reference to the bunk-stall. During this conversation Emma Larkins made inquiry of Greer as to the whereabouts of McPherson. So far as the testimony in the record shows she was never again seen alive outside of that stall. The evidence as to just what occurred in this bunk-stall is circumstantial. Ferguson, the care-taker of the horse, testified that on Tuesday morning after he had fed the mare he called plaintiff in error to get up. This was about seven o’clock. He then left the stall and walked around the grounds for an hour or more. These stalls were shut in with double doors, upper and lower. At the top of the lower door in bunk-stall 20 there was a hole. When Ferguson came back to the stall on Tuesday forenoon after his walk around the grounds he found the doors closed and a blanket hung on the inside of the door so that anyone passing on the outside could not see in. He rapped on the door and plaintiff in error put his mouth to the hole and said, “You can’t come in now; go away for an hour and a half and come back.” Ferguson did so and returned about eleven o’clock. The doors were still closed and he again rapped, and plaintiff in error told him there was a woman in there and that she had fallen in a faint. These stalls, as we understand the record, were built under the seats of the amphitheater. At the back end of the stall, far enough in for a person to stand upright, there was a partition across the stall. Through this partition there was a door extending back under where the seats gradually descended toward the ground. Apparently the roof of the stall at this point was not high enough to be used for horses. When Ferguson came back at eleven o’clock plaintiff in error stated to him that the woman who had fallen in a faint, was back of this partition at the further end of the stall under the séats, which sloped from the ground upward and formed the roof of the compartment back of the stall proper. The feed for the mare, Helen S, was kept in bunk-stall 20, and it was necessary for Ferguson to go to the bunk-stall to get the feed. Ferguson, when he went into the stall at eleven o’clock, opened the door in the partition across the end of this stall and saw a body covered with a light blanket. He. suggested to plaintiff in error that a doctor should be called, and plaintiff in error said he had seen lots of women faint away like that. Ferguson then fed the mare and did not return till about three o’clock. He found the bunk-stall closed and. plaintiff in error sitting upon a trunk in the stall. He stated to Ferguson that the woman was getting along all right and that he would take her out on the grounds when night came. Shortly thereafter Ferguson left and did not return until about five o’clock. He found the doors of bunk-stall 20 still closed, and plaintiff in error reported to him that the woman was getting along all right and that she had had a good sleep. Ferguson went away and did not return again until about seven o’clock in the evening. When he came back plaintiff in error asked him to stay while he went to get something to eat, as he had nothing to eat all day. Plaintiff in error was gone for fifteen minutes and when he returned Ferguson went away .again. Ferguson came back about eleven o’clock that night, and when he made inquiry as to how the woman was getting along, he testified plaintiff in error reported “all right.” Ferguson then went to bed and did not waken until half-past five the next morning.

Stall 19 under the amphitheater, next to bunk-stall 20, was occupied by Guy Haas and June- Bond. They kept in the large front part of the stall a mare they had entered to race at the fair.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.E. 416, 282 Ill. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sapp-ill-1917.