People v. Schallman

273 Ill. 564
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 273 Ill. 564 (People v. Schallman) 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. Schallman, 273 Ill. 564 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, Abraham Schallman, was convicted of receiving stolen property of the value of $150, at the June term, 1915, of the criminal court of Cook county. Motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled and plaintiff in error was sentenced to the penitentiary.

The evidence in the record tends to show that Charles Hoffman, a young man twenty-four years of age, was employed in the lining department of Marshall Field & Co.’s wholesale store in Chicago as order filler, city buyer and floor salesman. He was not employed in the silk department, which was just across the aisle, opposite the lining department. A large quantity of silk disappeared from the stock of Marshall Field & Co. in that department. Hoffman was suspected of stealing the silk, and in June, 1913, he was followed by a detective about noon of June 19, 1913, from said'store to the Medinah Temple, where he had an office, and when he got off the elevator at the fourth floor he was arrested and found to have concealed on his person a bolt of silk that he had stolen from Marshall Field & Co. FEoffman had maintained a jobbing office in the Medinah Temple for the sale of silks and satins "from April, i9i3j up to the time he was arrested by John Hopper, an operative of McGuire & White’s detective agency of Chicago, and had a sign on his door, “C. Hoffman & Co., Jobbers in silks and satins.—Charles Hoffman and M. Wallbaum, representatives.” M. Wallbaum was -Mabel Wallbaum, a stenographer, who worked for Hoffman from April 18 to June 19, 1913,.who testified that she had no interest in the business and had merely allowed him to put her "name on the door, and that she did not know where the goods in stock came from, as they usually came in when she was out at lunch. The office was about fifteen feet square, and there was about $2000 worth of silks and satins there when Hoffman was arrested. There were no letter-heads nor postcards found in the office, and the stenographer did very little writing and seems to have transacted none of the business connected with sales of the goods except to record sales in a loose-leaf ledger at the dictation of Hoffman. On one of those loose ledger leaves was found an entry of an account, “No. A-i,” against A. Schallman, 219 South Dear-born street, at which address plaintiff in error was engaged in the business of jobbing silks, satins and cotton linings and manufacturing ladies’ suits and garments, That sheet purported to show the entries of twenty-seven sales of mes-saline silk and another item of shirtings, dating from April 10, 1913, to May 29, 1913, at prices ranging from twenty-six cents to $1.60 per yard, only one lot being priced higher than forty-two cents per yard. The aggregate amount of the sales appeared to be $7355.60, and the total profits to Hoffman on these sales were shown to be $1319. Subsequent to the arrest of Hoffman the plaintiff in error was visited by Hopper, who learned from the man employed at the Temple building as a delivery man that Hoffman had sent goods by him to plaintiff in error’s shop. Hopper testified that he told plaintiff in error about Hoffman being arrested and that he had come after the silk Hoffman sold him, and asked him if he had any of it there. Plaintiff in error, after some hesitancy, answered him that he had none of it there but that he had several bolts of it in the building there. Schallman then went after them, and in a short while returned with a large package and showed Hopper eight bolts of silk that Hoffman had sold him, and assented to allowing Hopper to send over and get some of Marshall Field & Co.’s men to identify it. It appears that said employees could only identify two bolts of the silk as belonging to Marshall Field & Co., were in doubt about two other bolts and were of the opinion that two of the bolts did not belong to them. Hopper asked plaintiff in error to allow him to take possession of all eight bolts of silk, but plaintiff in error at first refused to allow him to take any of the silk unless, identified as belonging to Marshall Field & Co., as he had bought and paid for it, but finally, upon being threatened that it would be taken with a search warrant, allowed Hopper to take the eight bolts on giving him a receipt for the same. Plaintiff in error denied to Hopper all knowledge that the goods were stolen and insisted that he bought them at a fair price,—the usual jobber’s prices. Hopper then said to him, as Hopper claims, “Well, you know silk very well and you bought some of it pretty cheap,—$10 a bolt,” and that Schallman replied, “Well, I would buy it for $5 if I could buy it for that.” He further testified that Schallman told him that he had bought more than $6ooo worth of silk from Hoffman.

Plaintiff in error testified that he knew Hoffman and had met him at Marshall Field & Co.’s wholesale store several times, where he bought cotton and satin linings but never bought any silk there; that he bought from Hoffman from $800 to $1200 worth of silk, at most, while Hoffman was in business at the Medinah Temple and paid as high as fifty-five cents a yard for some of it, and that he paid about the usual jobber’s prices for all he bought; that he saw Hoffman a few times at his place of business, generally between one and two o’clock; that while trading at Marshall Field’s Hoffman asked him if he was buying in job lots any silks, and handed him a card and asked him to call on him at his place of business and told him that his partner was a Mr. Wallbaum, and that that was the way he came to do business with him. He denied all knowledge of the fact that the goods were stolen, or to his being in any way connected with Hoffman, or of knowing what Hoffman’s salary was at Marshall Field & Co.’s store, or of having ever talked with him about his salary or business, except to buy goods from him in a regular and legitimate way. He produced other witnesses tending to corroborate the claim that he bought them in a regular business way, openly and at reasonable prices. There was evidence for the State tending to show that he bought the goods at very low prices, in some instances for less than half their value.

Hoffman had plead guilty to larceny of silk goods stolen by him from Marshall Field & Co. and was serving his term when this case was tried. The State asked the court to call him as a witness and examine him, as counsel for the State did not want to vouch for him as their witness. The court called and examined him over the objections of the plaintiff in error, and finally the State cross-examined him at length, but he refused to answer any questions as to whether or not Schallman knew anything about the goods being stolen or had any connection with him in stealing them, merely stating that he had been convicted on the charge of larceny, was serving his time and wanted to get out and start life anew and did not want to perjure himself.

As this cause must be reversed for errors assigned we do not desire to discuss the case on the merits.

To prove that the plaintiff in error bought goods from Hoffman with knowledge that they were stolen, the State introduced the page of the loose-leaf ledger of Hoffman containing a supposed account against Schallman or a statement of goods sold by Hoffman to Schallman, already referred to in this opinion. Mabel Wallbaum testified that she made out this statement on that leaf herself, purely at the dictation of Hoffman, entering the items and dates of sales and the amount of each'sale as he announced it.

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Bluebook (online)
273 Ill. 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-schallman-ill-1916.