People v. Stine

199 Ill. App. 422, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 255
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 12, 1916
DocketGen. No. 21,048
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 Ill. App. 422 (People v. Stine) 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. Stine, 199 Ill. App. 422, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 255 (Ill. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Goodwin

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error seeks to set aside a judgment sentencing him to the penitentiary for five years, entered on a general verdict finding him guilty of conspiracy. The case went to the jury on four counts charging conspiracy to bribe members of the city council, one count charging a conspiracy to obtain money by threats and intimidation, and one, the eighteenth, charging embezzlement of certain moneys belonging to one Lyons and delivered to defendant as bailee. A separate verdict was returned finding him guilty on this embezzlement charge, but afterwards the count was dismissed out of the indictment. The indictment originally consisted of twenty-two counts. Of those dismissed, the sixth charged conspiracy to defraud the City of Chicago by bribing the aldermen to increase the pay of patrolmen, the seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth a conspiracy to collect political assessments contrary to law, the eleventh, twelfth and fourteenth a conspiracy to obtain money under false pretenses and to cheat and defraud, the thirteenth and fifteenth a conspiracy to obtain money by means of the confidence game, the sixteenth a conspiracy to embezzle, while the seventeenth and nineteenth charged embezzlement, and the twentieth, twenty-first and twenty-second charged obtaining money by the use of the confidence game.

The evidence disclosed that the defendant, a patrolman, was president of an organization known as the “United Police,” which embraced all ranks in the police department, although each rank constituted a separate division with its own committee. The patrolmen’s committee, of which defendant was an honorary or ex officio member, consisted of a representative from each of the forty-five or forty-six police precincts in the city. It further appears that in 1910, after an unsuccessful effort had been made to secure from the city council an increase in the salary of patrolmen, a meeting of the patrolmen’s committee was held some time in May at which it was decided, at the instigation of defendant, that an attempt should be made to collect $20 from as many as possible of the 4,000 patrolmen. For that purpose envelopes were distributed upon which was printed:

“Referendum Vote—Patrolmen only. Questions 4 and 5—Pensions. Place vote within this carton, seal and return to Patrolmen’s Committee, not later than June 15,1910. Carefully note the number of this Carton.”

These envelopes or cartons were numbered serially. A committee of three, one from each division of the city, was appointed to secure the collections. As one member died, the matter was left to the other two— defendant and one Carney. The contributions were made by putting $20 in an envelope and sealing it. No receipt was given, but the name of the patrolman was apparently checked upon a list. When the money was turned over to defendant and Carney, the envelopes were destroyed. By October a considerable sum of money was collected, but there is some variance in the evidence as to the amount. Defendant said it. was $25,000, Carney said $36,000, while other testimony indicated that it was $42,000 or more. This money was kept in a safety deposit box, secured by the defendant under a fictitious name, until" some time in October, when defendant and Carney divided it, and each placed his half in á separate vault. When, in February 1911, the city council passed an appropriation bill which left the salary of patrolmen unchanged, the contributors to the fund, for the first time, began to demand the return of their money. Defendant, who had been on a furlough for six months, allowed from time to time upon his false statement that he wished to take treatment for catarrh, dictated a letter at Springfield, April 5th, addressed to the superintendent of police, submitting his resignation, to take effect April 15th.

At the last meeting of the patrolmen’s committee, which was held in May, 1911, defendant was present and stated he was ready to return the money, but must know how much each precinct had contributed. When this information was given, he and Carney were to go to the vault. They left the hall, but did not return.

Defendant stated that he resigned from the' policy department to take a position with a sugar beet company, secured for him by his brother-in-law, and worked in that position about five months, but not continuously. The only evidence upon this subject was his own testimony, which was neither plausible, convincing, nor in harmony with the fact that after his resignation he spent practically all of his time on his farm in Michigan. Had he actually been employed by a sugar company, as he testified, there would, no doubt, have been ample corroborating evidence of that fact. He says he took his family to Kansas City March 22nd, was in New Orleans April 1st, Springfield April 2nd; that on March 15th, the men had demanded their money back; that he had it with him at the meeting, but men were demanding it who had no right to it. It clearly appears, however, that he never returned or accounted for any part of the money collected. Testimony was offered on behalf of the People as to statements made by defendant and his associates at the meeting at which the plan for raising the money was adopted and at other times, which, if true, established it as a fact that the money was collected for the purpose of bribing the city council to increase the pay of patrolmen from $1,200 to $1,400 a year.

From the conduct of the defendant it may fairly be inferred that from the beginning it was also his purpose to embezzle a portion or all of the money collected and rely upon the incriminating character of the enterprise as protection against complaints by his associates.

There is also clear and explicit testimony tending to show that in many cases the contributions were not voluntarily given, but were made because of the power wielded by the committee. It further appears that after defendant had left the State, one of the collectors, Lyons by name, followed him to Michigan and demanded the return of the money collected in his precinct, and that defendant refused to surrender it.

The testimony on the part of the prosecution establishing both the crimes of conspiracy and embezzlement was direct and convincing.

By way of defense, defendant testified that changes in the pension law were being agitated in the police department, and that there were a number of questions in regard to the proposed changes; that he desired to have a referendum submitted upon questions four and five, and prepared the envelopes or cartons for that purpose; that this purpose was abandoned, and that the envelopes were used to collect the money; that the money was raised to secure the passage of such favorable pension legislation as the patrolmen’s committee or the patrolmen might decide upon.

To explain the necessity for funds for this purpose, when the United Police, of which he was president, had several thousand dollars in its treasury, he said that it was not known whether all ranks in the United Police would agree to such changes as the patrolmen might desire. It was admitted, however, that at a meeting of the various ranks of the United Police held* in December, prior to the convening of the Legislature, all agreed upon a program, and that the expense incurred in securing these changes in the pension law was defrayed out of the treasury of the United Police.

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26 N.E.2d 415 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
199 Ill. App. 422, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stine-illappct-1916.