People v. Sturdyvin

137 N.E. 593, 306 Ill. 138
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1922
DocketNo. 14875
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 137 N.E. 593 (People v. Sturdyvin) 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. Sturdyvin, 137 N.E. 593, 306 Ill. 138 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

At 5:30 o’clock in the afternoon of November 27, 1921, S. K. McDowell drove with his family in a Dodge touring car from his residence in Bloomington to the 400 block on East Grove street, in that city, to make a call and left the car standing on the street. The car was stolen, and after the larceny it was first seen stuck in a mud-hole about eight miles east of Morton, in Tazewell county, and was found the next morning in East Peoria. The plaintiff in error, Ben Sturdyvin, was indicted in the circuit court of McLean county for larceny of the car and was convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary.

The indictment alleged the ownership of the car in S. K. McDowell, and it is contended that there was no proof of the ownership, which must be proved as alleged. (People v. Csontos, 275 Ill. 402.) McDowell, in telling of going from his residence to the 400 block, said, “We drove our Dodge,” and the argument is based on that statement, but he also testified that the casing and jack which were found in the mud-hole next morning belonged to him; that the jack was in the car under the front seat and the casing was on the rear of the car for a spare tire. On cross-examination he was asked the question whether his car was taken that night, and he answered that it was. It was not necessary that the ownership of the car should be proved in specific words, but it might be proved by any testimony which established the fact, and the ownership was proved and not disputed.

Related to the same subject, the court gave to the jury this instruction:

“The court instructs the jury, that if you believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the Dodge automobile described in the indictment, the property of S. K. McDowell, was stolen and that such automobile was of the value of more than $15 and if you further believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant committed such theft, if any there was, or was present aiding, assisting or encouraging such theft, if any there was, then you should find the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment.”

The objection to the instruction is that it assumed the fact of ownership by McDowell, which was a fact to be determined by the jury from the evidence. The instruction did not specifically require the jury to find that the car was the property of McDowell from the evidence, and the objection might be quite serious if there had been any evidence from which the jury could have found otherwise. There was nothing in the evidence which would have justified the jury in finding anything else than what was assumed in the instruction, and no harm was done.

It is also contended that the verdict was contrary to the evidence because it was not proved that the defendant stole the car, and there was testimony introduced by him of an alibi. Jerre O’Neal and Doris Kirkpatrick were witnesses for the People, and said that they left Peoria between eight and nine o’clock in the evening of November 27, 1921, in an automobile and drove to Bloomington; that O’Neal was driving the car, and about eight miles east of Morton they came to a mud-hole in which a Dodge touring car was stalled so that they were unable to pass; that their car had two headlights and a spotlight or searchlight, and that there were headlights on the Dodge car which were not very good. O’Neal said he turned his spotlight so as to hit the Dodge car and “saw some guys go over the fence and hit the field, — three of them.” Mrs. Kirkpatrick said that she saw two men by the fence. Both testified that the men came back and were asked to help them through the mud-hole; that one of the men was the defendant, and they helped by cranking and pushing the car for O’Neal and Mrs. Kirkpatrick; that the defendant endeavored to crank the car several times and also helped to push it, and that they were looking at him in the bright light and talked with him. They said that with the help of the men they got by the Dodge car and O’Neal went back. O’Neal said that when he went back they were jacking up the back end of the Dodge car, and he asked if he could help them, and they said no — to go on. The jack and the casing were found, as before stated, in the mud-hole afterward.

The defendant denied that he was at the place east of Morton or saw a Dodge car or helped anybody out of a mud-hole or that he stole the car or met Jerre O’Neal or Doris Kirkpatrick that night. He testified that he was a taxi driver, and that on the night of November 27 he lived in Peoria and was at the corner of Fayette and Adams streets, in that city, in a restaurant; that he met Elmer Bell, who was also under indictment for this larceny, and about eight o’clock they went for a ride and went to a garage on the corner of Fayette and Jefferson streets in a Cadillac car; that they left the car there to be washed and went to the last show at the Orpheum, at 108 North Madison street; that they met Mr. and Mrs. Schlagel at the show and borrowed ten cents to make up enough to get in and then went into the show; that they went to the garage and waited for their car until twelve o’clock and took a ride and went to bed. Bell testified to the same state of facts. Schlagel testified that he saw the defendant and Bell in front of the Orpheum theater that night about nine o’clock or a little later; that Bell had a dollar and borrowed ten cents to make up enough to go into the show, and that he saw them in the show. Homer Driscoll said that he was night foreman at the garage, and Bell and the defendant came with Bell’s Cadillac car about a quarter to nine, and that they came between eleven and twelve and got the car.

It is not reasonable to suppose that Jerre O’Neal and Doris Kirkpatrick were mistaken when it is considered that there was a bright light from their car, that the defendant tried several times to crank the car, and that they saw and talked with him. It was for the jury and the trial court to determine which set of witnesses was entitled to credit and to determine the fact, and the record furnishes no test from which this court can say that the conclusion of the jury was wrong.

On the examination of O’Neal he said that when he and Mrs. Kirkpatrick came to Bloomington he went to the city hall and asked Jack Penn if anything had happened, and he said Chadband’s store had been robbed. The court denied a motion to strike out the answer. Doubtless suspicion had been aroused in the mind of O’Neal from the circumstance of seeing the “guys” go over the fence, and he went on to tell the men at the city hall what he had seen. They asked him to drive back with them to the mud-hole, and they went on to Peoria, and returning found the jack and the casing in the mud-hole. There was no evidence of any robbery, and no further objection was made to the statement, which was only incidental to the trip back to the mud-hole with the sheriff and others and from there to Peoria. While the court ought to have stricken out what was said about the robbery of Chadband’s store, there was nothing raising any inference against the defendant in connection with it, and the ruling is not sufficient to reverse the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.E. 593, 306 Ill. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sturdyvin-ill-1922.