People v. Tielke

102 N.E. 229, 259 Ill. 88
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 229 (People v. Tielke) 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. Tielke, 102 N.E. 229, 259 Ill. 88 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

.Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error was tried and convicted in the circuit court of Stephenson county on the charge of burglary. After judgment was entered this writ of error was sued out.

From the evidence in the record it appears that on the night of July 8, 1912, a man entered, through a window in the basement, the residence of Thomas Holmes, in the city of Freeport, in said county. Holmes himself was absent, the house being occupied that night by his wife and his two children,—a boy of nine and a girl of six,—all three sleeping in the same room up-stairs. They retired about nine o’clock. Mrs. Holmes testified that they went to sleep almost immediately, and the first thing she remembered was being awakened by a man striking her over the head with his fist; that she commenced to “holler,” and that he then grabbed her by the neck and struck her with one hand and choked her with the other; that the little boy screamed and cried and then went to an outer door and called for help; that thereupon the man ran out into the hall and down the stairway and jumped through the glass of the front door without stopping to unlock it; that the man who was attacking her had on a blue shirt, gray trousers and a derby hat pulled down well upon his head. She testified that a lamp which was kept burning in the hall enabled her to see the intruder, and she identified plaintiff in error as the man who was in her room on the night in question. She further testified that after he broke through the front door she ran to a door opening onto the porch on the second floor and saw the man running back on the driveway toward the barn; that at that time she heard her neighbor, Mrs. Keeler, call to her husband to get a revolver, and the man "then turned and ran out to the street. Mrs. Keeler testified to the same effect as to the man changing the direction in which he ran at the time she called to her husband. Blood was found on the pieces of glass broken out of the front door. A coat and shoes were found next morning in the barn on the Holmes lot. In one of the coat pockets was a bottle of whisky. A loaded revolver was found the next morning on the ground near the open basement window, through which the evidence tends to show the man entered the house. The plaintiff in error was arrested the next day. His left hand was found bandaged, having a V-shaped cut, apparently recently made.

Plaintiff in error was thirty-three ■ years old and was employed in Freeport by a contractor to mix mortar. He was married in 1908, but when sent to the penitentiary for burglary, in 1909, his wife obtained a divorce. After he was released they lived together as husband and wife, without being re-married, until the time of this offense, having one child bom to them. On the evening of July 8 in question the plaintiff in error, his former wife, their child, and Tielke’s sister, (Mrs. Schadle,) went down-town to visit a street carnival then being held in Freeport and stayed down a couple of hours, plaintiff in error going alone to a side show, leaving his wife and sister on the street seeing the sights. They all testified they went home a little after ten o’clock. Plaintiff in error first told after his arrest that he received the wound in his hand in attempting to cut a melon after they returned home that evening. His sister, Mrs. Schadle, made the same statement to the police, in the presence of plaintiff in error, shortly after his arrest. They all three testified that shortly after eating the melon plaintiff in error went out onto the street again and came back along about 12:3o, when he went to bed with his former wife and remained in the house until morning. His testimony as to what occurred after he went out the second time was, in substance, that he 'was a part of the time in a saloon drinking with some friends, one of whom he named but stated he could not remember the name of the other; that when on his. way home (somewhat intoxicated) he noticed that he was being followed by two men, and that after a time he turned around and asked them, with an oath, what they wanted of him, and one of them answered, “We want you;” that he pulled off his coat and knocked one of them down and that one pulled a knife and cut him in the hand; that they told him to take off his shoes, which he did; that they then told him to take off his pants, and he swore and said he wouldn’t do it and ran away from them and to his home, where his wife helped dress his hand; that this was the- last he saw of his shoes and coat until they were shown by the police. He stated that he thought one of the men who attacked him was the ticket seller of one of the side shows, with whom he had trouble over short change when he bought a ticket that evening to the show. As has been stated, he first told the police that he cut his hand cutting a melon after he got home, about half-past ten. He also stated at first that the shoes and coat found at the barn did not belong to him. Hater on, at a second or third interview with the police, in the presence of his sister, two policemen and the prosecuting attorney, he was told by his sister that he had better make a clean breast of it, and he thereupon stated that his hand was cut in a fight and that the shoes 'and coat in question belonged to him; that they had told a falsehood at first in regard to these two matters. Shortly after he was arrested he wras taken by the police to Dr. Heavy to have his hand examined, and the doctor said, in his presence, that the wound had not been dressed by a physician, and plaintiff in error thereupon stated that he had bandaged it himself. The officer asked the doctor what, in his opinion, had made the cut, and the doctor answered that it looked like a glass cut, and plaintiff in error stated that he had cut it with a knife while cutting a melon. Dr. Heavy testified that the cut looked as if it had been made the day before. Dr. Snyder, who examined the cut shortly "after it was made, testified for plaintiff in error that while it looked as if it had been made with some cutting instrument, in his opinion it was not made by glass.

Counsel for plaintiff in error first insist that the trial court erred in admitting, over their objection, the testimony of the police officers as to Mrs. Schadle’s statements to them, in plaintiff in error’s presence, that the wound on the hand was made while cutting a melon and that the coat and shoes in question did not belong to Tielke, and also the, testimony of the police as to Mrs. Schadle’s statement, at a later interview, that he might as well make a clean breast of it, whereupon he stated that the cut was made in a fight, as heretofore stated, and that the coat and shoes-belonged to him. An admission or confession may be implied from the conduct of a person in remaining silent when charged with a crime or complicity therein, or when statements are made by third persons in his presence affecting him, when the circumstances afford him an opportunity to act or speak in reply and men Similarly situated would naturally deny the guilt imputed or make explanations as to- the statements. (Ackerson v. People, 124 Ill. 563.) This class of evidence is admitted on the trial of the person accused, on the ground that he has expressly or impliedly ratified and adopted it as his own statement. The bearing it has upon the issues and the weight to be given to it are to be determined by the jury in view of all the surrounding facts and circumstances shown by the evidence. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 229, 259 Ill. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tielke-ill-1913.