People v. Tokoly

144 N.E. 808, 313 Ill. 177
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1924
DocketNo. 15996
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 144 N.E. 808 (People v. Tokoly) 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. Tokoly, 144 N.E. 808, 313 Ill. 177 (Ill. 1924).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was indicted, tried and found guilty of the crime of manslaughter and was sentenced to the penitentiary to serve an indeterminate sentence. The indictment was under an act passed in 1923 “to punish persons knowingly and willfully selling, bartering or furnishing for beverage purposes wood alcohol, compounds or preparations containing wood alcohol, or any poisonous liquor, which causes death, from its use as a beverage.”/Section 1 is as follows: “Whoever knowingly and willfully sells, barters or furnishes any wood alcohol, or any compound or preparation containing wood alcohol, or any poisonous liquor, to be used for beverage purposes, and death results from such use, shall be guilty of murder and punished accordingly.” (Laws of 1923, p. 317.) Plaintiff in error sued out a writ of error to reverse the judgment of conviction.

Plaintiff in error, with his two sons, conducted a soft drink parlor in the city of Pana at the time of his arrest, in October, 1923. George Baldwin, a resident of Pana, entered plaintiff in error’s place of business on October 11, 1923, and drank as a beverage some liquid which looked like whisky. Baldwin died the night of the day following. There was testimony of other deaths following drinking at plaintiff in error’s place of business. Some of the same liquor which was being sold at that place was analyzed and was found to contain 44.7 per. cent wood alcohol. There was testimony that others drank the liquor sold by plaintiff in error, following which they were made sick and became blind, for a time at least. It appears from the evidence that alcohol was purchased by plaintiff in error from Bob Smith, who apparently resided in the same city. He purchased five gallons at one time, for which he paid $37, and another five gallons later, which had not been paid for at the time of his arrest. It was testified that wood alcohol sold for $1.45 to $1.60 and up per gallon. There was some testimony to the effect that plaintiff in error had stated at the coroner’s inquest that he supposed he was getting grain alcohol, but there was no direct evidence at the time of the trial to indicate that he purchased what he" supposed was grain alcohol, except the price paid and what he had previously stated at the coroner’s inquest. ,

The indictment contained six counts, all of which were based upon the death of Baldwin from wood alcohol poisoning. The first question discussed is the constitutionality of the act upon which the indictment is founded. It is argued that the act amends the Homicide act by making something murder which is not already therein contained, without setting out the act or section amended at length. It will be seen that the act does not purport to amend the existing law on homicide but is an independent act, which declares that one committing the act mentioned in the title and section shall be guilty of murder. When a law is, in fact, amendatory of a previous law in the sense intended by section 13 of article 4 of the constitution, the mere fact that the later act purports to be an independent act, and not amendatory, is unimportant. The court will consider it from the standpoint of what it is in reality. (People v. Wright, 70 Ill. 388.) But where the act does not purport to be amendatory but is enacted as original and independent legislation and is complete in itself, it is not within the constitutional requirement as to amendments where it simply modifies, by implication, prior acts or parts thereof. (1 Lewis’ Sutherland on Stat. Const. sec. 239; see, also, Timm v. Harrison, 109 Ill. 593; People v. Wright, supra.) Statutes may exist concurrently with the common law and the. statutes be construed as cumulative as to any particular crime. (1 McClain on Crim. Law, sec. 95.) Statutes are frequently cumulative of existing statutory laws without being considered amendatory thereof, although related to and in fact modifying prior laws. A subsequent act may have the practical effect of amending a prior one, or it may be substituted for it without violating the constitution. (People v. VanBever, 248 Ill. 136; People v. Jones, 242 id. 138.) The act here in question, while it modifies the Homicide statute by making an additional offense murder, is more in the nature of a cumulative provision than an amendatory one. It is no objection that one statute creates an offense and another act provides for its punishment. (16 Corpus Juris, 68, 69.) There are a number of such statutes in the Criminal Code of this State.

It is next insisted that the indictment is insufficient in that it does not charge the sale of the liquor as .being the cause of the death but the drinking of it to be such "cause; that the sale is the thing prohibited, and that that fact should have been alleged as the cause of the death. The act provides that if wood alcohol is sold, bartered or furnished for beverage purposes, and death results from such use, the offense shall be murder. The different elements constituting the crime of murder were contained in one or more counts of the indictment, namely, the name of the party charged, the person killed, the act done, the means employed, the injury inflicted, the result, time, place and fact of death, and the conclusion. In some of the counts, at least, the death is charged to have been caused unlawfully, willfully and with malice aforethought, against the peace and dignity of the people. Because a statute, in providing that if death follows the commission of certain acts the person so performing the acts shall be guilty of murder, does not in the same provision specifically define murder does not render the provision uncertain. The legislature in creating an offense may define it by a particular description of the act or acts constituting it) or it may define it as any act which produces, or is reasonably calculated to produce, a certain defined or described result. (16 Corpus Juris, 67.) The same general rules which govern and control in the indictment and trial for murder committed in any other manner govern and control as to a statute such as this, which states that certain acts shall constitute a particular crime, without further defining such crime. (Earll v. People, 73 Ill. 329.) Every indictment shall be deemed sufficiently technical and correct which states the offense in the terms and language of the statute creating the offense or so plainly that the nature of the offense may be easily understood by the jury. (Crim. Code, par. 716.) The indictment in this case was substantially in the language of the statute and advised the plaintiff in error plainly of the nature of the charge against him. That is all that the law requires. People v. Krause, 291. Ill. 64.

.It is contended, also, that error was committed by the court in permitting evidence to be introduced of sales of liquor containing wood alcohol to other persons and that they died as a result thereof or became blind or nearly so; that such evidence had no tendency to prove motive or to fix.identity and was not inseparably connected with the offense charged. The general rule is that in a case of this kind the evidence must be confined to the point in issue, and therefore no evidence of a distinct substantive offense committed is admissible. (People v. King, 276 Ill. 138.) In the very nature of the offense created by the statute it became necessary to show that the wood alcohol was sold for beverage purposes, and when that proof was made it showed the intention was to sell for beverage purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.E. 808, 313 Ill. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tokoly-ill-1924.