People v. Turner

265 Ill. 594
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 265 Ill. 594 (People v. Turner) 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. Turner, 265 Ill. 594 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error was convicted of incest, and has sued out a writ of error to reverse the judgment.

Error is assigned by plaintiff in error on the denial of his application for a change of venue. Two indictments for incest were returned against the defendant at the same term and applications for a change of venue were made in each case and denied. The plaintiff in error was convicted on one indictment and the judgment .was reversed by this court at the October term, 1913. (People v. Turner, 260 Ill. 84.) It was held that there was no error in denying the application for a change of venue. The present record is identical with the record in that case so far as the application for a change of venue is concerned, and there was therefore no error in denying the application.

Before the trial the plaintiff in error made a motion for a continuance on account of the absence of Clara H. Campbell, a material witness in his behalf, and filed an affidavit setting forth that she was now a resident of Seattle, in the State of Washington, and was too sick to come to Illinois to attend the trial; that she had been a resident of Decatur, Illinois, for many years before August, 1912, and would testify to facts material to the defense which could not be proved by any other witness, such facts being stated in the affidavit in detail. The affidavit further stated that the plaintiff in error had caused the deposition of this witness to be taken upon oral interrogatories upon due notice to the State’s attorney, with full opportunity to be- present and cross-examine, and that such deposition had been returned to the clerk of the court and was on file in the cause. The motion asked that the cause be continued ór the deposition be admitted in evidence on the trial. The court overruled the motion, and it- is insisted that a continuance should have been allowed or the deposition should have been admitted in evidence. The affidavit was not sufficient to require the granting of a continuance, because it contained no statement that there was any expectation or reasonable prospect of obtaining the presence of the witness at the next term of court or at any future time. Our statutes make no provision for the taking of depositions in criminal cases, but it is contended that the court had the discretionary power, which it should have exercised, to postpone the trial unless' the prosecution would consent to the admission of the deposition. Originally the common law courts had no power to procure the testimony of witnesses by deposition and it was not their practice to receive depositions in evidence. Depositions are not the best evidence the nature of the case admits of, and the presence of the witnesses in open court and their examination in the presence of the judge and jury were regarded as of such importance that an order for the examination of a witness on interrogatories could only be obtained by consent. (2 Tidd’s Pr. 810.) The courts of common law sometimes used indirect means to coerce the adverse party into a consent to the examination -of witnesses who were absent in foreign countries, under a commission for that purpose. "These means of coercion were various, such as putting off the trial or refusing to enter judgment, as in case of non-suit if the defendant was the recusant party; or by a stay of proceedings till the party applying for the commission could have recourse to a court of e'quity by instituting a new suit there auxiliary to the suit at law. But subsequently the learned judges appear not to have been satisfied that it was proper for them to compel a party by indirect means to do that which they had no authority to compel him to do directly, and they accordingly refused to put off a trial for that purpose.” (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 320.) This inconvenience has been remedied by statutes which provide in civil cases for taking the depositions of witnesses whose attendance at the trial cannot be procured, and in some of the States', as in Kentucky, Indiana and Massachusetts, statutes have been enacted allowing the defendant in a criminal case to' take the depositions of material witnesses in his own behalf. The legislature of 'this State has not seen fit to provide for such a method of obtaining testimony in criminal cases, and the courts ought not indirectly to change the law by compelling prosecutors to consent to the introduction of evidence for the defendant not legally admissible. We do not recognize the existence of such power in the courts of this State.

It is insisted that after a consideration of all the evidence there remains so serious a doubt of the guilt of the plaintiff in error that the judgment should be reversed for that reason. The evidence was conflicting to the last degree. The alleged victim of the crime was the plaintiff in error’s daughter Tona, who was seventeen years old at the time of the trial,—three years after she testified that the relations with her father which formed the basis of the indictment began. She, her sister Grace, three years older, and the plaintiff in error, were the only witnesses who testified directly in regard to the alleged criminal acts, all of which the plaintiff in error denied. The sisters testified to many acts of sexual intercourse between the plaintiff in error and Tona, and narrated in detail his treatment of her in the course of the maintenance of their sexual relations for a period of about ten months prior to his arrest. These details need not be stated or discussed in this opinion. Some of them are claimed by the counsel for the plaintiff in error to be unreasonable, incredible and impossible. The testimony of physicians was introduced on either side to show the possibility or impossibility of some of the things testified to. It was shown that after his arrest and indictment the plaintiff in error had a contracted liver, a chronic inflammation of the gall bladder, a chronic inflammation of the appendix and an enlarged heart, and that he had suffered from these conditions for several years. He was operated upon for appendicitis and his appendix was removed. One of his kidneys was also found congested and enlarged. In September, 1912, between nine and ten months after the finding of the indictment, Tona was taken by her aunt for examination to a physician, who made an examination of her sexual organs and testified that he found the vaginal orifice and hymen normal, the hymen unbroken and no physical indication that she had ever had sexual intercourse. Testimony of physicians was also introduced that sexual intercourse might occur without rupturing the hymen. The two girls and their aunt were the only witnesses introduced by the People in chief, and witnesses called to impeach them testified to statements of each of them more or less inconsistent with their testimony or showing animosity against the plaintiff in error.' In the end the question of the credibility of the testimony of the two daughters of the plaintiff in error is the determining factor -in the case. The case is one peculiarly calculated to excite passion or prejudice, and it was the right of the plaintiff in error to have the jury accurately instructed in all matters which might influence them in arriving at their verdict.

Complaint is made that the court instructed the jury, in the language of section 156 of the Criminal Code, that if a father shall rudely and licentiously cohabit with his own daughter the father shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a period not exceeding twenty years.

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Bluebook (online)
265 Ill. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-turner-ill-1914.