People v. Wheeler

130 N.E. 716, 297 Ill. 289
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1921
DocketNo. 13726
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 130 N.E. 716 (People v. Wheeler) 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. Wheeler, 130 N.E. 716, 297 Ill. 289 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Joseph, Wheeler, Frank Krueger, Harold Toomey and John B. Trainor were jointly indicted by the grand jury of DeKalb county for burglary and larceny. The indictment charged Wheeler, Krueger and Trainor with prior convictions for felonies under the Habitual Criminal act. After a motion to quash the indictment was made and overruled, defendants entered pleas of not guilty and were placed on trial. They were all found guilty. Wheeler, Krueger and Trainor were by the jury found guilty of having been previously convicted of felonies. A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment and sentences rendered that they be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a term not to exceed the maximum term fixed by the statute. Trainor has sued out this writ of error."

In the early morning of- September 18, 1919, the garage of Breunig & Bolder, in Somonauk, BeKalb county, Illinois, was broken into and ten automobile tires stolen. The day of September 17 there had been a celebration in Somonauk and a dance at night, which lasted till 2:3o in the morning. The garage was closed and locked by Breunig at 2:30 A. M. Between that time and 4:30 in the morning the large door into the garage proper was broken open and a door leading from the garage into a smaller room, called the “harness room,” in which automobile tires and other accessories were kept, was also broken open and ten tires stolen. The night was rainy and the roads were muddy. Men were seen to break open the door, and enter the garage. The owners of the garage were notified by telephone, and the owners and two brothers of Bolder arrived at the garage about 4:30, but the .guilty parties had taken the tires and left. They discovered automobile tracks in the near vicinity, and in two automobiles they started in pursuit, Breunig in one car and Bolder and his brothers in another. Sandwich, Plano and other near by towns were notified by telephone, and before Breunig- started in the pursuit he received word from the marshal of Sandwich, three and a half or four miles east of Somonauk, that a large, smooth-running car with curtains on had gone east through Sandwich about 4:35 or 4:40. The pursuers followed the- tracks to Sandwich, and police officer Hickey, of Sandwich, who had notified .the police of Plano of the car going that way, joined Breunig in his car in the pursuit to Plano. A car was seen to pass through Plano by the police officer a few minutes ahead of the pursuers, who followed on to Kaneville, where they found a car at a gasoline filling station, and in the car were the four defendants, who after a spirited resistance, during which several shots were fired, were taken into custody.

Plaintiff in error contends that the evidence was not sufficient to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; that the court permitted incompetent evidence and gave one prejudicial and erroneous instruction, and that the State’s attorney made improper statements in his argument to the jury.

More than fifty witnesses testified for the State and three for defendants. The transcript of the testimony in the record covers more than 1200 pages and the abstract of it more than 400 pages. It will therefore be impracticable within the reasonable bounds of an opinion to set out the evidence in detail. We can only refer in a general way to the most important facts or testimony relied on by the State. That the garage was forcibly broken open, entered, and tires of the value of $485 stolen, is undisputed. The State introduced testimony that Wheeler and Krueger were seen in Sandwich during the evening of September 17, and one witness testified he there sold Wheeler a battery for a flash-light, and he identified the battery in a flash-light found in defendants’ car when they were captured, as of the same make andr peculiar description as the one he sold Wheeler. A hat and a cap were found in the automobile of defendants, which were identified as the hat worn by Wheeler and the cap worn by Krueger when they were seen in Sandwich.

The garage is situated on the east side of Depot street, which is a north and south street and the principal business street in the village of Somonauk. Dr. Milliken’s residence is- on the west side of that street, the north side of his residence being on a line with the south side of the garage. The street is sixty-six feet wide and the distance from the residence to the garage is about eighty feet. Mrs. Baker, the mother-in-law of Dr. Milliken, testified her bedroom was on the first floor and on the south side of the Milliken residence; that there was a window on the south side of her room, and that about ten feet south of her room was a bank building. Early in the morning of September 18 she heard a noise like someone picking at the back door of the bank and heard someone walking between her room and the bank. She saw two men pass through to the street in front. She got out of bed and went into the parlor to a window and very soon heard a noise across the street at the garage like someone was breaking a door down. She saw a man peeping out of the door looking north and south and saw a man in the building with a flash-light. Two men in the garage seemed to be standing on a shelf, reaching up for something. She saw one man rolling out tires and two men loading them on their shoulders and arms and then going south. She watched them until they passed out of her sight. She saw a large car with a smooth-running engine, curtains on, pass north toward the depot, then come back and go on south. The car had large wheels.

The witness’ daughter, Laura Baker, testified she was awakened by her mother. She went to the window and looked across the street and saw three men pushing and prying at the garage door. They got it open, went inside, and the witness heard a cracking and breaking of wood. She saw two men in the harness room taking something off shelves. One man came outside and stood watching. She testified that man was defendant Toomey. The witness then went and called her sister and Dr. Milliken. She next saw three men going down the street with tires. Toomey was in front. She also saw Trainor. They were all walking down the street when she last saw them. There was a light in the harness room and a light in Harmon’s store, which is just across the street from the Milliken residence. Toomey was in front of the harness shop looking up “and down the street. The witness testified she saw three of the men three days afterwards in jail and identified them at the trial as the men she saw at the garage.

Mrs. Milliken testified she saw the men in the harness room and one man standing outside. One of the men inside was trying to take something down and the other had a flash-light, which he was flashing on the tires. Trainor was standing on a shelf taking things down. Wheeler was the man who had the flash-light. She identified them at the trial, and also Toomey as the one who stood outside. She testified there was a light in the tire department and in Harmon’s store. She saw three men with tires walk south. There was a street light at-the crossing half a block away. The witness was positive in her identification of the men.

Dr. Milliken testified to being awakened at about 4:15 A. M. and saw one man standing in the garage door and two inside. The two inside were in the harness department,—one on a bench or something, reaching up. The witness went to the telephone and called for Breunig and Dolder, and for Hickey, the night policeman at Sandwich.

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Related

The People v. Dustin
52 N.E.2d 224 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1943)
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20 N.E.2d 284 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1939)
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141 N.E. 196 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.E. 716, 297 Ill. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wheeler-ill-1921.