People v. Zachary

141 N.E. 732, 310 Ill. 351
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1923
DocketNo. 15566
StatusPublished

This text of 141 N.E. 732 (People v. Zachary) 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. Zachary, 141 N.E. 732, 310 Ill. 351 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

•' Samuel T.' Zachary, plaintiff in error, (hereinafter referred to as the defendant,) was indicted in the circuit court of Morgan county for the murder of Charles Luther Crawford. A change of venue was granted the defendant and the cause was tried in the Scott county circuit court and resulted in a conviction for manslaughter. Motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial were overruled by the court and judgment was entered on the verdict. The defendant has sued out this writ of error to review the judgment.

The facts are substantially as follows: On November 16, 1921, the day of the homicide, the defendant, who was then seventy-three years of age, resided on his farm about eleven and one-half miles southeast of Jacksonville. He had lived in that vicinity for over fifty years. Some time prior to November 16, 1921, he suffered a stroke of paralysis, which affected his speech and-the use of his right arm and disabled him generally. Charles Luther Crawford, the deceased, owned and resided on a small tract of 15 acres cut out of the northwest corner of the 160 acres of land upon which the defendant resided. Russell Crawford, a son of the deceased, also lived on his father’s 15-acre tract in a house a short distance from his father. Prior to the homicide there had been circulated throughout the neighborhood statements that Russell Crawford had forged a check on the defendant. The deceased a few weeks previous to the homicide had gone over to the defendant’s place and in the presence of Lloyd Cox had talked with the defendant in regard to the statements that had been made concerning his son, and the defendant there told him that his son had admitted to the defendant’s son that he had stolen some parts off of an automobile in Zahn’s garage. There was nothing said concerning the alleged forgery. After this conversation the deceased left, and as he was leaving said to the defendant, "We all have our troubles and I will see you again; I will see you again, Uncle Sam.” The deceased did not appear to be angry and they apparently parted on good terms. On the day of the homicide the deceased, accompanied by his wife, his brother, his son and Albert Filley, drove to Jacksonville and remained there until about two o’clock in the afternoon. The grand jury was in session and was investigating the charge of forgery against Russell Crawford. The deceased and his party remained at the court house until noon and learned that the charge of forgery against Russell Crawford had been dropped and that no indictment would be returned by the grand jury. The men in the party then had lunch. The deceased discussed the charge of forgery against his son and remarked to those he talked with that his boy had been cleared of the charge of forgery. Some of the persons to whom the deceased talked testified that the deceased said that he was going out to the defendant’s house and that the defendant had to apologize to his boy. Others testified that the deceased simply said that he thought that the defendant ought to apologize to his son for the trouble he had caused him. None of these witnesses testified that deceased threatened to do any actual violence to the defendant. One of the witnesses testified that he at that time could smell liquor on the deceased’s breath when he was doing this talking to him. The deceased and his party left Jacksonville about two o’clock for their home in the deceased’s car and he was driving. It had rained the night before and that morning and the roads were muddy. They drove to the home of Elmer Crawford, about three-quarters of a mile north of Russell Crawford’s home, and then drove to Russell’s home, at which Russell and Filley stopped, the deceased and his wife then driving to their home. The deceased changed his clothing and returned to Russell Crawford’s home, where Russell and Filley were at work putting a new tire on an automobile standing about seventy feet east of the intersection of the north and south and east and west roads, at a point which would place a certain machine shed in direct line between them and the place where the homicide took place. About the time the party in the automobile arrived at Russell Crawford’s house, C. F. Duffer, a neighboring farmer, and his small son, stopped at Russell Crawford’s on their way to meet Duffer’s children returning from school. Russell Crawford and Filley were at work putting on the tire, and Duffer, his small son and the deceased were standing near by. Norman Aulabaugh, driving an oil truck going west, drove up and stopped his truck just north of the machine shed. Russell Crawford, Filley, Duffer and the deceased went to the oil truck and engaged in conversation with Aulabaugh. They were thus engaged when Duffer’s small boy called to them and said, “There comes old man Zachary down the road with a gun under his arm.” After the Duffer boy had announced the approach of the defendant the deceased walked out to the north and south road and shouted to the defendant, “Come up this way, Uncle Sam; I want to see you a minute.” The deceased and the defendant then started walking toward each other and met about fifty yards south of the machine shed, the deceased having gone about three-fourths of the distance between them. As the deceased approached the defendant he made some comment upon the weather, according to the testimony of the witnesses who were at the machine shed. No part of what happened after the meeting of the deceased and the defendant was witnessed by any of the men at the oil truck except Duffer and Filley, as the machine shed was between them and the two parties in the conflict. They did hear the voices of the deceased and the defendant and knew they were quarreling or arguing but could not hear well enough to distinguish the words used by either of them. The driver of the oil truck went out into the road to see them, and testified that they were standing about four or five feet apart and talking in loud tones and gesturing with their hands and waving their arms. He then went back to the truck and in about five minutes thereafter heard the first shot fired. Duffer, one of the parties at the oil truck, testified for the People that he saw the deceased and the defendant during the entire time they were standing in the road, and that he did not see the deceased lay his hands on the defendant or do anything to him, and that when they turned to leave each other, and after the defendant had walked away about twenty-five or thirty feet, he turned and commenced firing at the deceased, and that after the first shot was fired the deceased asked the defendant not to shoot him any more. The witness Filley, for the People, testified that after the first three shots had been fired he saw the defendant take two steps toward the deceased, who had fallen out of his sight behind a bank on the roadside, and fire his gun in the direction he had seen the deceased fall. He measured the distance between the place where he thought the defendant was standing and where the deceased lay and stated it to be eleven and one-half feet. Crawford was found lying face downward in a ditch by the road. The shots struck Crawford principally on the arms, abdomen and chest. He died of the wounds in the evening of the day he was shot. The attending physician stated that in his judgment the wound in the left arm was the mortal wound, although one charge of shot had struck the right arm, and that there were between seventy-five and a hundred scattering shot in his chest and abdomen, which appeared to have struck deceased directly from the front and some from an angle but that there were no shot wounds in his back.

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.E. 732, 310 Ill. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-zachary-ill-1923.