Roberts v. People

80 N.E. 776, 226 Ill. 296, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3446
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 N.E. 776 (Roberts v. People) 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
Roberts v. People, 80 N.E. 776, 226 Ill. 296, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3446 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was indicted by the grand jury of Cook county for the murder of John V. Kopf. His plea was not guilty and he was tried in the criminal court of Cook county. The jury found him guilty and fixed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of twenty years. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were denied and he was sentenced on the verdict.

These facts were proved: On November 28, 1905, the annual election of the officers of the Thirteenth Ward Republican Club of Chicago was to be held at three o’clock P. M. at 1460 West Madison street, in said city. The opposing candidates for president were William J. Jackman, who was then president, and John V. Kopf, the deceased. By the constitution and by-laws the managing committee, consisting of the officers and one member from each primary district, was authorized to appoint judges and clerks of the election. At a meeting of the committee, of which each member was notified and at which all were present except five who were supposed to be supporters of Kopf, the committee appointed Frank Farnum, Samuel Leitzell and George D. Jensen as judges and John J. Callahan and the defendant as clerks. The election was to be held in a store room fronting north on Madison street. From the front door a railing was put up, running, diagonally toward the east wall and then along the east side of the room at a sufficient distance to form a passageway for voters, who were to enter the room at the front door, go along this passageway past a platform near the south end, where the ballot-box was, and pass out through an opening in the east wall. The platform was somewhere from eighteen to twenty-two inches high and the framework was seven feet three inches by ten feet three inches, and was floored over, with the exception of'the east thirteen inches. On the platform were two tables, one a little over three feet long by something over two feet wide, which was placed lengthwise near the railing, for the ballot-box and judges, and the other a round table on the platform at the north-west corner, for the use of the clerks. About twelve o’clock the judges and clerks took their places on the platform, with the ballot-box and rosters of the different precincts in the ward. They remained on the platform and had luncheon and beer at noon. About half-past one o’clock a line of supporters of Kopf entered the building, and some time before the hour for the election this line extended a considerable distance in the street, but whether those in the street were Kopf suppprters does not appear. About ten minutes before three o’clock, when the election was to commence, Kopf came into the room in the space before the platform, and at his request the ballot-box was opened, inspected and measured and found all right. There were fifteen men who had followed Kopf into the room and taken positions in the passageway along the railing. Kopf was a county commissioner, and the leaders of his faction acting in his interests were largely persons holding minor county positions. There was one bailiff, one record writer from the criminal court, two clerks from the board of election commissioners, one from the probate court, two employees of the county treasurer, one from the county hospital, one clerk from the board of review, one elevator man from the county building, and there were also two minor officials from the drainage canal board. Kopf took a position in the center of the room and made a speech to the men in the line, stating that he had been promised, at a meeting at Jackman’s house, a judge and clerk of the election, and he had not been allowed them, and claiming his right to have a judge and clerk. He read from a paper the names of fifteen persons and said that he wished these persons to serve him,— one as judge, one as clerk and thirteen as challengers. His claim was, that Jackman told him that he had the power to give him a judge and clerk and he would do so, but as to whether any such statement was made by Jackman the evidence was conflicting. It was understood between Kopf and the persons whose names he read, that when their names were called they would come over the railing to the place where he was. When Kopf read the name of John P. Lanahan, the man from the office of the clerk of the criminal court, he came over the railing and Farnum insisted that he should go back, and he weiit back at Kopf’s direction. The time for opening the election arrived before Kopf concluded his speech, and a man named Coffman, at the head of the line, who was bailiff in the sheriff’s office, handed up his ticket. Farnum took it, but Kopf told Coffman not to vote yet, and his ticket was handed back by - Farnum, who then called on the next man to vote. The next man declined to do so, and Farnum then said if they would not vote the judges and clerks would. Farnum then deposited his ballot and the clerks checked him off the list. Jensen then .attempted to vote, and according to the testimony of a number of witnesses he had a lot of ballots folded together in a bunch so thick that they would not go through the slot into the box, and when the ballots were taken out of the ballot-box after the election there was a bunch of ballots for Jackmap answering the description. The cry went up along the line that they were stuffing the ballot-box, and immediately the supporters of Kopf came over the railing into the space in front of the judges and clerks. It is impossible to state with entire accuracy the sequence of events from this time, from the fact that practically everything occurred at the same time and the trouble was all over in a few moments. There was a railing in front of the platform and there was some evidence that it was torn down, but the preponderance of the evidence is that it was not. A man named Waugh, a clerk in the office of the election commissioners, who was identified by the various witnesses as “the red-haired man,” rushed upon the platform, followed by Lanahan. There was a police sergeant named Landers present with several policemen, and Landers and some of the policemen also got on the platform. Waugh engaged in a struggle with the judges for the possession of the ballot-box, and Lanahan engaged in it and seized Farnum. Farnum demanded that he be allowed possession of the ballot-box as one of the legally appointed judges of the election, whereupon Landers, the sergeant, struck at Farnum with his club, but his aim was bad and he struck the chandelier overhead. There was evidence that Landers also called Jensen a vile epithet, and said, “I will run this election,” and that when Leitzell told him he was a judge of the election and needed protection, he said: “Screw your nut out of here; I will take charge of this election.” Leitzell left. Farnum got away from Lanahan, and, with either Lanahan or Landers hanging to his coat-tails, got over the railing and ran away as fast as he could. At the same time that the others went upon the platform Kopf started to go upon it at the north-west corner, where the table of the clerks was. Callahan, one of the clerks, was sitting on a chair which was tipped back, with the roster before him ready to check off names, and as Kopf came by .him Kopf either brushed against him or pushed or shoved him and knocked off his hat. Callahan picked up his hat and_put it on his head and took an immediate departure. The defendant was also sitting down at the clerks’ table, and the disputed questions of fact in the case relate to what then occurred.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bucklin v. Narkwich
182 A. 207 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1936)
People v. Strauch
93 N.E. 126 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1910)
Lane v. People
142 Ill. App. 571 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.E. 776, 226 Ill. 296, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-people-ill-1907.