Shields v. People

132 Ill. App. 109, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 109
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 4, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,103
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 Ill. App. 109 (Shields v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shields v. People, 132 Ill. App. 109, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 109 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

Many of the questions arising on this record are common to the contentions of all of the plaintiffs in error, but there are also some that are peculiar to one, or to" some number less than the whole. As the judgment against each of the plaintiffs in error is a separate and individual matter, necessarily to be to some extent separately considered, we deem it most convenient to discuss in this opinion the case of each person separately and the contentions which are of significance as to him. Of course it will not be necessary, however, in so proceeding to make more than a reference in the case of any defendant to questions already treated of in disposing of the contentions of another defendant. It will therefore be under those first considered that the greater part of the positions insisted on by plaintiffs in error must be discussed.

But- before specifically . discussing the objections urged to the judgment against one of the defendants separately it seems desirable to state the nature of the conspiracy alleged against all the defendants, and the result of. that conspiracy as set forth by the State, which the evidence before the jury tended to prove.

All the defendants to the indictment, with the exception of Charles Gilhooly, Marcus Looney and Edward Feeley, were members of The Carriage and Wagon Workers Union Local No. 4—a labor organization having several hundred members and with headquarters on North Clark street in Chicago. It had been, in April, 1905, in existence for about four years. A strike had been called by it against certain employing wagon and carriage makers April 2, 1905. One of these employers was Fred L. Meckel, who had a wagon factory near the corner of 13th street and Wabash avenue, in Chicago. He had a man in his employ named Carlstrom. Carlstrom had been a member of the Union for two years and more, but was in arrears, for dues when the strike was called. He did not leave his job. This was noted by members of the Union. Two of the.plainU iffs in error, Newman and Casey, were picketing the Meckel shop shortly after the strike began, and Casey was seen talking with Carlstrom, who worked and was known in the Union under the name of Meyers. Carlstrom, after his day’s work on April 13, 1905, shortly before five o’clock, started from the shop for his home at 3234 Princeton avenue, several miles away. On Princeton avenue between 31st and 32nd streets, Gilhooly and Looney, -two of the plaintiffs in error, were lying in wait for him. The theory of the prosecution, on which Edward Feeley was indicted, was that he was the “trailer” or “dog”, so-called, who had Carlstrom pointed out to him by persons who wished Carlstrom slugged, and then in turn, after watching his movements and learning his habits, pointed him out and identified him to Gilhooly and Looney, who had undertaken the job of beating him. The trial court, however, did not find that there was sufficient evidence to hold Feeley, and during the trial instructed the jury to find him not guilty, which was accordingly done. We must therefore dismiss his supposed connection with the matter from consideration.

Gilhooly and Looney, however, for some purpose, and through the operation of some agency, were at the place before indicated between five and six o ’clock. As Carlstrom came up to them Gilhooly, who was a large and tall man, got oíf a fence where he had been sitting and spoke to him. A short conversation was followed by a vicious and brutal assault on Carlstrom by both Gilhooly and Looney, the latter of whom was a smaller man than Gilhooly. • They knocked Carlstrom down and savagely kicked him more than once, breaking his jaw. There were women passing on the other side of the street, who called out to these men to desist. “Never mind, lady,” Gilhooly .called back, “he is nothing but a God damned scab.” He and Looney then turned through a vacant lot and ran away across it. Carlstrom, bruised and bleeding, started for his home and was met by his wife near the house and helped in. Physicians were called and examined him, and on their order he was taken to a hospital on that or the following day. There, on April 22nd, eight or nine days afterward, he was taken with pneumonia, of which, on April 27th, he died. His death under these circumstances made much stir, and on May 5, 1905, Gilhooly, Looney and Feeley were arrested on a charge of murder. On May 13th the plaintiffs in error, Casey and Newman, together with one George Miller (who was subsequently indicted as a party to the charged conspiracy, but as to whom the indictment was nol prossed during the trial), were also arrested as accessories. Newman made a statement to the policemen who arrested him, and the police inspector before whom he was brought, concerning his own connection and that of others with a conspiracy or combination made on the night of April 7, 1905, by which Gilhooly and Looney and Feeley were hired by members of the Executive Board of Local No. 4 of the Carriage Workers Union to act as a slugging committee and beat various “scabs,” whose names and addresses were given to them on the next day, April 8th, Meyers’, or Carlstrom’s name, being the first on the list. Then Mr'. Meckel, who was taking a deep interest in the matter, was sent for and came with his lawyer, Mr. Heile, to the police station where Casey, Newman and Miller were confined, and in their presence, and in the presence of Casey, Newman re-' peated his statement. Casey also made a statement. Then George Miller told his story, claiming, however, that any part, he took in the transactions involved was that of an innocent messenger. Gilhooly, Looney and Feeley were then brought in from another police station and confronted with Newman, Casey and Miller. Gilhooly, on being asked if he knew these men, answered “No,” but they declared that Gilhooly was the man of whom they had been talking as a hired slugger. Gilhooly became violently angry and called, them obscene names, declaring that if they had kept their- mouths shut, nobody could have convicted him. Newman, after telling his story, also signed a written statement prepared by Heile, which statement was introduced at the trial as People’s Exhibit 15.

Another statement was prepared by Heile for Casey to sign. Casey said that it was true, but declined to sign it without advice from his lawyer. This was introduced in evidence at the trial as People’s Exhibit 18, limited by the court’s rulings, as were Newman’s statements and those of all the other defendants, as will be hereafter pointed out, to an effect upon the cases of some of the defendants only, against which defendants they were respectively declared to be competent.

Sunday morning, May 14th, Novak and Heiden were arrested. Sunday afternoon Novak was interrogated by Heile and signed a .statement prepared by Heile, which was introduced at the trial as People’s Exhibit 16. It contains nothing but an alleged admission of Casey, and it was not admitted at the trial, except as against Novak, who was acquitted. About the same time, but separately (so far as Heile could testify) Mr. Heile interrogated Heiden and prepared a statement which Heiden signed and which was introduced in evidence as People’s Exhibit 17.

May 15th another statement by question and answer was taken from Casey by Mr. Fake, assistant state’s attorney, and Mr. Heile. It was taken down by a stenographer and introduced in evidence. On the same day a statement was taken in the same way by the same persons from Newman, which was introduced in evidence.

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Related

People v. Koning
151 N.E.2d 103 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1958)
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82 N.E.2d 823 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1948)
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People v. Niederhauser
258 Ill. App. 564 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
132 Ill. App. 109, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-people-illappct-1907.