The People v. Benson

152 N.E. 514, 321 Ill. 605
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1926
DocketNo. 16926. — Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 514 (The People v. Benson) 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
The People v. Benson, 152 N.E. 514, 321 Ill. 605 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, A. William Benson, was jointly indicted with one Irvin Hutchinson in the criminal court of Cook county for an assault with a deadly weapon, an automobile. The indictment charged that the assault was willfully-and maliciously made in and upon Leo Addison with, intent then and there to inflict upon his person a bodily injury, and that the assault was without any considerable provocation and under circumstances showing an abandoned and malignant heart. The jury was waived and upon the trial the court found both defendants guilty as charged and sentenced plaintiff in error to six months in the county jail and imposed a fine of $50. Hutchinson was sentenced to three months in the county jail and fined $10. The Appellate Court for the First District affirmed the judgment as to the plaintiff in error and reversed it as to the other defendant. Benson sued out this writ of error to review the record.

About 9:30 A. M. on October 14, 1923, the prosecuting witness, Leo Addison, accompanied by his wife and two children and George Maierhofer and wife, were driving on a public highway known as Rand road, between Chicago and Crystal Lake, in a Chevrolet automobile. At a point about two miles west of Desplaines they passed a Ford coupe containing one seat, driven by plaintiff in error. The Ford coupe was occupied by plaintiff in error, sitting on the left end of the seat; Hazel Harm, sitting by him on the right; Irvin Hutchinson, sitting on the right end of the seat; and Thelma Peterson, sitting in Hutchinson’s lap with her arm around his neck and shoulders. There is a dispute in the evidence as to whether or not Benson, the driver of the Ford coupe, had his arm around the Harm girl as the Chevrolet car passed the Ford car. Addison and Maierhofer both testified that Benson, the driver of the Ford, did have his arm around the Harm girl, while the Harm girl and Benson denied that in their testimony. The defendants were each twenty-one years of age and lived at Crystal Lake. They hired the Ford coupe on Saturday afternoon, the day before the collision, and told the owner of the car that they intended to drive to Lake Geneva and would return on the next day, Sunday. They changed their minds and drove to Chicago, stayed all night there and started back from Chicago about eight o’clock A. M. Mrs. Maierhofer testified that when she saw the Ford coupe in front of the car she was in, one of the fellows in the Ford had his arm around a girl, but she does not make it clear whether it was Benson, the driver, or Hutchinson. All of the parties in the Chevrolet testified that as they passed the Ford coupe George Maierhofer called out to the parties in the Ford car, “Here! Cut it out!” and that he was addressing his remarks to the party that had his arm around the girl, as well as to the girl who had her arm around Hutchinson’s neck and shoulders. It appears to be the theory of the parties in the Chevrolet car that the defendants took offense at this remark, and for that reason the defendants undertook a little later to pass the Chevrolet and intentionally collided with that car. It does not appear from the evidence of any one of the four parties in the Ford coupe whether or not any of them heard the said remarks addressed to them by Maierhofer.

The record shows without dispute that the Chevrolet car, after passing the Ford coupe, had only driven about two city blocks when the driver was signaled by the driver in the Ford coupe that the latter intended to pass him, and that Addison, in the Chevrolet, immediately pulled his car to the right side of the road and gave to the Ford car the entire left side of the road for it to pass. Addison testified at this point that as the Ford car was passing him on the left he could see that it was headed right for his car; that the front wheel of the Ford struck the front end of his car or the front wheel, locked the driving power of the Chevrolet, and that the pull on the latter car turned it over and threw its occupants under the car, the car turning with the bottom side up. He further testified that his car was going between twenty-five and thirty miles an hour when it was hit and that the chassis of the car laid on top of the occupants after it turned over; that the back of the front seat of his car was across his back but his shoulders were free; that he managed to draw himself out from underneath the car, and that a man by the name of Schmidt, who was following him in another automobile, then came up and helped him to lift his car off of the other occupants. The two women in the Chevrolet were pretty badly injured, Mrs. Addison having her collar bone broken and also sustaining other injuries. Addison took the license number of the Ford coupe and asked the defendants, who were strangers to him, their names. The defendants told him that their names were Ben Anderson and Carl Carlson and that their residence was Barrington, and there is no dispute in the record that the defendants thus mis-stated their names and their residence. At the time of the collision there was no car approaching the cars in question from the opposite direction. The evidence shows without dispute that the road at the point of the collision was sufficiently wide for two cars to pass comfortably and safely and leave five or six feet between them, and that the Chevrolet, when the collision occurred, was close to the right-hand side of the road, leaving to the Ford coupe all the remainder of the road to the left of that car. All of the occupants of the Chevrolet were more or less injured, and they were all very positive in their testimony that the Ford coupe collided with the front part of the Chevrolet and that the four fenders of the latter car were broken, and that the Ford car, as it was passing the Chevrolet, was within two or three feet of the latter car, and that as the front end of the Ford got even with the front end of the Chevrolet the Ford cut into the right and struck the other car.

Otto E. Schmidt testified that the Ford coupe passed him before it passed the Chevrolet and that witness, was then driving between thirty and thirty-five miles an hour, and that he remarked to his wife as the Ford passed that it was going a pretty lively clip with four people in it; that the witness then drove probably from one to two miles and that the Ford increased its distance ahead of him, and that the next thing he noticed was the Ford passing the Chevrolet, and that as it did so it pulled to the front of the car and that this other car tipped over, — upside down. He noticed, also, that the Ford stopped about a city block ahead of the upturned car, and the witness then rode up to the wrecked car, and with others who were gathering around he assisted in extricating the occupants of the Chevrolet after turning the car back on its wheels. He also testified that he could not swear that the first car was trying to ditch the other, as he was too far off. He examined the Ford car and found several bad dents on the right side, toward the back end, and that the right rear fender was dented, and .he also noticed a number of scratches on it. He also stated on cross-examination that he could not swear that the Ford struck the Chevrolet, and that he just looked at the right side of the Ford, “where I imagine the two cars came together.”

All four of the occupants of the Ford coupe testified at the trial, and every one of them stated, in substance, that they did not feel any jar or jolt of their car as they passed the Chevrolet.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 514, 321 Ill. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-benson-ill-1926.