The People v. Bolton

155 N.E. 310, 324 Ill. 322
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1927
DocketNo. 17697. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 155 N.E. 310 (The People v. Bolton) 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. Bolton, 155 N.E. 310, 324 Ill. 322 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

William B. Bolton was indicted by the grand jury at the April, 1926, term of the circuit court of Washington county for robbery while armed with a dangerous weapon. By the jury’s verdict he was found guilty as charged. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were made and overruled and he was sentenced to the Southern Illinois penitentiary. He seeks a reversal of the judgment by this writ of error.

Cecil Tucker, Fred Tucker and Verne Tucker, co-partners by the style of Tucker Bros., conducted a garage at the junction of routes 2 and 15 of the State highways, about two miles west of the city of Ashley, in Washington county. The building occupied by them faced south on route 15. The office and accessory room occupied the east side or portion of the building. The front of the building had two sliding doors, through which automobiles entered the garage, and also a single door to gain entrance to the office. A counter ran parallel to and near the east wall of the office. There was also a door which opened from the office to the garage. On December 8, 1924, plaintiff in error, while driving a Chevrolet automobile with a cracked cylinder head, stopped at the garage between three and four o’clock in the afternoon to have the necessary repairs made. He remained at the garage until eight or nine o’clock, when he was taken to Ashley by Verne Tucker. Plaintiff in error returned to the garage about two o’clock in the morning of the next day, paid for the work done by two checks for five dollars each, drawn by his father to his order and endorsed by him, received his car from Fred Tucker and drove away. About a week later plaintiff in error and his brother stopped at the garage when Cecil and Verne Tucker and David Tucker, their father, were present. The checks had not been deposited in a bank and plaintiff in error offered a ten-dollar bill to Cecil Tucker to redeem them, but upon the suggestion of the brother of plaintiff in error that they might need the money and that the checks were good, Cecil Tucker retained them.

The evidence on the part of the State shows that shortly before ten o’clock P. M. on January 10, 1925, while Cecil and Fred Tucker were preparing to close their place of business for the night, three men entered the office, pne of whom inquired, “Have you got a mechanic?” immediately following which one of the other men asked the same question'. Cecil was behind the counter and Fred was west of it. The former answered affirmatively and asked, “Where is your car ?” They replied, “Up the road,” and drew their guns. One of the mqn caught hold of Fred and pushed him back against the wall. Another with a sawed-off shotgun pointed it at Cecil’s head, and as the latter attempted to reach for his revolver, the third man, who was plaintiff in eiror, jumped over the counter and held a revolver against Cecil’s body. The revolver was taken from Cecil and he was compelled to hold up his hands. Plaintiff in error then left the office with a pistol in each hand and entered the garage, stating that he would “get the other one,” apparently meaning Verne Tucker. One of the men answered, “Kill anything you see; don’t take no chances.” Verne was not in the garage at the time, and plaintiff in error returned to the office and with his two accomplices forced Cecil and Fred to go into the garage and to lie on the floor, face downward. Cecil turned to watch the men, and when the plaintiff in error observed his position, commanded him, in profane language, to turn his head, and pulled his cap down over his eyes. The brothers were then bound and gagged, their overalls were cut at the sides from the shoulders down, and papers, letters and money were taken from their pockets. While Cecil lay on the floor he heard an automobile driven under the canopy of the garage, the cash register opened and chattels removed through an east window. The lights were turned out, and the man with the shot-gun said that he would stand guard for twenty minutes and that he would kill the person who moved. After the robbers left, Cecil was the first to extricate himself from his bonds and he then cut the ropes from his brother’s hands and feet. They returned to the office, and the clock showed that it was 10:07 P- M. Cecil immediately went to Ashley and by telephone notified the chiefs of police of the cities of Mt. Vernon, Centraba, Carbondale, Benton and Marion of the robbery. Later it was discovered that ten automobile tires, forty-five inner tubes, four or five boxes of cigars, six cartons of cigarets and about ten boxes of candy, of the value of $339.71 at wholesale, and two revolvers, a double-barreled shot-gun, an overcoat, a suit of clothes and $79 in money had been taken.

The foregoing is substantially the testimony of the two brothers who were robbed. Their testimony with reference to the presence of plaintiff in errqr at the garage on the two occasions in December, 1924, was corroborated by their father, David Tucker.

Nearly a year later, on December 7 or 8, 1925, plaintiff in error again stopped at the garage and bought some oil for his automobile. The checks given for the work done on December 8, 1924, had been returned unpaid, and Verne Tucker inquired of him whether his name was Bolton and whether he was the person who had given the worthless checks. He replied that his father had paid them. His present and former employments were also discussed. When plaintiff in error left the garage Verne first followed him to Ashley and then proceeded to Nashville, the county seat, where he requested the sheriff to apprehend plaintiff in error. The latter’s arrest at Centralia occurred shortly afterwards.

On the part of plaintiff in error, C. F. Bolton, his father, testified that on January 10, 1925, he, the father, resided at 730 North Euclid avenue, in the city of St. Louis, about eight miles west of the Mississippi river and approximately seventy miles from Tucker Bros.’ garage; that he had conducted a food manufacturer’s advertising and selling campaign among retail merchants in southern Illinois and that plaintiff in error worked with him until that campaign closed, about December 20, 1924; that immediately thereafter plaintiff in error was employed at the Chevrolet automobile plant in St. Louis and continued to work there until October, 1925, and that he then returned to southern Illinois to assist the witness in a food brokerage business which the latter had established at Marion, in Williamson county.

Plaintiff in error admitted that he called at Tucker Bros.’ garage on December 8, 1924, and again about a week later, accompanied by his brother, but denied that he had any part in the robbery. January 10, 1925, was a Saturday, and he testified that he remained in his room, at 730 North Euclid avenue, in St. Louis, during the whole evening of that day; that Joseph Roither and Katherine, his wife, resided on the first floor of the same house, and that Clemens and Edward Kremel, Mrs. Roither’s brothers, occupied a room on the second floor; that he saw Roither after eight o’clock and Mrs. Roither between nine and ten o’clock on that evening, and that he was in the presence of Clemens Kremel from 1 :oo P. M., and of Edward Kremel from 5:30 P. M., until after 11:00 P. M. on that day. These persons testified that they were not related to plaintiff in error; that they saw him at 730 North Euclid avenue, St. Louis, on the evening in question at the hours stated, and that they fixed the date because of the death of Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
155 N.E. 310, 324 Ill. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-bolton-ill-1927.