The People v. Coniglio

187 N.E. 799, 353 Ill. 643
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1933
DocketNo. 21719. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 187 N.E. 799 (The People v. Coniglio) 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. Coniglio, 187 N.E. 799, 353 Ill. 643 (Ill. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

Carlo Coniglio, defendant, was convicted in the circuit court of Morgan county of the murder of Walter Massey and his punishment was fixed at sixteen years in the penitentiary. He brings the record here for review.

Walter Massey was proprietor of a lunch room and filling station, known as the South Side Inn, on the west side of State highway No. 3, about three miles south of the public square in Jacksonville. Between 12:00 o’clock, midnight, on September 23, 1931, and 1 :oo o’clock in the morning of the following day, he was shot and killed in an attempted “hold-up” at the lunch room. The South Side Inn consists of two small buildings. One is used as a light and power house and is located just north of the lunch room building. The latter contains three rooms — two on the south side and one on the north. The southeast room has a front entrance door on the east side, near the southeast corner. The southwest room is a kitchen, with a door into the southeast room nearly opposite the front entrance door. There is a double door leading from the southeast room into the north room and also a door leading from the kitchen into the north room. On the night of the murder there was a counter along the west side of the southeast room, with an ice-box in the northwest corner and one in the northeast corner. There were two tables, six chairs and a stool, the stool being up against the counter, toward the north end. A space of about eighteen inches was between the north end of the counter and the ice-box in the northwest corner. A sixty-watt light in the southeast room was about six feet from the stool and another light was in the kitchen. Gasoline pumps, with space to drive on each side, were located to the northeast of the building. There were two lights on the pumps, four large lights on poles with reflectors, and lights on the north, east and south sides of the building. All of the lamps were lighted.

Maurice Bond testified that he was an employee at the filling station and lunch room; that he was sitting on the ice-box in the northwest corner of the lunch room talking with Walter Massey, who was standing behind the counter; that about 12:3o o’clock A. M. a Chevrolet coupe came from the south and drove past the entrance door; that there were two men in the car; that one of them came in and ordered a “hamburger;” that he wore no hat; that the other man stayed outside and the motor was left running; that the man who came in was the defendant; that he came over and sat down on the stool at the north end of the counter; that witness looked at him about five minutes as he sat on the stool, not more than five feet away; that Massey went into the kitchen to prepare the hamburger, then went to the ice-box on the east side of the southeast room and then back into the kitchen, where he started pumping up the gasoline stove; that witness went into the kitchen to help Massey and told him, “Those guys look kinda suspicious.” On a motion by defendant the court excluded this statement. Bond further testified that another car with two men drove up to the station and Massey told him to go out and service it; that he sold them five gallons of gasoline; that while he was pumping the gasoline he observed the license number on the Chevrolet coupe and took down the number in his mind; that it was a 1931 Illinois license with six figures; that the number started with a “6” and had a “7” in it; that the license plate was about fifteen feet from him; that there was a good light and he could see it plainly; that it was all shined and had one headlight lighted; that as he went out to serve the two customers defendant got up and went to the south window; that when the customers drove away witness went inside just as Massey put defendant’s hamburger on the counter; that defendant came to the counter and sat down; that his companion got out of the car and was standing at the east door; that as this man started in witness went to the kitchen to put down the license number, but, remembering that he had no pencil, started into the other room to get one; that because of subsequent events he did not make a note of the license number; that defendant came around the counter with a gun and ordered him back into the kitchen, and he obeyed; that he was about two feet from Massey and about five feet from defendant; that Massey was standing in the kitchen and picked up his gun; that as he did so defendant shot him; that Massey shot at defendant and his companion, and there were six or eight shots fired; that defendant was in the building about ten or fifteen minutes; that the two men drove off north; that witness put Massey in an old Ford car and tried to start it; that he hailed a truck that came along but it did not stop; that he finally got the Ford started and took Massey home; that he then went back, closed the filling station and went to the sheriff’s office; that he did not tell the two customers whom he served that he was suspicious of defendant and his companion, because he was afraid they would laugh at him and he did not know but they might all be associated; that he lived on the Vandalia road, about ten miles from Massey’s filling station, and did not see Massey from the time he was shot, on Wednesday, until the following Saturday, and that he went to work on Monday after Massey was buried.

Defendant was arrested in Springfield and was taken to the police department. He was placed in a shadow-box and observed by Bond about five minutes. ' Bond was in the dark and the shadow-box was brilliantly lighted. Bond testified that the moment he saw defendant he knew he was the man who shot Massey and almost fainted, meaning that he got dizzy. Defendant was then taken out of the shadowbox and Bond sat across a table from him in a well-lighted room for about ten minutes. Bond was at the police station about' fifty minutes and went home with the sheriff of Morgan county. During that time he did not tell the officers defendant was the slayer of Massey. The homicide occurred on Wednesday. The exhibition of defendant in the shadow-box was one week later. On the following Monday Bond told the sheriff he was sure defendant was the slayer. On cross-examination he testified he told the police officers at Springfield he was not sure defendant was the man because defendant’s brother was there, and, while he was sure defendant was the slayer, his mother had told him not to identify anyone and that it was unsafe to do it, and he was afraid.

Benjamin Nunes was a cook in a restaurant at Whitehall, on State highway No. 3, about twenty-five miles south of Jacksonville. He testified that on the night of September 23, 1931, between 11:00 and 12:00 o’clock, two men came into the restaurant; that one of them wore a cap and ordered two fried ham sandwiches to be taken with him and a pork sandwich which he ate there; that the other man wore no hat, and he ordered a hamburger. Witness stated that defendant bore a resemblance to the man who bought the hamburger. Dempsey Collins, a waiter in the restaurant, testified to the same facts, except that .he did not know whether defendant was one of the men he served or not.

L.

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Bluebook (online)
187 N.E. 799, 353 Ill. 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-coniglio-ill-1933.