The People v. Crowe

61 N.E.2d 348, 390 Ill. 294, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 293
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1945
DocketNo. 28555. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 61 N.E.2d 348 (The People v. Crowe) 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. Crowe, 61 N.E.2d 348, 390 Ill. 294, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 293 (Ill. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Chiep Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error, Harry Crowe, was indicted in the criminal court of Cook county on July 30, 1943, for the crime of taking indecent liberties with a female child who, at the time of the crime on July 19, 1943, was not quite seven years eld, she having been bom on July 22, 1936. The trial was commenced before a jury on March 6, 1944, and the plaintiff in error was later convicted by the jury and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary. He prosecutes this writ of error to reverse that judgment.

At the time in question, the plaintiff in error was thirty-one years of age, was married and had two children. He and his family occupied the first floor and basement of an apartment at 3830 West Flournoy street in Chicago. Joanne Konsoer, a child about eight years of age, who testified for the State, resided with her mother, father, brother and sister on the second floor of this same building, and was in the third grade in a Catholic school. The complaining witness lived about three doors away on the same street and was in grade 2-B in the Gregory school. She and Joanne were playmates, and she had known the plaintiff in error, Harry Crowe, for a long time.

She testified to the commission of two offenses upon her, one in Crowe’s home when she and Joanne were there together and were each sitting on one of plaintiff in error’s knees, and the second offense about two weeks later when Crowe took her into his basement and stood her on a trunk and took indecent liberties with her. After she left the basement, she went upstairs with Joanne Konsoer and Joanne told her to go home and tell her mother and father, which she testified she did. Her mother testified that she had a conversation with her daughter on July 19, 1943, and, after she talked to her, the mother called the police, and later she went to the State’s Attorney’s office with her daughter and Joanne and her mother..

Both girls were uncertain as to what da)r the first offense was committed, but they both testified it was in the month of July, 1943, and in the afternoon. Joanne corroborated the complaining . witness as to the offense when she and complaining witness were sitting on Crowe’s knees in the dining room of his home, and she further testified that the wife of plaintiff in error was not at home at the time but that his sons, Robert and Butchie, were running in and out of the house. Joanne told her mother that evening what Crowe had done. No objection was made by the plaintiff in error to this testimony.

Police officer March testified that he arrested the plaintiff in error on July 20, and took him to the police station and later sent him to the State’s Attorney’s office. Later that day, after plaintiff in error returned from the State’s Attorney’s office, he had a conversation with him in which Crowe admitted he had taken indecent liberties with complaining witness in his basement. The plaintiff in error did not testify and, therefore, the testimony of the complaining witness and Joanne Konsoer as to the commission of the two offenses was not denied by the defendant or by any other of the defense witnesses, nor did the plaintiff in error deny the testimony of the police officer as to the confession.

The only witness offered by the plaintiff in error was the testimony of his wife, Alice Crowe. She testified she saw complaining witness in her home on only one occasion, that being July 5, 1943, which was her little boy’s birthday, at which time her husband was home in the afternoon and he was playing with the children, roughing them up a bit, playing tag and climbing over the furniture, and that they were all sitting around her husband’s knees. She further testified that on July 19, 1943, she left home about 4:45 P.M. and the complaining .witness was not there. On cross-examination this witness testified she had seen complaining witness come into their building and go up to the Konsoer apartment, and that from time to time, the Konsoer girl had been down in the basement, which was used by both families, and that the Leonard girl had at times gone down with her; that there was a trunk in the basement and that they kept some kittens there which her husband would feed.

The plaintiff in error put on the stand three witnesses to prove his general reputation for chastity and good morals. One of his character witnesses resided in Elmhurst and was general manager of a plant where plaintiff in error worked, and his knowledge was based simply on his business acquaintance, and on cross-examination he said he had never discussed it with anyone. Alice MacArthur, another character witness, lived distant about ten minutes walk, and Harriet Murray, the third witness, lived about five blocks .away from the Crowe home. The People in rebuttal called three witnesses who testified the reputation ■of plaintiff in error for chastity and good morals was bad. The evidence on this point was about evenly divided.

The plaintiff in error contends that he was not proved guilty beyond all reasonable doubt. In support of his position the plaintiff in error cites, without comment, three cases, People v. Schwabauer, 369 Ill. 261; People v. Phipps, 338 Ill. 373; People v. Freeman, 244 Ill. 590. In the Schwabauer case, there was a conviction for taking indecent liberties with a male child eleven years of age. The judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial because of the unsatisfactory evidence for both the People and the defense. There were eleven witnesses produced by the defense to prove an alibi. The defendant testified and denied all the testimony of the State’s witnesses; one of the State’s witnesses was uncertain in his identification of the defendant, and there were strong contradictions as to other material features of the evidence.

In the Phipps case, there was a conviction for the crime of taking indecent liberties with a female child, but the indictment also contained a count for assault with intent to commit rape, which was later nolled after the proof was in. The child’s mother had, however, testified to a complaint by the child as to the attempted rape. The girl was ten years of age. The defendant called several witnesses to contradict and impeach the testimony of the prosecuting witness and also testified in his own behalf. The court reversed and remanded the case for a new trial because there were too many errors of a material character committed on the trial to justify this court in affirming the judgment. The errors pointed out were in the giving of instructions, the refusal of the court to require the prosecution to elect on which count it would prosecute the case, and because the jury might be materially affected by the incompetent testimony of the mother given in support of the stricken count.

In the Freeman case, a judgment of conviction in an indecent-liberties case was reversed because the testimony of the prosecuting witness, a child about eight years of age, was not clear and convincing and because there was practically no corroboration of her story.

We are aware of the danger of resting a conviction on the testimony of a child of tender years, and such a conviction ought not to stand unless the testimony is corroborated or is otherwise clear and convincing. (People v. Johnson, 298 Ill. 52.) In the case cited, the complaining witness was a girl eight years of age.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E.2d 348, 390 Ill. 294, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-crowe-ill-1945.