The People v. Dascola

153 N.E. 710, 322 Ill. 473
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
DocketNo. 17554. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 710 (The People v. Dascola) 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. Dascola, 153 N.E. 710, 322 Ill. 473 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr., Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, Giovani Dascola, (also called John Dascola,) and Carmela Dascola, his wife, were indicted and tried in the criminal court of Cook county for the murder of Robert Killion. Mrs. Dascola was acquitted, while the plaintiff in error was convicted and his punishment fixed at twenty years in the penitentiary. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled and plaintiff in error sentenced in accordance with the verdict. The record is before this court for review upon writ of error.

On the evening of August 9, 1925, Minnie Dascola, aged eighteen, a daughter of John and Carmela Dascola, an employee of the Hyde Park telephone exchange, whose time for quitting work was nine P. M., not arriving at her home at 10657 Hoxie avenue at the usual time, her father and her brother, Tony, aged eleven, at about eleven P. M. started in search of her and went to the corner of Ninety-fifth street and Commercial avenue, where she was accustomed to transfer from one street car line to another. Shortly after arriving there they saw Minnie with the deceased, Robert Killion, on the north side of Ninety-fifth street, either in or near an automobile belonging to Daniel Killion, a brother of the deceased. About 11:3o P. M. the deceased, while in the automobile, received two gun-shot wounds. He was taken to the South Chicago Community Hospital, where he died at 8:20 the next morning as the result of the wounds. No witness for the State directly identified plaintiff in error as the person who actually did the shooting or testified to the actual situation of the parties at the time of the shooting or as to how it actually occurred.

Rev. John A. Keating testified that on August 9, 1925, at about 11 ¡35 P. M. he got off a street car at Ninety-fifth street and Commercial avenue and engaged in a conversation with officer Dailey at that corner; that he observed an automobile about fifty feet west of Commercial avenue, on the north side of Ninety-fifth street; that he heard two shots from the north side of the automobile but did not see any flashes; that before the shots were fired a woman passed him back of Dailey; that he did not know who it was; that she walked directly west and had time to get there when the shots were fired; that after the shots were fired he saw Dailey start running toward the automobile; that he did not see anyone running from the automobile, as he got under cover; that right after that Dailey came around in front of the building with John Dascola, and Dailey had his own revolver in his hand; that after that he went over to the automobile, where the wounded man was groaning in pain; that he did not know him but found out later that his name was Killion.

James P. Dailey, for nine years a police officer of Chicago, testified that on August 9, 1925, at about 11 :io P. M., he was on duty, in full uniform, at the corner of Commercial avenue and Ninety-fifth street; that as he stood on the northeast corner John Dascola came up to him and called him by name; that Dascola said, “Jimmie, I want you to call the wagon;” that he asked him to call the wagon to take “those two” to the police station; that at that time he didn’t know who Dascola was talking about and asked him where they were, and Dascola said, “Down there,” meaning a point about fifty feet west of Commercial avenue ; that witness went to the place and found Robert Killion and Minnie Dascola; that she was standing by the left front fender of the Essex coach, facing east, toward Commercial avenue; that the left fender was toward the sidewalk, — the same side where the steering wheel was; that he asked them how they happened to get there, and Killion, whom he knew slightly, told him he went to the Hyde Park exchange to get a girl by the name of Nellie Alatta, but there was some confusion as to the hours she worked that night; that in the meantime Minnie came out and said that Nellie wasn’t working that night, and that then he said that as he was going south he would drive her as far as Ninety-fifth street; that witness asked Minnie what time she quit work that night, and she said 10:30 P. M.; that he then told Dascola there was no ground to call the wagon; that then Dascola went into the restaurant on the corner for about two minutes while witness talked to Minnie and Killion; that Dascola said he just called up his wife to take the girl home; that witness stayed around there about ten minutes talking to them; that he asked the girl if Killion had ever insulted her, and she said, “Not the least;” that witness told Dascola it wouldn’t be very wise to lock the girl up and take her to the police station like that; that Dascola walked to the corner and witness left Killion and Minnie in the machine; that in the meantime Father Keating came along, and witness was talking to him about two minutes when Mrs. Dascola got off a north-bound street car that travels on Commercial avenue; that the machine at that time was about fifty feet west of witness and Keating; that Mrs. Dascola got off the car about one hundred feet north of Ninety-fifth street and came by the corner where witness was; that he heard a little commotion and someone called his name; that then he heard two shots, and as he ran to the machine he saw Dascola, in his shirt sleeves, running down the alley; that the shots appeared to come from the direction of the machine; that Dascola ran back of the restaurant; that witness started after him — about fifteen feet behind him; that as he ran after him he fired two shots in the direction of his legs; that Dascola went north for about fifty feet and then turned cast again, along the side up on Commercial avenue; that Dascola came east from the alley to Commercial avenue and ran a short distance on Commercial avenue when witness apprehended him; that he searched him for a gun and couldn’t find any; that nothing was said by Dascola immediately after he was apprehended; that it was about twenty minutes between the time witness first spoke to Dascola and his wife’s arrival; that John Miller handed him a gun, which he identifies as the gun in evidence; that at the time it was handed to him there were two empty shells and three loaded shells in it; that when he ran after Dascola he didn’t stop to look whether or not anyone in the automobile had been shot, nor did he observe whether anyone was near the automobile just before Dascola commenced running away from him; that he saw the deceased make a written statement and was present when he signed it, at 12:20; that Dascola was there that evening for some little time, in his shirt sleeves; that he had no revolver to witness’ knowledge; that he figures he didn’t have any in his hip pocket; that if he had had a revolver that night when he first saw him witness would not have seen it, but he admitted that when testifying as a witness at the coroner’s inquest he made this answer: “He was in his shirt sleeves, and if he had a gun I would have seen it;” that he did not see a revolver in Dascola’s hand that night nor did he see Mrs. Dascola with a revolver in her hand; that at no time did he hear either Dascola or Mrs. Dascola make any threats against Killion; that he did not know what happened before the shots were fired, as he was not looking at the machine.

Edward W. Thomasson, called as a witness on behalf of the State, testified that he was thirty-eight years of age and employed, as superintendent for the Calumet Coal Company; that on August 9, 1925, between 11:30 P. M.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 710, 322 Ill. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-dascola-ill-1926.