The People v. Deal

192 N.E. 649, 357 Ill. 634
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1934
DocketNo. 22582. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 192 N.E. 649 (The People v. Deal) 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. Deal, 192 N.E. 649, 357 Ill. 634 (Ill. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Herrick

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs in error, Harold Deal and Clarence Lemmons, (hereinafter called the defendants,) were by an indictment returned by a grand jury of Effingham county charged with the crime of robbery while armed with a dangerous weapon. They were tried by a jury, which returned a verdict of guilty. The motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment interposed by them were severally overruled and they were sentenced to the Illinois Reformatory at Pontiac for the indeterminate sentence fixed by the statute. To reverse the judgment of conviction they have sued out this writ of error.

Numerous errors are assigned, but those most earnestly urged are, (x) that the trial court admitted incompetent and prejudicial evidence; and (2) that the State’s attorney in his argument to the jury made improper statements calculated to arouse, and which did arouse, the passions and prejudices of the jury against the defendants.

The defendants are young men residing with their parents in Vandalia. Altamont is about twenty miles east of Vandalia, on Route 40. Leroy Martin was an attendant at a gasoline filling station located on Route 40, at Altamont. About 8 :55 of the night of October 16, 1933, two men, each with a revolver in his hand, entered the office of the station, where Martin then was. The shorter man commanded Martin to stick up his hands and ordered him to turn out the lights, which Martin did, with the exception of the lights in the canopy outside the office. The taller man then took the money-changer, which was strapped about Martin’s body, from him, and also took two one-dollar bills out of a pocket in his overalls. The money-changer contained about $5.90. While the robbery was in progress, Martin’s sister, Katherine, drove up to the station. On her arrival one of the robbers left the office, met her, pointed a revolver at her and directed her to come inside. The robbers forced her and Martin into the washroom, commanded them to stay there, placed a chair against the outer door and then left in an automobile. The evidence tended to show the automobile was a Ford and that it was driven west from Altamont. The money-changer was later found in a field between Altamont and Vandalia.

The defense interposed was an alibi. Each of the defendants testified in his own behalf, denied any connection with the robbery, and purported to detail his whereabouts on the evening and night in question. There was evidence tending to support the testimony of each defendant that he was in Vandalia at the time the robbery occurred. Inasmuch as the case must be again tried, we refrain from expressing any opinion upon the weight of the testimony of any of the witnesses.

The case turns on the question of identity. Martin testified that he positively identified the defendants as the persons who committed the robbery. While on cross-examination his sister stated that, she was likewise positive that the defendants were the robbers, yet she further stated, in substance, that her identification was limited to her opinion that the defendants were the robbers. Martin testified he identified the defendants in the jail at Green-ville, where they were then imprisoned, after the robbery. So far as the record discloses, Katherine did not see either of the defendants after the robbery until they were in jail in Effingham. She and Martin both admitted that they had not seen either of the men before the night of the robbery. It is rather difficult to accurately tell from the record about the identification of Deal by Martin. He said on one occasion that Deal was brought out by himself for identification. He later testified that they (apparently referring to the sheriff’s force) brought some men out and that he picked Deal out from amongst the men; also that at the Effingham jail Deal was brought out by himself. Martin also saw Lemmons a few days after the robbery, in the jail at Greenville. The sheriff of Bond county had told Martin that he (the sheriff) had Deal in jail there. The method of identification of Lemmons is also not clear from the record. We said in the case of People v. Crane, 302 Ill. 217, on page 223: “Where one under arrest is brought alone before persons who are present for the purpose of identifying an assailant and who know that the person arrested is to be brought before them for identification, it is not unlikely that such surrounding circumstances might influence one who seeks to identify an assailant. Certain it is that such an identification cannot be given the same weight and credibility as where the witness had picked out the assailant from a number of persons unknown to her.” What we there said was approved by this court in People v. DeSuno, 354 Ill. 387.

An attendant at a gasoline station at Mulberry Grove was robbed by two men at about 11 ¡45 P. M. on the same night the robbery was committed at Altamont. Mulberry Grove is in Bond county and about ten or twelve miles west of Vandalia, on Route 40. The evidence'shows that the two defendants were arrested, charged with the robbery, held in the jail at Greenville and tried for that robbery. While the evidence was not placed before the jury that the defendants were found not guilty of that robbery, yet certain instruments filed in connection with the motion for new trial show that they were tried for the robbery of the attendant of the oil station at Mulberry Grove in the circuit court of Bond county on February 26, 1934, and found not guilty. The trial of the present case commenced on the 29th of March.

The defendant Deal was asked on his cross-examination if it was not a fact that between 11 :oo and 12:00 o’clock of the night of October 16 he was at Mulberry Grove, and if he did not see a boy, Lester McDaniels, there between 11 :oo and 12 :oo o’clock that night, and whether he did not see certain people at Durr’s restaurant about 7:3o P. M. on that same night. Deal denied that he was in Mulberry Grove on either of the occasions about which he was interrogated. The defendant Lemmons was asked substantially the same questions on his cross-examination and likewise denied that he was in Mulberry Grove at any time in the evening or night of October 16. In rebuttal the People produced the testimony of different witnesses tending to identify the defendants, who with two other men were in Durr’s restaurant about 7:30 P. M. on October 16.

Lester McDaniels testified that he was the attendant at the filling station and restaurant operated by Albert Durr in Mulberry Grove on the night of October 16, and that about 11 .-45 P. M. the two defendants entered the place and robbed him. This testimony was objected to. The court overruled the objection. McDaniels not only related the fact of seeing the two defendants in the filling station, but over the objection of the defendants was permitted to state that the taller of the defendants commanded him to go in the back room, which he did; that said defendant (Deal) followed him there, felt of his clothing, and then struck him on the head with some steel instrument, knocking him down; that after he was prostrate a watch was taken from his pocket, and that he lay there on the floor, confused, until a man named McMasters came in. McDaniels had seen neither of the defendants before the occasion testified about. He stated that in his opinion the defendants were the men who robbed and assaulted him.

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192 N.E. 649, 357 Ill. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-deal-ill-1934.