The People v. Fedora

65 N.E.2d 447, 393 Ill. 165, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 298
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1946
DocketNo. 29151. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 65 N.E.2d 447 (The People v. Fedora) 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. Fedora, 65 N.E.2d 447, 393 Ill. 165, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 298 (Ill. 1946).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs in error were indicted in the circuit court of Macon county, at the October term, 1930, for the murder of Abel E. Price. They were tried by a jury in that county and were found guilty and punishment of each defendant was fixed by a jury at imprisonment in the penitentiary for life. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled and sentence was imposed by the court on February 18, 1931. A bill of exceptions was filed on May 14, 1931. This writ of error was sued out to the September term, 1945, of this court. Because one of the assignments of error is that the evidence was insufficient and that the verdict is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence, it will be necessary to make a rather detailed review of the evidence.

On the night of December 4, 1930, Abel E. Price was employed by the Illinois Power and Light Company in the city of Decatur as a bus driver. On this night he drove a bus on East Condit street to the Twenty-second street viaduct and at that point turned the bus around for the return trip to the city of Decatur. Condit street runs east and west; Twenty-second street runs north and south. Just west of the main Twenty-second street viaduct is a short street known as Little Twenty-second street. Gabriel’s restaurant was located on the corner of Condit and Little Twenty-second streets.

Edward L. Manning, a witness for the People, lived on Little Twenty-second street in the third house north from Gabriel’s restaurant. At five minutes of nine on the evening in question, Manning went to bed. Just before that he saw a black Ford coupe drive under the viaduct at Twenty-second street and turn off the lights. It was a brand new late model one-seated car and it looked like it was blue or black. Manning had just dropped off to sleep when he was awakened by someone shooting and he went to the front door of his home. When he reached the door, he saw a Ford coupe coming out from under the viaduct and the coupe headed north. As the car started north, a man came running from the direction of Gabriel’s restaurant and ran in front of Manning’s house. The car at that time was directly in front of Manning’s house. The man ran alongside of the coupe and jumped on the running board and fired two shots towards the south and in the direction of where the bus was located. He then got into the car and drove north on Little Twenty-second street to the main Twenty-second street. Twenty-second street runs north and in one-half mile comes to a road running across Stevens’ creek. There were no lights on the car as it drove away. Manning then dressed and went west on Condit street to the office of the Wabash railroad shops. The bus had stopped in front of the shops on the north side of Condit street, and Manning saw some men place Abel F. Price, whom he had known as a bus driver, in an ambulance. Manning described the man who did the shooting as about five feet four inches in height and weighing about one hundred forty pounds.

Virgil E. Richardson testified that he was a patrolman for the Wabash railroad company and was on duty in the car shops’ yards just east of the viaduct at Little Twenty-second street on this night; that at about ten minutes after nine o’clock he saw a new dark model “A” Ford coupe stop underneath the viaduct and the lights turned off and saw a man get out of the coupe on the right side and walk behind a pier underneath the viaduct and wait there until the bus turned around. He further testified that after the bus turned around and started west the man ran from behind the pier and whistled two or three times and the bus stopped. He heard shots fired and saw a man run around the corner of the restaurant toward the car. As the car was driven north, Richardson fired two shots at the moving car. ' He testified the man who did the shooting was about five feet four or five inches tall and that he was kind of a slender fellow and had on an extra long overcoat. Richardson was about one hundred feet away from the car and to the southeast of it when he shot, and he fired a .38 Smith & Wesson revolver with lead bullets.

W. A. Jones, who lived at the corner of Condit and Twenty-second streets, near the Twenty-second street viaduct, testified that he was in bed on the night in question when he heard someone holler he was shot. He got out of bed and went to the door and saw a man about five feet five inches in height rumiing north in front of his house about in the center of the street, which is eighteen feet wide, and saw a new Ford coupe come from underneath the viaduct on Little Twenty-second street and drive northward. There were no lights on the car and he saw the man run alongside of the car and get in on the left side and shoot back again after he got on the running board. He was shooting back south. The lights on the viaduct throw light onto Twenty-second street. He heard about five shots by both parties and heard two after he went to the door. He went down to the Wabash office and saw Price brought out on a stretcher and being put into the ambulance. It was about a quarter after nine on that night that he heard the shot.

Arthur Dodwell, a witness for the People, and who was a laborer for the Wabash railroad and twenty-seven years of age, testified that he had known the two defendants for about ten years and saw them together on the evening of December 4, 1930; that in the afternoon of that day the defendant, John Fedora, asked Dodwell to rent a car for him from the Saunders U-Drive-It-Yourself system and that Dodwell rented a Ford coupe from the Saunders agency for Fedora and Laska and delivered it to Fedora before six o’clock that evening. Fedora said to be at Laska’s house around five o’clock and Laska would give him the money to get the car. He drove to Laska’s house with Fedora about five minutes after five o’clock. Laska gave him five dollars to pay for the car and said he wanted a Ford coupe. Dodwell rented the car and gave a five-dollar bill as a deposit, and then Laska and Fedora got into the car and Dodwell told them to meet him at nine o’clock at Central Park so that he could get the Ford and return it to Saunders. Laska testified that Dodwell and he had a conversation as to where Laska would meet him and that Dodwell told him to meet him at nine o’clock and where to meet him. Dodwell then got out of the Ford coupe and into his own car and he did not see them again until about eleven-fifteen, when they came to where he was parked in his car. Elizabeth Heckler and Laurence Heckler were with him during that time, and he was at the meeting place at nine o’clock and remained there until defendants came. When the two defendants arrived, they told Dodwell to follow them and they all drove out across the lake to Homer Neal’s place, where they remained drinking beer, which was bought by the defendants Laska and Fedora, until about three o’clock the next morning. After they left the Homer Neal home, Dodwell took Miss Heckler to her home and left his car at his home and got into the rented car with the defendants and all three of them drove out in the country to Stevens’ creek. Laska told him he got hold of a newspaper and read where an Illinois Power and Light Company bus driver was shot and in a critical condition. Laska also testified that he had talked to Dodwell at Stevens’ creek and said he had. seen in the paper where the Jasper street bus driver was shot three times and was in a critical condition.

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.E.2d 447, 393 Ill. 165, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-fedora-ill-1946.