The People v. Funk

155 N.E. 838, 325 Ill. 57
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1927
DocketNo. 17812. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 N.E. 838 (The People v. Funk) 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. Funk, 155 N.E. 838, 325 Ill. 57 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was convicted in the circuit court of McLean county of the crime of robbery while armed with a dangerous weapon and brings the cause here for review.

On the afternoon of January 13, 1925, at about two o’clock, two men entered the Farmers Bank of Chenoa and presented a letter to James S. Kelly, president of the bank, purporting to be credentials of bank examiners. One gave his name as McAndrews and introduced the other as Hoefer, his assistant. They stated to Kelly that they had come to examine the books of the bank. The latter accordingly prepared for them in the rear room a table, upon which the books and securities of the bank were placed for their examination. While the table was being prepared the men stood over a register in the outer office warming themselves. After about fifteen minutes Kelly called them into the rear room and showed them where they could work. The only other person in the bank at that time was Anna W. Sommers, the book-keeper, who was behind the counter near the register at which the men stood while preparations were made for them by Kelly. These men called for the bills receivable and bonds. McAndrews checked the cash with the book-keeper. The men continued apparently examining the books and securities of the bank until about five o’clock, when Miss Sommers left for the day. At or about three o’clock a third man, dressed as a mechanic and carrying a bag, came into the bank and inquired for McAndrews, and said to him, “I have finished your job, and if you will pay me I will go.” The latter replied that he was busy and would see him later. The third man took a seat in the lobby of the bank and remained there until after Miss Sommers left. McAndrews explained that they had had an accident with their car on the way to Chenoa and that this man was the mechanic who repaired it for them. Soon after Miss Sommers left the bank McAndrews called Kelly into the back room. Hoefer arose from the table, and while Kelly was talking to McAndrews, with his back towards Hoefer, the latter threw his arm ' around Kelly’s neck, under his chin. The man who had been sitting in the lobby came in and he and Hoefer bound and gagged Kelly and tied him to the seat of a water closet in the toilet room of the bank. Shortly thereafter the men left, taking with them in cash and securities $181,319. Shortly before six o’clock that evening Kelly succeeded in attracting attention by pounding on the floor of the bank and was released. On September 8, 1925, plaintiff in error was arrested in Champaign, Illinois, and taken to the McLean county jail. Kelly and Miss Sommers identified him as the man who had given his name as Hoefer, an assistant bank examiner, and Marie Zeitz, employed in a bakery across the street, identified him as one of three men whom she saw alight from an automobile and go into the bank.

The defense was an alibi. The testimony of the defense on that issue was offered by plaintiff in error and certain witnesses from the city of Chicago. A surgeon of that city testified that he performed an operation on the spine of plaintiff in error on April 4, 1924; that on January 13 (the day of the robbery) plaintiff in error wore a plaster cast, it having been put on on June 20, 1924, and removed on February 13, 1925. The evidence of the witnesses for plaintiff in error on this issue also is to the effect that plaintiff in error was in his room in a hotel in Chicago from June, 1924, until September of that year; that when he began walking about he was required to move slowly and laboriously, with the assistance of a cane, and that he was in his room in the hotel on January 13, 1925. Witnesses so testifying fix that date by the fact, as stated by them, that the wife of plaintiff in error had been injured on that day in a street car accident. On rebuttal the State produced the proprietor and department buyer of a department store, who testified that plaintiff in error’s wife was at work at this store on January 12 and 13, 1925. Evidence was also offered to show the length of time required to travel from the hotel in Chicago to Chenoa by automobile.

Marie Zeitz testified that she was employed in a bakery across the street from the bank; that on the afternoon of January 13, 1925, she saw a large car bearing no license plate stop across the street and that three men got out of the car. • One of them, whom she positively identified as the plaintiff in error, removed his hat and smoothed down his hair with his hands, at that time facing her, and that while he was across the street she recognized him very distinctly. All the witnesses for the State testifying concerning the robbery stated that the man who was known as Hoefer walked as though he had been injured.

Plaintiff in error took the stand and denied all knowledge of the crime or that he was in the neighborhood of the scene of the crime at any time on that day but that he was confined to his room in the hotel in which he was living in Chicago. On rebuttal the State, for the purpose of affecting the credibility of plaintiff in error, introduced in evidence a certified copy of the record of the circuit court of Audrain county, Missouri, showing plaintiff in error to have been convicted of the crime of burglary with explosives, and of larceny.

Numerous errors are assigned in the exhaustive briefs presented by plaintiff in error, some of which are not of sufficient merit to justify consideration. The principal objections relied on in argument are: First, that the evidence fails to show the commission of the crime as charged in the indictment, as the indictment charges the taking of property from the person of Kelly while the proof shows it was taken from his presence; second, there was insufficient proof to justify a finding of guilty of robbery with a gun; third, it was error to introduce the certified copy of the record of the judgment of conviction in Missouri; fourth, the court erred in failing to submit to the jury a form of verdict by which the jury might find plaintiff in error guilty of robbery without a dangerous weapon; and fifth, errors in ruling on the admissibility of evidence and in giving and refusing instructions to the jury.

As to the first contention, it is argued that while the indictment charges the taking of the property from the person of James S. Kelly the proof shows it was taken from his presence, and that such constitutes a variance. The indictment, and each count thereof, charged the taking of certain property by putting Kelly in bodily fear of his life, and that, against the will of Kelly, defendant did by force and intimidation rob, steal and carry away from the person of Kelly a large amount of personal property. Robbery is defined by the statute as the violent taking of money, goods or any valuable thing from the person of another by force or intimidation. The gist of the offense of robbery is the force or intimidation and taking from another, against his will, a thing belonging to him or in his custody. Such taking may be either from the person or the 'presence of the one assaulted. The indictment was in the language of the statute. The proof was sufficient. People v. Carpenter, 315 Ill. 87; O’Donnell v. People, 224 id. 218.

The second contention is, that there is no proof that there was robbery with a gun. Kelly testified positively that plaintiff in error, when he seized and bound him, pointed a gun at his head.

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Bluebook (online)
155 N.E. 838, 325 Ill. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-funk-ill-1927.