The People v. Geer

151 N.E. 604, 321 Ill. 69
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1926
DocketNos. 17236-17237. Judgment reversed.
StatusPublished

This text of 151 N.E. 604 (The People v. Geer) 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. Geer, 151 N.E. 604, 321 Ill. 69 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the February, 1922, term of the criminal court of Cook county Raymond J. Bischoff, Charles W. Bischoff, Thomas O. Davis, E. G. Geer, T. D. Wilson, Charles Darwin, Stephen Bagowitz, Walter Silver, Frank Shaput, Karl Joblowski, Walter Tuskovski, Matthew Venckus, James Jornale, John Mickevitz, John Karbanski, Charles Stankus, Adolph Sparkevitz, Alex Kissel, Anton Walukas, Joseph Chatro, Felix Jawgil and Frank Dalkus were indicted by the grand jury upon a charge of conspiracy. The indictment consisted of twelve counts, of which the eleventh and twelfth were quashed and a nolle prosequi entered as to the third and fourth. Four of the remaining counts alleged a conspiracy to obtain money by false pretenses and four a conspiracy to obtain money by the confidence game, Walter Butkiewicz, Frank Lolcis, Francis Laurinatis and Alice Janlcus being each named in two counts as the persons whose money was sought to be thus obtained. Raymond J. Bischoff, Davis, Joblowski and Chatro were not tried upon the indictment. A separate trial was granted Wilson, Darwin, Mickevitz and Sparkevitz. During the trial a nolle prosequi was entered as to Bagowitz, Silver, Jornale, Kissel, Walukas and Jawgil. The jury found Venckus, Shaput, Stankus, Dalkus, Tuskovski, Karbanski, Charles Bischoff and Earl Geer guilty and they were duly sentenced in accordance with the verdict. Venckus and Stankus were fined and paid their fines. The record as to the others convicted was upon their several writs of error reviewed by the Appellate Court for the First District, which court reversed the judgment of conviction as to all except Charles Bischoff and Geer and affirmed it as to them. Bischoff and Geer sued out writs of error from this court to review the record and the two cases have been here consolidated.

It is contended by plaintiffs in error that the evidence in the case does not show either of them to have been guilty of either a conspiracy to obtain money by the confidence game or by false representations. The transactions on which the prosecution was based occurred in the course of the conduct of the business of Raymond J. Bischoff, who was operating under the name of R. J. Bischoff & Co., of whom plaintiffs in error were employees. These business methods were under review by this court in People v. Bischoff, 319 Ill. 262, and it was then held that the evidence in that case did not show Raymond J. Bischoff to have been guilty of crime. The evidence in the present case covers practically the same range as in People v. Bischoff, supra, many of the witnesses and the transactions involved being the same in each case. In this case, as in that, one Wilson gave the principal testimony as to the character, methods and extent of the business done by R. J. Bischoff & Co. His evidence is, that R. J. Bischoff had in his employ a large number of agents or field-men, whom he sent out among the people to tell them that he had a “special” on for a certain date, and if they wanted to invest in it they could bring the money to Bischoff’s office or send it by the agent; that a “special” was a special transaction in which Bischoff was engaged, such as speculation on the stock market or in oil lands, or concerning a body factory at Columbus in which he was interested, and for which he obtained a certain amount of money for a few months to use in one or more of his various enterprises; that in return for the money Bischoff would give each investor his own promissory note bearing interest at ten or more per cent. The business flourished for a time and the notes were paid in cash at maturity if the investor so desired, or re-invested if desired. Bischoff was largely interested in the sale of Y Gas and Oil Company stock.

In April, 1921, R. J. Bischoff got up an excursion to take field agents and customers to certain places in Kansas, Louisiana and Texas to see what he claimed were his oil properties. A special train of four Pullmans was engaged. It cost about $7000, all of which was paid for by Bischoff. The passengers numbered about 125. All the defendants were aboard except Charles W. Bischoff, who at the time was already at the property in Kansas which was to be visited. The first stop was at Latine, Kansas, where they met Charles, who had already prepared, pursuant to a telegram he had received from his brother, a dinner for 125 people. The party was then taken around with Charles in charge and shown various oil wells and witnessed the "shooting” of one particular well. Raymond J. Bischoff, according to Wilson, said the property belonged to him. They were shown altogether twelve or thirteen small wells. They were then taken to Vivian, Shreveport, Harmon and Eldorado, Louisiana. Charles was with them. At Harmon they were shown fifteen or twenty wells, with derricks, which Raymond said he owned. At Vivian they looked over some oil fields. Wilson testified that, though not positive, he thought Raymond said they belonged to him. At Eldorado they looked at oil fields, covered, as Wilson says, with oil wells in such numbers that he could not estimate them. Both Raymond and Charles were there with all the others. Raymond told them that he wanted to take them out and show them a well that he was contemplating buying.

The first amount charged in the indictment as having been sought to be obtained by the alleged conspiracy is $2000 from one Butkiewicz, by trade a tailor. He testified that some time in 1920 he met Shaput, one of the defendants, who told him about the business and said that it sometimes paid fifty and sometimes one hundred per cent; that he then invested $100 and later $250, though whether he paid the money to Shaput or someone else he was not sure; that the first month he got seventy-five per cent on the $100; that then in two or three months he got fifty or sixty per cent; that he also did business in August, 1921, with Dalkus; that September 17, 1921, he gave a check to Dalkus for $2000 and in five or six weeks got $200, and in a month, in the fall of 1921, got $420 more, but nothing thereafter; that he got from Dalkus a Bischoff note for $3000; that he gave Dalkus $400 for 500 shares of the Y oil stock; that Dalkus told him that in a few months Bischoff was going to buy the stock back at two dollars a share; that he also did business with Stankus, giving him $300 on specials; that Dalkus told him he had invested money in- Bischoff’s, and after the bankruptcy Dalkus told him that he, too, had lost money in the business. Butkiewicz testified that he lost altogether over $3000. Dalkus testified that he never solicited money from Butkiewicz but did receive a $2000 check and endorsed Butkiewicz’s name on it and cashed it and turned the money in to R. J. Bischoff & Co. Shaput testified that in June, 1920, be explained to Butkiewicz the business of R. J. Bischoff & Co. and solicited him to invest; that Butkiewicz then gave him $250 to invest; that at that time he had invested $300 of his own money; that he did not tell Butkiewicz that he would get seventy-five per cent on his money.

The second amount alleged to have been sought to be obtained by the alleged conspiracy is $3900 from Frank Lokis. He testified that he first heard of R. J. Bischoff & Co.

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Related

The People v. Bischoff
149 N.E. 756 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 604, 321 Ill. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-geer-ill-1926.