The People v. Gillespie

176 N.E. 316, 344 Ill. 290
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1931
DocketNo. 20629. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 176 N.E. 316 (The People v. Gillespie) 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. Gillespie, 176 N.E. 316, 344 Ill. 290 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was convicted in the circuit court of Pike county of the crime of burglary and sentenced to the penitentiary. He here seeks reversal of that judgment.

The indictment consists of two counts, the first charging that plaintiff in error forcibly broke and entered a certain tool-shed, the property belonging to the Pittsfield Country Club, a corporation; and the second count that he entered said tool-shed without force, the doors and windows being open. Both charge an intent to steal the personal property of the country club.

Plaintiff in error filed a motion to quash each count of the indictment on the ground that a “tool-shed” is not included within the term “other buildings,” as defined by the Criminal Code; and as to the second count the further ground that it is bad for two additional reasons: (1) The tool-shed, being under construction, contained no doors and windows; and (2) the said count is double, in that it charged entering the tool-shed with the intent to commit a felony and also to steal personal property belonging to the country club. The motion to quash was overruled. A bill of particulars was on motion of plaintiff in error filed, which stated that the People intended to prove that the accused entered the tool-shed mentioned in the indictment with the intent then and there feloniously and burglariously to steal, take and carry away the following goods: Twenty gallon? of gasoline, of the personal goods and chattels of the said the Pittsfield Country Club, a corporation, then and there being in said tool-shed.

The evidence shows that the Pittsfield Country Club is located some two or three miles east of Pittsfield. On October 20, 1930, there was on the club grounds, at a point about a quarter of a mile off the highway, a tool-shed having ground dimensions of twenty feet by thirty feet. It was roofed. The east twelve feet of the north end, the east twelve feet of the south end and twenty feet on the north end of the east side were entirely open. These ends and side walls had not been built. Material was on the ground for enclosing the balance of the end and side walls and for the construction of doors to the shed. In the shed were a metal tank containing about ten gallons of gasoline, a mower, a tractor, and other articles of personal property owned by said club. Between six and seven o’clock in the evening of October 20, 1930, the caretaker of the club left the grounds, and about ten o’clock that evening officers of the club were notified that a building on the club grounds was on fire. It was this shed. It was completely burned. On the morning of October 21 officers and members of the club returned to the location of the shed and found that the gasoline tank, which was kept standing on end, had been tipped over from its position and the faucet in one end of the tank was resting on a five-gallon gasoline can containing a funnel. The lock on the faucet had been broken and near the tank were two other five-gallon gasoline cans. A starting crank of a 1929 Chevrolet automobile was found by the side of the gasoline tank. Neither the three five-gallon cans, the funnel nor the automobile crank were the property of the country club and none of them were in the shed when the caretaker left the premises the evening previous. The evidence also showed that on October 20, 1930, between the hours of seven and eight o’clock P. M., plaintiff in error was seen in the company of one William McGreevy and one Pauline Coulter in the city of Pittsfield. The person last named was in possession of a 1929 model Chevrolet coupe. Shortly before eleven o’clock on that night plaintiff in error, in company with McGreevy and Pauline Coulter, drove up in front of the office of Dr. S. L. Smith, approaching from the direction of the country club. From there they drove to the Barber drug store, in Pittsfield, in said Chevrolet automobile, where Pauline Coulter purchased unguentine, gauze and bandage, which she took to the car and the three drove in the direction of plaintiff in error’s home. On October 21 plaintiff in error was arrested, taken to the State’s attorney’s office and questioned by the sheriff and the State’s attorney. At first he denied that he had been away from his home on the evening of October 20 or that he had been injured or burned. He was requested to lift the legs of his trousers, whereupon it was found that both legs were bandaged. Plaintiff in error then stated he had been in an automobile wreck near Quincy some four or five days prior, but said he did not know whose car it was, what his business was when the accident occurred or just where it occurred. He stated that the clothes he wore at the time of the accident were in Quincy but the clothes he wore the evening of October 20 were in his home at Pittsfield. He was then taken to the jail and the county physician called to give him treatment. The county physician testified that on removing the bandages he found the left leg severely burned from the knee to the top of a low shoe and his right leg burned to some extent on the shin. He stated that in his opinion the burns were less than twenty-four hours old. He testified that he attended plaintiff in error daily because of the severity of the burns, and that the limbs became so sore and swollen that plaintiff in error was unable to arise from his bed.

The sheriff testified that he obtained a pair of trousers, a sock and shoe at plaintiff in error’s father’s house which plaintiff in error stated were his clothes, and that plaintiff in error told him the clothes were burned when the automobile in which he was riding caught fire near Quincy. This witness identified the gasoline can, funnel, the broken lock from the gasoline tank and the automobile crank as having been taken from the ruins of the tool-shed on October 21. The pair of trousers and sock, together with the shoes, were identified by the sheriff as those admitted by plaintiff in error to be his. None of the articles were offered in evidence. No evidence was offered on behalf of plaintiff in error.

Plaintiff in error urges here that both counts of the indictment are defective because neither contains an averment that a “tool-shed” is a building. He insists that such an averment is necessary, as a “tool-shed” is not included in the eighteen enumerated structures of the Burglary statute and does not come within the general classification of “other buildings.” A building, within this act, has been defined as a fabric, structure or edifice, such as a house, church, shop or the like, designed for the habitation of men or animals or for the shelter of property; a structure. (9 Corpus Juris, 684; Clarke v. State, 69 Wis. 203, 33 N. W. 436.) In Orrell v. People, 94 Ill. 456, it was contended that an indictment which averred “the defendant broke and entered a stable,” and contained no averment that it was a “building,” was not sufficient to sustain a conviction. It was there said: “A ‘stable/ as that word is commonly used and understood, is the equivalent of ‘building/ and is therefore fairly included in the statute defining burglary in that class of structures denominated ‘other buildings.’ ” We are of the opinion that the structure here described comes within the language “other buildings,” as used in the statute defining burglary. Bruen v. People, 206 Ill. 417.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.E. 316, 344 Ill. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-gillespie-ill-1931.