The People v. Hauke

167 N.E. 1, 335 Ill. 217
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1929
DocketNo. 19479. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 1 (The People v. Hauke) 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. Hauke, 167 N.E. 1, 335 Ill. 217 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of the murder of Isabella Scheckley and was sentenced to death. The deceased resided with her son, Louis, in the city of Chicago, at 1405 West Marquette road. On May 28, 1925, plaintiff in error came to her house, shot her twice through the head, killing her almost instantly, and shot her son, Louis, three times, though his wounds were not serious. There is no dispute as to these facts, but plaintiff in error’s defense was that he shot at Louis Scheckley, who was about to shoot him; that his shooting was in self-defense, and that Mrs. Scheckley rushed in between plaintiff in error and her son, Louis, and was killed by accident or misadventure. These three persons were the only ones present at the time of the shooting.

It appears that plaintiff in error had been separated from his wife for some months and between the latter part of March and the first of May she had lived in the Scheckley home with her child, a son. The undisputed evidence shows that on the morning of the homicide, plaintiff in error, who at that time was living in Harvey, was driven to the home of the deceased by one DiFalco, with whom he had made such arrangements the night before. On the evening-before the homicide plaintiff in error traded his gun, an army-pistol, to one Pouts, of Harvey, receiving in return the gun which was introduced in evidence in this case. About seven o’clock on the morning of the homicide plaintiff in error appeared at the rear door of the home of Elizabeth Finnegan, who lived in the first house west of the home of deceased and but a few feet therefrom. She testified that when she first saw him he was trying to get in at her back door, but the door was locked; that she went to the door, and he was standing there with one hand on his hip, and said, “I want to talk to Mrs. Scheckley.” Witness replied, “Mrs. Scheckley don’t live here.” He said, “Where does she live?” Witness said, “Next door.” He then went down her back steps and jumped over the fence between her house and Mrs. Scheckley’s house. This witness testified that shortly thereafter she heard shots, and in a few minutes Louis Scheckley came to her house, dripping with blood, and asked her to call the police. She stated that at the time she saw plaintiff in error he appeared to be nervous and upset, and that she did not see him after he went down her back steps and jumped over the fence into the Scheckley yard.

Louis Scheckley testified that on the morning of the homicide he was awakened about a quarter to eight by a scream and there were sounds like shots; that he jumped out of bed and went to the door of his room, which was directly off the dining room, and that as he appeared in the doorway he was shot; that when he first opened the door he saw a gun but did not see who had it; that he later saw plaintiff in error there; that he had a shiny gun; that he was struck in the head and in the arm by the bullets from this gun; that he saw his mother lying on the floor just north of the sewing machine, which was in the corner of the kitchen; that her body was partly in the kitchen and partly in a short hallway which extended north to the dining room; that after he 'was shot he fell into the dining room, which was the next room east of his room, and plaintiff in error rushed through the dining room, kicked him and went into the front room of the house, which had been occupied bj' Mrs. Hauke and child during the time that she had stayed at the Scheckley home. Witness testified that he jumped through the window of his own bed-room and went to Mrs. Finnegan’s home, next door, and asked her to call the police. On cross-examination he testified that he had known Mrs. Hauke about eighteen years; that she had lived in their home between three and four weeks but that she left about the first of May. He testified that before Mrs. Hauke was married he accompanied her to places once or twice but that he had never been in her company from the time she was married; that he didn’t know why Hauke came to his house that day, and that the other time he had come he came to see his wife. Fie was asked if he had told Hauke to stay away from the house while Mrs. Hauke was there, and he said that he did not, and that he did not threaten him or say that if he, Hauke, did not stay away from the house he would send him back to Harvey in a box. He testified that he did not have a gun in his possession or in the house at the time of the shooting and did not attempt to shoot Hauke.

By the witnesses John Gordon and Fern Heckman, two children living in the neighborhood, it was shown that a pistol introduced in evidence was found on the lawn of the Heckman home, which is two doors west of the home of the deceased. Mrs. Heckman identified the pistol introduced in evidence as the one which she gave to the police, and gave as the reason for her identification of it that she had copied the numbers from the inside of the gun on a paper before turning it over to the police. This gun is shown to have had five discharged shells in it when found.

As we have indicated, the disputed evidence relates to what took place in the house. Plaintiff in error’s defense was that Louis Scheckley attempted to shoot him and that he shot in self-defense, accidentally killing the deceased. A police officer, Louis J. Starr, testified that he was called to the home of the deceased on the morning of the homicide and that he found the deceased lying on her back in a short hallway between the dining room and kitchen; that he found two holes in the left side of her head; that she was bleeding and unconscious.

Dr. Henry G. W. Reinhardt, the coroner’s physician, testified that the body showed three puncture wounds, such as made by a bullet, two in the left cheek and another in the right side of the head. One bullet was found in the head on post-mortem examination. He was of the opinion that the hole on the right side of the head might have been caused by the exit of one of the bullets that entered on the left side.

Police officer Patrick McDonough testified that he was called to the house of deceased on the morning of the homicide and found her lying on her back on the floor and took her to the St. Bernard’s Hospital. On cross-examination he stated that he had a talk with Louis Scheckley and-asked him how it happened and that Scheckley told him who did the shooting; that Scheckley told him that plaintiff in error did the shooting.

Police officer Edward Tyrrell testified that in the year 1928 he was sent to Fairville, California, to return plaintiff in error, who had been arrested there; that during the return trip to Chicago plaintiff in error told him how he happened to go over to the home of the deceased on the morning of the homicide; that he said he went there with a fellow from Harvey; that he was looking for his wife; that he went to the back door of the basement and went up the steps and started shooting; that he didn’t say how-many shots he fired. He also stated that he knew he shot the son but did not know he had shot the woman — the mother. He testified that plaintiff in error was at a marine hospital at Mare Island at the time he was arrested.

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 1, 335 Ill. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-hauke-ill-1929.