The People v. Hicks

192 N.E.2d 891, 28 Ill. 2d 457, 1963 Ill. LEXIS 550
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1963
Docket37393
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 192 N.E.2d 891 (The People v. Hicks) 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. Hicks, 192 N.E.2d 891, 28 Ill. 2d 457, 1963 Ill. LEXIS 550 (Ill. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Klingbiel

delivered the opinion of the court:

After a trial by jury in the criminal court of Cook County the defendant was found guilty of the crime of rape and was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of life imprisonment. A writ of error has been issued to review the judgment of conviction,

The defendant’s first contention is that the court erred in unduly restricting defense counsel’s redirect examination of the defendant. An analysis of this contention requires us to briefly review the evidence. The complaining witness testified that in the early morning hours of September 28, i960, she was accosted in her apartment building by the defendant, who was armed with a knife. The defendant forced her to leave the building and enter an alley, where he forced her to submit to several unnatural sex acts and an act of intercourse. After the defendant left the alley, she ran to a restaurant and called the police, who took her to a hospital. While she was in the hospital she gave the police a description of her assailant, and mentioned that he had worn a small-brimmed dark hat, a dark tweed coat with white spots and a shirt with black stripes. Eight days later she gave the same description to a police artist, and the following day the defendant was arrested and was identified by the complaining witness at a police line-up. The witness testified that the defendant was wearing the same hat at the line-up as he had worn the night of the attack. On the following day the witness identified a coat as the same coat which the defendant had worn at the time of the attack and also identified a knife as resembling the knife which had been used by the defendant. These articles had been found in a basement storeroom at the defendant’s hotel following his arrest.

Police officer Nash testified that after the arrest of the defendant and his identification by the complaining witness, he went to the defendant’s hotel and interviewed the manager, Leon Spahn. He started to testify that he went to the basement and searched a box he found there, but counsel for the defendant stated that he wished to be heard outside the presence of the jury for the purpose of making a motion. The jury was excused and defense counsel stated that he wished to make a motion to suppress any evidence which might have been taken without a warrant. A hearing was then held outside the presence of the jury.

Officer Nash testified at the hearing that prior to going to the defendant’s apartment the defendant had told him that he had lived at the apartment until September 30. The defendant had told him that he could specifically recall the date because that was the day he went downtown to seek welfare aid. Officer Nash testified that Spahn, the hotel manager, told him that the defendant was behind in his rent and that as a result of this delinquency he had put a plug in the defendant’s door and had taken all of the defendant’s belongings from his room and put them down in the basement. The officer and Spahn then went down into the basement where they found a box with the defendant’s name and room number on it. The officer testified that the coat which had been identified by the complaining witness had been taken from this box.

The defendant testified at the hearing that on September 28 he lived at this hotel and that he lived there for two days thereafter, following which his door was plugged because of nonpayment of rent. The defendant testified that he had left all his personal belongings and clothing in his room, including the coat. The defendant said that before he had been arrested he had not worn the coat for a year. He was asked by defense counsel whether he recalled on what specific date he had last seen the coat in his closet and he replied, “I saw the coat in my closet on the 30th, the day I left.” This concluded the evidence at the hearing outside of the presence of the jury. A discussion between the court and counsel brought out the fact that the knife was also found in the box.

After this hearing, defense counsel stated that since the jury had already seen the coat on the table and there had been testimony concerning ■ it, the motion to suppress would be withdrawn. The trial then resumed in the presence of the jury and officer Nash continued his testimony. He testified that he and his partner recovered a coat and a knife from the box in the basement of the apartment hotel and that this coat and knife were the same ones which had been previously identified by the complaining witness.

Leon Spahn, the manager of the hotel, testified that the defendant had checked into the hotel on May 24 and had stayed there until September 27 at which time he was locked out on account of nonpayment of rent. The manager testified that one or two days thereafter his assistant took the defendant’s property from his room and placed it in a paper carton in the basement storeroom. Spahn testified that the door to the basement storeroom was locked at all times and that he was the only one who had a key. On cross-examination, Spahn testified that the box had been packed on either the 28th or the 29th, one or two two days after the lockout. Spahn confirmed, on cross-examination, that he had put the plug in the defendant’s door on the 27th and said that as far as he knew the defendant was not able to get into that room after the 27th. Spahn testified that the storeroom had not been broken into at any time between the 28th of September and the date of the defendant’s arrest.

At the conclusion of the State’s evidence counsel for the defendant moved for a directed verdict on the ground that the coat and knife identified by the victim of the attack had been locked up continuously since September 27, which was one day prior to the attack. The prosecutor replied that there was ample identification without the identification of the coat and knife and pointed out that the defendant himself had testified outside the presence of the jury that he was not locked out until September 30, and that the coat was in his closet on that date. The court denied the motion for a directed verdict.

The defendant testified that on September 27 he lived at the apartment hotel and that after the 27th he no longer lived there because his door was plugged. He testified that he had spent the night of the 27th and the early morning of the 28th with a friend. He denied ever seeing the complaining witness and specifically denied any of the acts with which he was charged.

On cross-examination the prosecutor asked the defendant if he were not actually locked out of his room on September 30th. The defendant replied that he was locked out on the 27th, not the 30th. The prosecutor then asked for a recess so that the court reporter could write up the testimony which had been taken outside the presence of the jury, and after the reporter had transcribed this testimony the prosecutor continued his cross-examination. The defendant was asked whether he recalled testifying earlier at a hearing before the judge and he replied, “Yes, but I had the dates mixed up.” On motion of the prosecutor the latter part of the answer was stricken. The prosecutor then asked him whether or not he had testified that he lived in the apartment for two days after the 28th and he replied, “I had the dates mixed up.” This answer was stricken and the defendant then admitted that he had testified at the hearing that he lived there until the 30th.

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Bluebook (online)
192 N.E.2d 891, 28 Ill. 2d 457, 1963 Ill. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-hicks-ill-1963.