The People v. Hoffman

77 N.E.2d 195, 399 Ill. 57, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 239
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1948
DocketNo. 30134. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 77 N.E.2d 195 (The People v. Hoffman) 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. Hoffman, 77 N.E.2d 195, 399 Ill. 57, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 239 (Ill. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

Stanley Hoffman, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was sentenced by the criminal court of Cook County to a term of not less than fifteen nor more than twenty years in the Illinois State Penitentiary by reason of a conviction for the alleged crime of taking indecent liberties with a minor child, five years of age. The defendant, 27 years of age, was at the time of his indictment and conviction, on parole from the Illinois State Penitentiary for the crime of burglary for which he was placed on parole on November 28, 1944. The. crime charged here happened on July 9, 1945? and trial was had before a jury and a verdict of guilty returned on February 21, 1946.

The affair out of which the indictment arose happened on July 9, 1945, at approximately 2:3o P.M. in the afternoon in the rear of a building at 2744 North St. Louis Avenue, Chicago, near a stairway close to which were several large oil drums.

On that day and at that time a woman witness for the State, who was a resident of the building, looked out the window and saw a man sitting among the oil drums with the five-year old prosecutrix sitting on his lap very close to him. The witness could not identify the man, inasmuch as she could not see his face because of an obstruction on the porch. This witness did not identify the defendant. However she did call the police. Shortly thereafter the witness saw the mother of the prosecutrix come home and called to her and told her of the man in the back yard. She saw the mother pick up something and run over and fight with the man and then saw the man running out of the back yard with the mother chasing after him.

The mother of the child testified that about 2 ¡45 of the afternoon of July 9, 1945, she arrived home through the rear of the yard, walked into the passageway where she saw the defendant sitting on the concrete next to the oil drums and holding the little girl on his lap. She further stated that she could see his face and that he was bent over with his head down toward the child and she heard him call the child “Honey.” She opened the gate and yelled at the man to leave the child alone and when he did not move she ran over and grabbed his hair and pulled his head. In pulling the man to his feet she pulled some of the hair from his head and then engaged in a struggle with him. The man attempted to go after the child again and the mother struck him on the side of the face and the man hit her back on the arm. She noticed that-his privates were exposed and he ran from the yard back toward the alley and through the alley and disappeared. The mother testified that she did not know the man’s name but that she had seen him two or three times at a cocktail bar in the neighborhood and that he had tried to pick her up in the bar on several occasions. She then stated that the police came and took the child to a doctor who examined the child and found lacerations and blood. Later in the evening a police officer came to her house and she and her husband and the officers went to the cocktail bar attempting to locate the man. Later the police officers took her to the defendant’s place of employment where she saw him and identified him.

A police officer also testified that the mother gave him a description of the person who molested the child and that he had a description of the clothing and general appearance. He further stated that he was unable to ascertain whether or not any hair had been pulled from the defendant’s head and had sent the samples given him by the mother to the police laboratory for analysis. He further stated that the defendant denied the crime when he was arrested.

The defendant set forth an alibi for the time of the alleged crime, claiming that he was not in the vicinity of the building at 2744 North St. Louis Avenue at any time on July 9, 1945; denied he molested the child in question or that he had struck the mother; denied that he had been drinking on that day and further testified that on the afternoon of July 9, around the hour of 2:3o, he was at his mother’s house at 2134 North Ridgeway where he had gone about nine in the morning because he was sick; that he had been to a birthday party at his mother’s house the night before and that for almost the entire previous day and the day of the alleged crime had been with someone at almost all the time. He further stated that he did not leave his mother’s house on the day of July 9 until about 4:30 in the afternoon when he went to the cocktail bar where he met his sister, Evelyn, and that while he was there some police officers came in and looked him over but did not arrest him. He further denied that he had ever seen the people prosecuting him.

Evelyn Hoffman, a sister of the defendant, testified that on July 9, .1945, she met defendant at about ten minutes to five at the tavern where they remained until six, during which time policemen walked in and looked defendant over and made the statement that defendant was not the man. She testified that the defendant was not drunk at any time he was with her that night. She further stated that she received a message from the father of the child involved in the cause and that during various conversations with him he had told her that if he received the sum of $3000 from her or her family the prosecution would not take place inasmuch as the mother of the child was not sure that she had identified the proper party. These conversations as to the payment of money to the father of the child were also testified to by another sister of the defendant.

The mother of the defendant and one Ratz, an electrician, testified that on July 9, 1945, he was at the home of the defendant’s mother doing some work and that he got there about 1:3o and saw there the defendant’s mother, his two sisters, the defendant and a young fellow whom he had never met before. One Gibson, also a witness for the defendant, testified that on July 9, 1945, he was present in the home of the defendant’s mother from approximately 12:30 until 4:00, that the electrician was working there and that the defendant was in the mother’s home all during that time. Defendant’s mother also testified as to the. defendant being in her house on the date in question.

In rebuttal the State called the father of the child who denied all conversations as to requests for sums of money from the sisters of the defendant and he further stated that the offers of defendant’s sister to do anything for him if he would refuse to prosecute had been turned over to the crime commission. Another witness was called in rebuttal on behalf of the People who testified that on Sunday, July 8, 1945, she saw the defendant running with a little girl. A bartender, employed at another tavern in the neighborhood, testified that on the evening of July 9, 1945, the defendant and the sister came into the tavern and that they stayed in the tavern an hour or an .hour and a half and that they then left. He further stated that the defendant was pretty full.

The expert who examined the samples of hair submitted to him with a specimen he had removed from the defendant’s head testified that he was unable to state whether or not the hairs could have come from the head of the defendant.

In essence, the situation with regard to the facts is this: the defendant was positively identified by the mother of the child and also by the child.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E.2d 195, 399 Ill. 57, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-hoffman-ill-1948.