The People v. Hrdlicka

176 N.E. 308, 344 Ill. 211
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1931
DocketNo. 20400. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 176 N.E. 308 (The People v. Hrdlicka) 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. Hrdlicka, 176 N.E. 308, 344 Ill. 211 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

The defendants, Fred Hrdlicka, Edward Kotek and Edward Kerstein, were found guilty by a jury in the criminal court of Cook county upon an indictment which charged that during the canvass of the votes cast at a special election on November 5, 1929, in the twenty-seventh precinct of the thirty-fourth ward, they willfully and fraudulently changed and altered certain ballots and certain markings placed on the ballots by the electors.

The election was a judicial election of twenty judges of the superior court and two judges to fill vacancies in the circuit court. Edward Grysh, Edward J. Hrdlicka and George Krejsa were judges, Grysh being a Democrat and the other two Republicans. Frank Prochol and Leo Kawczsinski were clerks and Thomas Collins was the police officer assigned to the polling place. Kerstein was Republican precinct captain, Fred Hrdlicka Democratic precinct captain, and Kotek, who was thirty-seven years of age and had lived all his life in the precinct, went to the polling place at about 5:15 in the afternoon while the canvass was in progress and as he knew all the men who were in the place he was admitted. A short time later Edward J. Hrdlicka complained of not feeling well and asked Kotek to take his place as judge, which Kotek did. Edward J. Hrdlicka was absent until about 7:3o.

Counsel for the plaintiffs in error argues that there is reasonable doubt, on the record, of their guilt. The evidence upon which the convictions rest consists of the original ballots, the testimony of an expert witness, Jay Fordyce Wood, who had followed the calling of an examiner of disputed documents for twenty years, during which he had given great attention to the study of disputed handwriting, typewriting and other subjects connected with the investigation of the genuineness of disputed documents, and the testimony of Grysh that during the progress of the canvass he saw each of the plaintiffs in error making marks upon some of the judicial ballots. There is no question of the qualification of Wood as an expert. Photostatic copies of those ballots concerning which Wood testified are in the abstract. One hundred and seventy-five ballots were cast in the precinct. Wood was examined as to thirty of these ballots and gave his opinion as to twenty-five of them in regard to erasures and changes. Philip J. Finnegan and Daniel P. Trude were candidates on the Democratic ticket for the two vacancies in the circuit court to be filled, George A. Curran and Edgar A. Jonas were candidates on the Republican ticket for the same offices, and all four names appeared at the foot of the ballot in the columns of their respective parties, the Democratic column being at the left of the ballot and the Republican next to it. In a number of cases the alterations concerning which Wood testified are clear on the face of the photostatic copies, and it thus appears that in several instances a cross was erased from the square before Finnegan’s name or Trude’s name, or both of them, and a cross added by a different hand and pencil before the names of Curran and of Jonas, or one of them, on several ballots; that upon several straight Democratic ballots a different hand and pencil added crosses before the names of Curran and Jonas; that upon one ballot crosses were added by a different hand and pencil before the names of Curran and Jonas. In the election Finnegan was .the opponent of Curran and Trude of Jonas. Other alterations which are apparent were the erasure of a cross in the Republican circle upon two ballots, the erasure of a cross in the Democratic circle upon one ballot and the erasure of a cross before the name of Denis Sullivan upon another ballot. Other alterations mentioned by Wood are not so apparent. The alterations where Curran and Jonas were concerned are thus so numerous, even apart from change of hand and pencil, as to eliminate all but a very remote possibility of mere coincidence. As the alterations were in a number of cases made by a different hand and pencil it is proved beyond a doubt that there was a violation of the election laws by an alteration of ballots.

The poll closed at four o’clock. There were three tables, with tops four or five feet square, in the polling place. They were placed end to end and the ballots emptied upon the middle table. A proposition for the issue of bonds and other propositions were voted on at the election, and Grysh testified that the ballots on these propositions and the judicial ballots were separated by Kawczsinski, Prochol and himself. The bond ballots were first counted and he and Kawczsinski proceeded to count the ballots on the other propositions. At that time Kerstein was sitting at the west side of the south end of the tables and Fred Hrdlicka across from him on the east side of the tables. Between the two were piled probably a third of the judicial ballots, and as Grysh counted the proposition ballots he looked at Kerstein and Hrdlicka from time to time — from eight to ten times— and each time he looked at one of them he saw the movement of his hands making cross marks very rapidly. Grysh was at the other end of the table. Kerstein was making marks on the ballots. Grysh did nothing about it. Later the judicial ballots were all placed on the center table and Kotek stood in front of them and was calling off the candidates. Grysh looked up and saw Kotek marking ballots. He had a pencil in his hand and was marking a ballot for Joseph J. Sullivan. Grysh asked Kotek what he was doing. Kotek said that he was a lodge member of his. The count proceeded, and at its conclusion Grysh, as a judge of the election, joined in making the returns as if the ballots had been protected honestly and counted as cast. Grysh was indicted for making false returns and upon his arrest told his story to an assistant State’s attorney and was released upon his own recognizance.

Changes were certainly made in the ballots, and if Hrdlicka, Kerstein and Kotek marked the ballots as openly as Grysh’s testimony indicates, the jury were justified in the inference that those present were cognizant of what was being done, or at least that Kerstein, Hrdlicka and Kotek felt little fear of criticism of their acts. All were subject to suspicion. Ballots were altered by some one or more of those present at the canvass. The requirements of the law for the protection of the ballots were not observed but the evidence indicates that access to them during the canvass was permitted to unauthorized persons who thus had the opportunity to alter them. The defendants had no authority to handle or to touch the ballots. The judges and clerks alone had such authority, and they had no right to permit the defendants to have access to the ballots. It is the duty of the judges and clerks to conduct the canvass, and they cannot delegate that duty, or any part of it, to other persons. The explanation of the use of pencils by the defendants Hrdlicka and Kerstein is, that when the judges and clerks started to tally the ballots the two precinct captains took sample ballots and marked them to keep a check against the count of the judges and clerks in order to make a report to the headquarters of their respective commissioners. Suspicion pointed to everybody present at the canvass. The testimony of Grysh fixed criminal acts of alteration of ballots upon the defendants and criminal omission of duty upon himself as a judge of election. The open manner in which the marking was done tended to show the criminal participation of all.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.E. 308, 344 Ill. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-hrdlicka-ill-1931.