The People v. Jenkins

187 N.E. 148, 353 Ill. 152
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1933
DocketNo. 21516. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 187 N.E. 148 (The People v. Jenkins) 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. Jenkins, 187 N.E. 148, 353 Ill. 152 (Ill. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Charles Jenkins was indicted in the circuit court of Douglas county for receiving stolen property, knowing it to have been so obtained. A jury found him guilty and he was sentenced to the Southern Illinois penitentiary. He prosecutes this writ of error.

The plaintiff in error is forty-eight years of age, and resides in the village of Galton, in Douglas county. In December, 1930, Fred Beckman owned a farm situated about three miles northeast of the village of Arthur in the same county and Arthur Ashwell was his tenant. Late in that month Beckman discovered that boards had been removed from a corn-crib on his farm and that a considerable quantity of ■ corn had been taken. It appeared that Clyde Albin had told the plaintiff in error that he wanted the latter’s trailer to haul corn. The plaintiff in error took the trailer to the home of Albin’s father. On a night between Christmas and New Year’s day, Albin, Alva Cook and Jesse Morrow drove in a Ford truck, owned by Cook’s father, with the trailer attached, to the crib on Beckman’s farm and took a quantity of corn from the crib. The corn was loaded in the truck and the trailer, and was taken to the home of Albin’s father in Areola where all the corn, loose and in sacks, was placed in the trailer. Albin testified that early the following morning the plaintiff in error arrived in an automobile; that they, the witness and the plaintiff in error, attached the trailer to the automobile and drove about one hundred thirty miles to the home of W. J. Moore south of Wayne City,' in Wayne county, where they left the corn; that, on the next day, the corn was unloaded and they returned to Areola, and that the plaintiff in error paid Albin nine dollars for the corn. Both Albin and Cook testified that they had previously sold the plaintiff in error corn, barbed wire, harness and other chattels which they had stolen.

Two witnesses, residents of Wayne county, testified that during the last week of 1930, the plaintiff in error appeared in their vicinity driving an automobile, to which a trailer loaded with yellow corn was attached, and that he attempted to sell the corn to one of them. Moore, at whose home the corn was left, testified that he bought from the plaintiff in error twenty-six and one-half bushels at eighty cents per bushel and that the latter told him he had raised the corn.

The plaintiff in error testified that his father lived in Wayne county; that in December, 1930, corn was scarce in that county and that on the twenty-eighth day of the month, accompanied by Clyde Albin, he left Areola in an automobile to which a trailer loaded with corn was attached; that he owned the corn and had taken it from a crib at Galton and that he sold the corn at eighty cents per bushel to W. J. Moore, who resided south of Wayne City. He admitted that he had offered to sell the corn to another resident of Wayne county before he reached Moore’s house; that he had heard Albin and Cook say that the corn had been obtained from Beckman’s farm and that Albin had spoken to him about the sale of some barbed wire, but he denied that he ever made a purchase from either except a small quantity of corn from Cook and a set of harness from Albin. According to the information of the witness, Cook had exchanged a horse for the corn and Albin had obtained the harness at a sale. The plaintiff in error further testified that he bought barbed wire, not from Albin, but in the city of St. Louis; and Moore, who asserted that he sold cattle there at the time, corroborated the testimony of the plaintiff in error in that respect.

Other witnesses were called by the plaintiff in error. Frank Emmons, a foreman employed by a railroad company, testified that in 1930, he leased a portion of his employer’s right of way to the plaintiff in error; that the latter raised approximately eight hundred bushels of white and yellow corn upon it and that the plantiff in error delivered some of the corn to the witness and placed the remainder in a crib. F. E. Rose, the manager of a co-operative grain elevator at Galton, testified that during the last week of 1930, the plaintiff in error had a quantity of corn stored in the elevator. William VanDoren, a merchant at Galton, testified that on December 29, 1930, he assisted the plaintiff in error in scooping twenty-five or thirty bushels of corn from the elevator to a trailer and that some of the corn was placed in sacks. The reputation of the plaintiff in error respecting his obedience to the law, nine witnesses declared, was good.

On rebuttal, the sheriff of Douglas county testified that in executing a search warrant he found a harness which the plaintiff in error said he had obtained from some horse traders along a public highway. Raymond Wimple, a farmer, identified the harness as his property and testified that it had been stolen from him.

The defendant in error made a motion in this court to expunge the bill of exceptions on the ground that it was not taken and signed during the term of the circuit court at which the cause was tried and the motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were made and denied. The indictment was returned, the trial occurred and the two motions to which reference has been made were overruled at the October, 1931, term of the circuit court. On the day disposition was made of these motions, the plaintiff in error filed a petition to be admitted to probation. The court took this petition under advisement. Thereafter, on February 20, 1932, the October term was adjourned. The first day of the March, 1932, term began on the 14th day of the month; and on that day the prayer of the petition for probation was denied, judgment was entered on the verdict, sentence was pronounced and the plaintiff in error was allowed forty days within which to file his bill of exceptions. The period for filing this bill was later extended thirty days.

To support the motion to expunge the bill of exceptions, the defendant in error relies upon the cases of Hake v. Strubel, 121 Ill. 321, People v. Strauch, 247 id. 220, People v. Ellsworth, 261 id. 275, and People v. May, 276 id. 332. These cases were decided prior to or failed to take cognizance of section 81 of the Practice act as amended, (Cahill’s Stat. 1931, p. 2182; Smith’s Stat. 1931, p. 2205). That section provides, among other things, that “at any time during the term of the court at which judgment was entered or within such time thereafter as shall, during such term, be fixed by the court, any party desiring to prosecute a writ of error to or appeal from any such judgment, may submit to the court a stenographic report of the trial containing the evidence and the rulings of the court upon” the questions submitted and the judge shall examine the report and, if he finds it correct, shall so certify officially. The section further provides that the report shall thereupon be filed and that all matters and things contained in the report shall become as effectually a part of the record as if duly certified in a formal bill or bills of exceptions. The stenographic report or bill of exceptions may be submitted to the trial court at any time during the term “at which judgment was entered or within such time thereafter as shall, during such term, be fixed by the court.” The judgment in this case was entered at the March term and the bill of exceptions was signed and sealed within the time fixed at that term.

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Bluebook (online)
187 N.E. 148, 353 Ill. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-jenkins-ill-1933.