The People v. Jersky

36 N.E.2d 347, 377 Ill. 261
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1941
DocketNo. 26108. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 36 N.E.2d 347 (The People v. Jersky) 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. Jersky, 36 N.E.2d 347, 377 Ill. 261 (Ill. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shaw

delivered the opinion of the court:

Rubin Jersky was convicted of murder in the criminal court of Cook county on a trial before a jury. This writ of error seeks review of a judgment entered on the verdict of that jury whereby he was sentenced to a term of twenty years imprisonment.

The man who was killed by Jersky was Donald Warden who lived with his wife and baby in the first or ground floor apartment at 1143 South Central Park avenue in the city of Chicago. The defendant, Jersky, lived on the other side of South Central Park avenue, nearly, but not quite, across the street from the Wardens. Across the alley to the south from the Warden’s apartment was an oil station, while in front of their apartment, between the sidewalk and the curb, was a strip of parkway or lawn.

On the evening of November 3, 1938, when the killing occurred, the Warden family was at home and Warden, having relaxed for the evening, was coatless and in house slippers. At about 8 :oo o’clock one Wallace Perper drove his car up over the curb and parked it on the lawn in front of Wardens’ living room windows. While the evidence is somewhat confusing it is clearly to be inferred from all of it that this act made Warden angry and that, dressed as he then was, he went outdoors for the purpose of doing something about this irregular parking. This man Perper who parked his car on Warden’s lawn appears to have been a friend of Irving Jersky, a brother of the defendant. It also appears from the record that the deceased was giving Perper and Irving Jersky the worst of an unarmed combat and had chased them around the oil station when the Jersky-Perper combination was reinforced by the arrival of brother Rubin, the defendant, from his home across the street, and Rubin himself came implemented with a .38 caliber revolver.

With the arrival of these reinforcements Warden retreated up the twelve or fourteen steps leading into his home, and was killed on his own porch. There were two doors to the apartment, one opening into the vestibule, and the other from the vestibule into his living room. The outer vestibule door was open while the inner was closed and locked. After the shooting, Warden fell and lay face down with his feet toward the 'street and his head on the outer threshold.

There was ample evidence from which the main facts can be clearly understood, the points of difference being slight and to be later noticed. Thus it is quite clear that the deceased started the fight and that he carried it on until the arrival of the defendant with his pistol. It is also clear that Warden had desisted from the conflict and retreated to his own locked front door before he was killed. There is also evidence making it reasonably certain that the defendant called the deceased a coward and various vile names while challenging him to come down off his porch and fight. It is proved by all of the witnesses, including the defendant himself, that the fatal shot was fired while the deceased was at the top of the porch stairway and the defendant was on the stairs. The only conflict in the evidence comes at this point.

The witnesses for the People gave evidence tending to prove that the defendant Jersky followed Warden up onto his porch, challenged him to put up his fists and fight, and that when Warden offered to put up his fists and fight Jersky shot him. Jersky’s version of it is that he saw Warden beating his younger brother and ran over to try and break it up. He testified that he saw this on the sidewalk in front of the house and stepped between them yelling “Break up the fight!”; that Warden hit him twice and that he fell down temporarily unconscious; that the next thing he knew the fight was still going on and that he ran up the stairway telling them to “break it upthat he had the gun in his hand as he ran up the stairs during all of which time Warden was hitting his brother; that when he got up to the top of the stairway Warden turned from his brother and started hitting him; that he kept backing down the stairs holding the revolver in his left hand; that Warden grabbed his left hand and tried to twist the gun away from him, whereupon the revolver accidentally exploded with results above mentioned.

Dr. Jerry J. Kearns, coroner’s physician of Cook county, examined the body of Warden and conducted an autopsy. In his testimony as to qualification it appears that he has performed eight thousand post-mortem examinations, between a thousand and fifteen hundred of them on the bodies of persons who had died from bullet wounds. It was the opinion of this witness that the bullet which caused the death had been fired from a distance of two feet or more, and, in any event, not less than eighteen inches from the point of entrance. His opinion as to this was based upon observations and experiments conducted over a period of ten years.

.Immediately after the shooting, the defendant became a fugitive for eighteen days and could not be and was not found by the police until his attorney brought him to the State’s attorney’s office and surrendered him to custody. The record shows that an intensive police search for him during this period of eighteen days was entirely fruitless. He admitted, on cross-examination, that he spent these eighteen days at the home of his mother, although he knew the police were looking for him. It was proved by the police that they had looked for.him at the home of his mother but he was not there.

It is apparent from the record that during this eighteen days something happened to some of the People’s witnesses. • Several of them were very forgetful, apparently reluctant to testify, and one of them who was an eye-witness to the shooting had to be called as a court’s witness because of the conflicting statements he had made to the police at different times. A considerable amount of conflicting reputation evidence was also introduced. A number of witnesses testified that the defendant’s reputation for truth and veracity was bad and that they would not believe him under oath, while others testified that it was good. Likewise, a number testified that his reputation as a peaceable and law-abiding citizen was good, and others testified that it was bad. Witnesses were called who testified that the deceased had the reputation of being a quarrelsome fellow, but, on the other hand, an equal number testified that he had exactly the opposite reputation.

The evidence on these various matters of reputation is not conclusive on any point, but we do not think it of any great importance to the decision of the case in this court, after the facts have been found by a jury. For the purposes of this review we might assume everything to be as the defendant claims it is without materially affecting the disposal of the case. The fact is that the defendant comes so extremely close to convicting himself on his own testimony as to require but little probative force from the testimony of other witnesses and from the surrounding circumstances to sustain the verdict of the jury.

Plaintiff in error questions the correctness of the ruling of the court on the admission of evidence and instructions to the jury. His first objection as to the evidence concerns the testimony of Dr. Kearns as to the distance from which the bullet was fired. This objection is based upon our holding in People v. Rongetti, 338 Ill.

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36 N.E.2d 347, 377 Ill. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-jersky-ill-1941.