The People v. Johnson

22 N.E.2d 683, 372 Ill. 18
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1939
DocketNo. 25007. Judgment reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 N.E.2d 683 (The People v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 22 N.E.2d 683, 372 Ill. 18 (Ill. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

A1 Johnson, Max Johnson and Sam Levin were convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of conspiracy to defraud the State of Illinois of certain sums of money claimed to be due under the Motor Fuel Tax act. That conviction was affirmed by the Appellate Court for the First District. On writ of error sued out of this court the conviction was reversed because one of the two counts of the indictment was insufficient to establish a conspiracy. (People v. Johnson, 363 Ill. 45.) A second conviction was obtained by the People on the good count in the indictment and affirmed by the Appellate Court. (296 Ill. App. 646.) The case again comes to this court on writ of error sued out by Al and Max Johnson.

The overt acts upon which the conspiracy charged is based are alleged to have occurred prior to and on September 15, 1930. The Statute of Limitations for such'an offense is eighteen months (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 38, par. 631) and would have run on March 15, 1932, if no steps had been taken to prosecute. However, on October 3, 1930, these defendants were indicted by a grand jury in Cook county. On November 24, 1930, this indictment was stricken off by Judge McGoorty with leave to reinstate. If credit be given the People for fifty-two days, being the time from the filing of the original indictment on October 3, 1930, until it was stricken, November 24, 1930, the eighteen-months’ Statute of Limitations period expired on May 5, 1932. However, the same indictment was, in fact, later reinstated by the State’s attorney on December 8, 1932, and on January 16, 1933, after a hearing before Judge Prystalski, it was quashed. Two and one-half months later, March 31, 1933, another indictment charging the same offense was returned by the grand jury and resulted in the present conviction. It is the contention of defendants that the Statute of Limitations had run during the time the old indictment reposed off the docket before return of the second indictment and that prosecution is, therefore, barred. This point is not tenable for the reasons stated in our former opinion in People v. Johnson, supra.

On their first appearance in this court the defendants submitted their case only upon the common law record, which, of course, contained nothing to show why the original indictment had been stricken. After reversal and remandment and a second trial, the case is now here with a bill of exceptions. Upon leave granted, a certain additional record has been filed, including some additional testimony, and a motion by the People to strike was taken with the case. Defendants do not find fault with our decision when the first trial was reviewed by us merely upon the common law record, but ask for a different interpretation when the indictment is studied in the light of evidence contained in the bill of exceptions. That evidence, they contend, shows the People finally and unconditionally settled the motor fuel tax claim against them and definitely abandoned their prosecution. To show that such claim of settlement and abandonment was not made in the Appellate Court the People have filed the brief and abstract used there by defendants. Our examination of that brief and abstract shows allegations of error because the trial judge did not support them in the contention that the statutory period had run against the indictment. The errors were briefed and argued in the Appellate Court, and the argument was there advanced that, when viewed with the evidence, the second indictment of March 31, 1933, constituted a new cause of action barred by the statute. The Appellate Court, on the second and present writ of error where it had the bill of exceptions before it, misconceived the situation when it said: “Defendants’ brief discusses the question of the indictment, but this matter has already been settled by the decision of the Supreme Court.” It thus referred to our decision wherein we considered the sufficiency of the indictment with only the common law record before us, and without any opportunity to review the evidence.

It is urged that we cannot consider the argument of settlement of claim and abandonment of prosecution because it was not presented in the Appellate Court. The People become confused between a point presented, briefed and argued and a mere argument in support of a point. The point presented in the Appellate Court was that the Statute of Limitations had run against the indictment. Various arguments, based upon the evidence adduced in the second trial, were used to support the point. The additional argument is founded upon material appearing in this amended and supplemental record. After they had given notice of their intention to the People, who offered no opposition, the defendants, in vacation, obtained an order from a judge of this court allowing them to file an abstract of the amended and supplemental record. At the February, 1939, term of this court, the defendants, after giving due notice of their intention and serving copies of their motion on the People, applied for leave to file an amended and supplemental record of proceedings had prior to the trials. The People also failed to appear and contest this last described motion and it was allowed by us as a matter of course. After thus twice receiving notices and both times failing to appear or object, the People cannot in good grace now complain for the first time that the amended and supplemental records and abstract are improperly before us, and that the motions for leave to file them were improvidently allowed. Under such circumstances, it will be presumed no error was committed in allowing the motions. (Dodd and Edmunds, Ill. App. Proc. sec. 844.) The motion taken with the case to strike the amended and supplemental records and abstract is therefore denied.

The testimony preserved and shown in the amended and supplemental record includes the written motion of the People to strike the original indictment, (No. 58382) as follows:

“To the Honorable J. P. McGoorty, Chief Justice of the Criminal Court of Cook County.

“Now comes the People of the State of Illinois, and moves the Court that the above entitled cause be stricken off with leave to reinstate. As a reason for making this motion the people state that these Defendants were indicted for violation of the Motor Fuel Tax Law. This law went into effect on the 1st of August, A. D. 1929, and it took the Department of Finance, under whose supervision the taxes are collected, some time to be organized, and that from time to time, and from the date that the law went into effect until recently, and the State Department had been unable to exercise the supervision that seemed necessary and required; that these defendants took advantage of this lack of supervision, and are charged with handling a great quantity of motor fuel oil upon which they failed to pay any tax. That they have acknowledged their indebtedness to the State for the amount of motor fuel on which they have failed to pay a tax, that they have made a substantial payment of such taxes, and made arrangements to pay the balance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 N.E.2d 683, 372 Ill. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-johnson-ill-1939.