The People v. Kendall

192 N.E. 378, 357 Ill. 448
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1934
DocketNo. 22343. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 192 N.E. 378 (The People v. Kendall) 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. Kendall, 192 N.E. 378, 357 Ill. 448 (Ill. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shaw

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs in error, Frank Kendall and John Prief, were jointly indicted with Elmer Benson, Charles Smythe and Lloyd Cox, in the circuit court of Peoria county, on a charge of robbery while armed. Benson was found not guilty, Smythe was never apprehended, and another participant in the robbery, one Adams, was killed in the course of the hold-up. Kendall and Prief were found guilty and sentenced to an indeterminate term of from one year to life in the penitentiary and prosecute this writ of error.

The facts are in part controverted but appear substantially in the record as follows, depending to a considerable extent upon the testimony of the defendant Cox, who pleaded guilty and became a witness for the People:

Milka Marsh, a widow, together with her nineteen-year-old son, Stephen Marsh, lived at 1900 South Washington street, Peoria, Illinois, on the 14th of February, 1933. The premises occupied by them contained a front room which was once used as a restaurant but at the time of the occurrences herein mentioned was not open for business. It had previously been used by the deceased husband of Mrs. Marsh for “bootlegging” purposes and had contained one or more slot machines. On the night of February 14, 1933, the defendant Cox and the defendant Smythe came to the side door of this building and demanded entrance, representing themselves to be deputy sheriffs. They called Mrs. Marsh’s son by his first name, saying, “Steve, open the door; we are deputy sheriffs; where are the slot machines?” Having gained entrance to the building on this pretext they then displayed revolvers and demanded to know where the money was hidden, informing Mrs. Marsh and her son that they knew there was money hidden in a fruit jar and they were there for the purpose of getting it. She denied having any money, and Cox searched the basement and the steps leading into the garage without any success. They then threatened to kidnap Steve if she did not produce the money. The son told them he had ten dollars which had been given to him as a present, which he went and got while being kept under the leveled revolver of Cox. Upon Steve being taken out of the room Mrs. Marsh became hysterical and began to scream, whereupon the other robber started to beat her. There is some confusion in the testimony, but it appears that the robbers became panicky, and that Steve grabbed a butcher knife and cut Cox across the throat with it, whereupon both of the robbers ran. Steve secured a revolver from the dresser drawer, went to the door and started shooting, killing the man named Adams, who was sitting in the car, and wounding Cox with a bullet through the mouth. Smythe ran away and was never seen again, while Cox ran in another direction and down some railroad tracks and was later in the evening apprehended at a restaurant and taken to a hospital. He made a complete confession, and became, as above indicated, a witness for the State on the trial.

Plaintiff in error Prief is the owner and proprietor of the Floyd Hotel, at 200 Liberty street, Peoria, and plaintiff in error Kendall is in the slot machine and punch-board business in that city. Adams, who was killed in the holdup above mentioned, was until that date a guest at the Floyd Hotel, and upon the trial it was the theory of the People that the robbery was planned in Adams’ room at the Floyd Hotel upon information and instruction given by Kendall, assisted by the advice of Prief, who furnished the revolvers to be used and who expected a share in the proceeds of the crime. They were convicted as principals upon proof indicating them to be accessories before the fact, within the provisions of the Criminal Code. (Cahill’s Stat. 1933, chap. 38, par. 611.) For proof of the necessary facts to sustain this part of the case the People depend upon the testimony of Cox, with such corroboration as- appears in the record.

Cox testified that his home was in Decatur, Illinois, and that of the absent Smythe was at Terre Haute, Indiana ; that in the early morning of February 14, 1933, they drove together to Peoria, it being the first visit that Cox had ever made to that city; that after being lost and making several inquiries they finally arrived at the Floyd Hotel, where Smythe claimed to have an appointment with Adams. Adams at this time was staying at the Floyd Hotel under the name of Baxter. He had been there a few days prior to the sixth of February, at which time he checked out. He returned on the ninth of February and stayed until the evening of the fourteenth, when he was killed. Baxter (or Adams) had told Prief, according to Prief’s testimony, that if a man from Terre Haute inquired for him Prief should send him up and that “he was all right.” According to the testimony of Cox, when he and Smythe reached the Floyd Hotel they inquired of Prief for Adams, but was told he had no one there by that name. Upon describing Adams, however, they were told by Prief to go up to room 10, which they did and there met Adams. The testimony covered the entire day, and without going into too great detail, it is sufficient to say that it was Cox’s story that Adams sent for Kendall, who came to the hotel about 9 :oo o’clock in the morning; that they spent a good part of the day discussing among themselves some means of raising money for the purpose of carrying on counterfeiting operations in Oklahoma, which Smythe had under way. According to his testimony Kendall suggested the Marsh restaurant and home as a likely place for a hold-up. He told them, according to Cox, that he had seen boot-leg liquor unloaded there, and that Marsh, before he died, always kept a fruit jar full of bills of large denominations; that he thought there might be several thousand dollars in it; that Marsh had recently died and there would probably be some insurance money also; that he knew Mrs. Marsh did not do any banking and that a large sum of money might be expected from that particular robbery. He advised them, according to Cox, that he could not participate personally because they were well acquainted with him, and he had been a pallbearer at the funeral of Marsh as well as having had slot machines in their place for a long time. He is said to have described Steve Marsh so they would be sure and recognize him and told them to call him “Steve” and to get in under the pretext that they were deputy sheriffs with a search warrant; that he felt sure they would be let in without any trouble, because he happened to know that the slot machines had been removed a week or so previously. Cox further testified that Prief was called into the conference for the purpose of furnishing the necessary revolvers; that Prief had two revolvers — one a 45-caliber black gun and the other a 32- or 38-caliber gun which had been niclcel-plated and was somewhat worn. He went on to testify that Prief had furnished the guns and upon examination discovered that they needed oil, and he got an oil can and put them in first-class working condition; also that Prief furnished them with a quart of whisky and four dollars for expenses for gasoline, oil, etc., and offered such further services as might be needed. Cox further testified that Kendall first took Smythe and then himself in his car, drove around past the Marsh place, showed them the lay of the job, and pointed out the side door through which entrance could be obtained.

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Bluebook (online)
192 N.E. 378, 357 Ill. 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-kendall-ill-1934.