The People v. Knight

154 N.E. 418, 323 Ill. 567
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1926
DocketNo. 17561. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 418 (The People v. Knight) 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. Knight, 154 N.E. 418, 323 Ill. 567 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

This writ of error was sued out to review the judgment of the circuit court of Edgar county convicting Ernest Knight of the crime of receiving stolen goods knowing them to be stolen.

The indictment was in one count, and charged the defendant with receiving twelve joints of meat, the property of Mike Remley, which had been stolen, well knowing that they had been stolen. A motion was made to quash the indictment for the reason that it does not. state what a “joint of meat” is or the kind of meat. In the ordinary use of language “meat” refers to flesh of animals used for food, and a “joint of meat” is any large piece of meat as cut into portions by butchers. The indictment was sufficient to inform the defendant of the charge against him and to enable him to prepare for trial, and the motion to quash it was properly overruled.

It was proved that meat was stolen on Saturday, February 14, 1925, from the smokehouse of Mike Remley, the prosecuting witness, on his farm six miles east of Chrisman. On his return, about two o’clock in the afternoon, from Paris, where he had gone in the morning, he found the windows of the smokehouse broken out and twelve joints of sugar-cured meat, (the hams and shoulders of hogs,) which had been in the building, were gone. There were the tracks of two persons under the window, and in front of the house were the tracks of an automobile. On February 17 Remley swore out a search warrant to search the premises of the defendant, who lived a mile and a half east of Brocton, in the northwest part of the county, and went with two deputy sheriffs and some other persons to the defendant’s house. They found there in the defendant’s smokehouse seven joints of sugar-cured meat piled on a barrel, which contained other meat cured with salt, and on the table in the kitchen of his house one shoulder which had been partly used. Remley testified that as they stepped inside the smokehouse where the meat was, he said in Knight’s presence, “If that’s my meat it’s been re-wrapped.” Later, when he was in the smokehouse, he took a joint off the barrel and unwrapped it, and found the cloth that was around the meat dry and the paper practically dry. He did not take the meat off the paper but folded the paper back. He examined to see whether there had been other paper on it, turned the joint over, and there were scraps of paper sticking to the meat. He then asked Knight whether this meat was in the original package as it was cured or whether it had been re-wrapped, and Knight answered, “In the original package.” After finding the scraps of paper on the meat Remley said, “There is no use; this meat has been re-wrapped, because here is the old paper,— the scraps of that paper on it, — that shows that it has been re-wrapped,” but Knight said in reply that it had not. Remley examined two or three more joints and found them like the first. The meat was then brought to Paris, and the sheriff, his deputy, the State’s attorney and Remley laid the meat out and examined it. They found old-looking paper sticking to the meat. The largest scrap was a part of Meis Bros.’ advertisement, with a picture on it. Remley testified that in wrapping the meat stolen from his house he used the Danville Commercial News, and he examined the files of that paper and found an advertisement in the issue of December 16, 1924, that corresponded with the Meis Bros, advertisement which was on the scrap taken from the meat found at Knight’s house. Remley testified as to the manner in which'his meat was wrapped, that a square yard of cloth was laid down, a paper of the same size on top of that, the joint of meat then laid on the paper, the paper folded over the meat and the cloth folded over the meat both ways, the joint turned over and the cloth brought together, twisted, and tied in the middle of the joint. The stolen meat was hanging in the smokehouse by binder twine tied to each joint hung on a nail, and broken pieces of twine were found hanging to the cloth on some of the joints.

The only evidence connecting Knight with the stolen meat was the testimony of Remley tending to identify the meat as that taken from his smokehouse, the circumstances testified to in regard to the wrapping and re-wrapping of the meat, Knight’s statements made at the time of Remley’s visit to his house with the officers and the search warrant, and other statements made by him after his arrest. Since the judgment must be reversed for error occurring on the trial, we express no opinion as to the sufficiency of the identification of the meat.

In order to avoid a continuance on account of the absence of Myrtle Williams, the defendant admitted that she would testify, if present, to the facts set forth in the affidavit filed for the continuance, and the People offered in evidence the portion of the affidavit as to what she would testify. It was received over the objection of the defendant, and stated that “on the afternoon of the 14th of February, A. D. 1925, the residence of the said Myrtle Williams was burglarized and a large quantity of the goods and chattels of herself and her husband stolen therefrom ; that as she and her husband were on the point of entering their automobile preparatory to leaving their home on the said 14th day of February, A. D. 1925, she, the said witness, noticed an automobile driving very slowly past her said residence and noticed that one of the two occupants of said automobile was carefully watching the movements of herself and husband; that said car proceeded slowly down the road and that she and her husband left their said residence, departing in the direction taken by the said automobile ; that after going a short distance the said automobile turned into a bad and little used road a short distance from her said residence; that she observed the condition of the car and certain peculiar marks of mud upon the said car; that later she was called to Paris and informed that an abandoned car had been found in the neighborhood of Brocton, Illinois, and that such car was parked on the public square, and she was requested to walk around the square and ascertain whether or not she could identify any car upon the public square as the car which she had seen passing her home on February 14, 1925, as above set forth; that she started from the southeast corner of the public square, made no stop at any car until she arrived at a point on the west side of the public square near the pump, when she pointed out a car to deputy sheriff Pennington, who was following her, and stated that that car parked on the west side of the square as aforesaid was the same car which she had seen passing her residence as aforesaid on the 14th day of February, A. D. 1925.”

Ralph Humphrey, who lived about four and a half miles west of Brocton, testified that a burglary was committed in his house on the evening of February 14, 1925. He left home at seven o’clock that evening and returned about nine. He found the front door open, his guns gone and other property taken. The burglars had reached the house by an automobile, and the next morning he made a very close examination of the yard and found the imprint of automobile tires in the soft ground. The tires on the left side of the car had a peculiar tread-design. There was a bead in the center of the tread that ran completely around, and running in either direction from the bead to the outside were rays, the impression of which on the ground ran backward, toward the rear of the car.

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154 N.E. 418, 323 Ill. 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-knight-ill-1926.