The People v. Ladas

29 N.E.2d 595, 374 Ill. 419
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1940
DocketNo. 25742. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 595 (The People v. Ladas) 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. Ladas, 29 N.E.2d 595, 374 Ill. 419 (Ill. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Murphy

delivered the opinion of the court:

George Ladas has sued out this writ of error to review a judgment of the circuit court of St. Clair county. A jury found him guilty of robbery and he was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of one to twenty years. He was indicted jointly with William Bourland, who apparently was not apprehended. He urges that the court should have allowed his motion made at the close of all the evidence to instruct the jury to find him not guilty, because, he says, the evidence against him was insufficient; that prejudicial testimony was admitted on the trial; that the conviction was secured as a result of improper conduct on the part of the assistant State’s attorneys who tried the case, and that his motion for a new trial should have been allowed.

Dumas Scholes testified that he was robbed of $345 in bills about 3:00 o’clock in the morning of July 18, 1939, at Duck Inn on State highway Route No. 3, a few miles south of East St. Louis. He had been in the Roxy Cafe in East St. Louis earlier in the evening, where he sat at the counter and ordered a steak. He had had two or three bottles of beer, and when the steak turned out to be tougher than he had anticipated, he told the waitress that he had ordered a good tender steak and she had brought him a tough one, and that if she gave him a steak he could not eat he would' give her a hundred-dollar bill which she could not change. He started to show the waitress that he had that much money, but Gus Roustiau, a customer of the restaurant and a stranger to Scholes, warned him not to display his money. Both Roustiau and Thomas Doyle testified that he did display his money, and that defendant Ladas was. sitting at the counter at the right of Scholes. Ladas admitted being in the Roxy Cafe the evening of the robbery, but did not know whether Scholes was there or not. When Scholes went to his car, which was parked about a block from the restaurant, a man whom he later identified as Ladas asked him if he was going out to Duck Inn. Scholes said he was going over to St. Louis, but that he would take the man as far as the “free” or municipal bridge. As they drove along Scholes noticed that Ladas was attempting to conceal a black-jack between his legs. He became suspicious but consented to take Ladas on to Duck Inn when the latter roughly demanded that he do so. It was dark and no one was around when they approached the bridge. They met twenty-five or thirty cars in the two-mile trip from the bridge to the inn and Scholes testified that he made use of their lights to observe the man who was riding beside him. When they arrived, Scholes said: “Well, we are here.” Ladas said: “Well, I want you to get out and come in and take a drink.” Scholes said: “No, I don’t care for any. I am going to St. Louis.” Ladas insisted, and turned toward Scholes with the blackjack in his hand. Scholes reached for his knife and stepped out of his car, so that he could reach the safety of Duck Inn. Another man who had drawn up in a taxicab behind Scholes’ car attacked Scholes, and he and Ladas knocked him down, took his money and made off. William Morgan, a deputy sheriff, heard the commotion and came out of Duck Inn in time to see a car drive away at high speed. He took Scholes to East St. Louis to report the robbery to the police as soon as Scholes regained consciousness. Scholes gave the police a description of the man who had been with him in the automobilé, and later in the day went to the Veterans’ Hospital at Jefferson Barracks, south of St. Louis, Missouri, for treatment. On July 19, 1939, three deputy sheriffs of St. Clair county took Ladas and a man named Newman over to the hospital to see if Scholes could identify them. He identified Ladas in the presence of deputy sheriffs Hogan and Stuart but could not identify Newman. Scholes was a diabetic and his general health was not good. His vision was impaired and he wore spectacles. He lost his best pair of glasses in the robbery, and at the time he identified defendant he was using a cheap pair that did not fit perfectly. However, the defendant was within five or six feet of him while he was at the hospital. On cross-examination he stated that he had no conversation with defendant while he was at the hospital, and did not accuse him of the robbery in his presence. Counsel for defendant then moved that the testimony as to what Scholes told the deputy sheriffs be excluded, but his motion was denied. Counsel sought to discredit Scholes’ identification by showing that he could not see well enough to be sure that Ladas was the robber. Scholes admitted he could not tell whether the defendant was wearing a mustache or whether his lip was dark from where he was sitting at the trial, and that the nose of the defendant did not look like that of the robber, but at the end of his examination he was still positive that defendant was the robber, and did not think he could be mistaken.

When the case was first set for trial Scholes was still in the Veterans’ Hospital and refused to come to Illinois to testify. A warrant was issued for his arrest and he was taken to the County Hospital in St. Louis. Two days later he waived extradition and was taken to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Belleville where he remained until he was called to testify. No guard was kept over him there and he was given medical treatment.

John Hogan, a deputy sheriff of St. Clair county, saw Scholes about 7 :oo o’clock on the morning of the robbery and obtained a description of the man who had robbed him. He was then asked: “After securing that description, did you assist in arresting the defendant Ladas ?” He answered: “I. asked to have him picked up. The East St. Louis police arrested'him.” Counsel for defendant said: “I object to what he asked.” The objection was overruled. This witness then testified that he was one of the deputies who took Ladas to the Veterans’ Hospital for identification on July 19. Scholes did not identify the first man taken into his presence, but positively identified Ladas. The latter ran around the room in circles to prevent Scholes from getting a look at his face, and asked the deputies for an opportunity to talk privately to Scholes. Later this witness had a conversation with Ladas as he was returning him to jail after his preliminary hearing. Ladas told him: “They got me hooked again. I was in the penitentiary once and I would have been just as well off if I had stayed there.” The court overruled a motion to exclude the conversation as being immaterial. On cross-examination Hogan testified that Scholes said: “That’s him!” when Ladas was brought in, and after Ladas went out Scholes said: “I would know him in hell.” The jury was instructed to disregard this last statement. Defendant’s counsel then asked Hogan to repeat the conversation objected to above in which Ladas told Hogan they had him hooked again and that he would be just as well off in the penitentiary. Vivian Stuart, a deputy sheriff, testified that Scholes identified Ladas at the Veterans’ Hospital.

George Ladas testified in his own behalf. He stated that when he finished working at his father’s tavern he stopped by the Roxy Cafe and ate a sandwich and drank a cup of coffee; that he did not see Scholes while he was there, and when he finished eating he went to his father’s home a few blocks away, put the keys to the tavern in his father’s pocket and went to bed. He denied robbing Scholes and testified that Scholes did not accuse him of robbery while he was at the Veterans’ Hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 595, 374 Ill. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-ladas-ill-1940.