The People v. Lenhardt

173 N.E. 155, 340 Ill. 538
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1930
DocketNo. 20260. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 155 (The People v. Lenhardt) 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. Lenhardt, 173 N.E. 155, 340 Ill. 538 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

William Lenhardt was indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for the murder of Milton Valasopoulos. A jury found him guilty of the charge and fixed his punishment at death. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were made and denied and judgment was rendered on the verdict. By this writ of error, allowed upon his application, he seeks a review of the record.

On June 20, 1929, Milton Valasopoulos was the proprietor of a restaurant located at 803 West Seventy-fourth street in the city of Chicago. The building so occupied faces north and the restaurant consisted of a dining-room with a kitchen to the rear. The entrance to the restaurant was at the northeast corner of the dining-room. Along the west wall of that room ran a counter practically the entire length of the room. East of and parallel to this counter and separated from it by a passageway running north and south, there were placed longitudinally, from front to rear, a cigar case, a lunch counter and then another lunch counter. The ends of these counters were separated by a short passageway connecting with the longer one behind or west of the lunch counters. Along the front or east of each of these counters were six stools, and adjoining the east wall of the dining-room, were five tables placed transversely.

Early in the afternoon of June 20, 1929, there were present in the dining-room, John Schmueser, a customer, sitting at the south lunch counter; Rody Maddox, a waitress, sitting next to Schmueser and engaged in folding napkins, and Valasopoulos, the proprietor, standing behind the lunch counter, almost opposite Schmueser. James Stevens, the chef, and William Garth, the dishwasher, were in the kitchen.

Shortly after 2:15 o’clock a man about five feet four inches in height, wearing a dark gray suit of clothes, white shirt and straw hat, entered the restaurant and approached the cigar case. Valasopoulos walked up the,, passageway to the front of the room and as he reached the cigar case the stranger drew a revolver from his pocket, pointed it at Valasopoulos, and attempted to rob him. Valasopoulos offered resistance and a struggle followed. Schmueser’s attention was attracted by the noise and as he looked, he discovered that Valasopoulos was engaged in a scuffle over the counter with a man who had a revolver in his right hand. Schmueser rushed to Valasopoulos’ assistance, caught his assailant by the leg, but failing to hold it, seized his arm to prevent his use of the revolver. The stranger, however, succeeded in shooting Valasopoulos and Schmueser believed that he fired three shots.

Garth, the dishwasher, saw the beginning of the encounter and told Stevens, the chef, that Valasopoulos and a stranger were fighting in the dining-room. Stevens rushed into the room, caught the assailant’s arm and attempted to wrest the revolver from him. In the struggle that ensued Stevens lost his hold on the intruder and the latter shot Valasopoulos twice. After the shooting, 'Schmueser and Stevens went outside the restaurant and called for help.

The assailant escaped from the restaurant, leaving his hat, stopped a passing Dodge sedan automobile driven by Peter Miller, entered it and commanded Miller, at the point of a revolver, to follow a circuitous route for several blocks. When a point some distance northeast of the restaurant was reached, Miller was ejected from the car and it was driven north. Miller was an automobile mechanic employed at the southwest branch of the Dashiell Motor Company, located near Valasopoulos’ restaurant. This company was the agent for the sale of Dodge automobiles and Miller had been directed to drive the car to the company’s main salesroom near the center of the city. The car was a new one, dark blue in color and had no registration plates.

About four o’clock the same afternoon a man wearing a light shirt, and without a hat, entered the drug store of George Dembo at 5726 Elston avenue, in the northwestern part of the city approximately eighteen miles from Valasopoulos’ restaurant. After ordering a beverage, the man pointed a revolver at Dembo, and emptying the cash register, said that he was “leaving town” and needed money “to get away quickly;” that he had “just shot a man out south” and that he did not want to shoot another. He asked Dembo to take “a good look at him,” but commanded him not to move from the place where he stood. The robber drove away in a dark blue Dodge sedan automobile which bore no registration plates. Dembo grabbed his gun, ran out of the store and shot at the departing car.

Immediately after the robbery had been committed, Clarence Falk, a police officer, equipped with a motorcycle, was informed of the fact at a gasoline station in the neighborhood. Looking down the street he observed an automobile being driven in and out of the line of traffic and started in pursuit. Falk overtook the automobile and as he drove alongside of it, pointed his revolver at the driver and ordered him to stop. The driver reduced his speed and said “All right Jack, you got me.” Almost instantly, however, he pointed a revolver at the officer and fired twice. The first bullet missed the officer but the second struck him in the back. The occupant of the automobile then drove away at high speed. Falk fired two shots at the fleeing car, but the driver escaped. Later in the afternoon, at about five o’clock, another police officer found a new dark blue Dodge sedan automobile, without registration plates, but with four bullet holes in the rear of the body, standing in a vacant lot adjoining 4729 Lawrence avenue, a point more than two miles from Dembo’s drug store.

Valasopoulos was taken to a hospital immediately after he was shot and died there two days later, on June 22, 1929. The plaintiff in error was identified by Schmueser and Stevens as the person who shot Valasopoulos; by Miller as the man who entered the automobile he was driving and took it from him; by Dembo as the one who robbed his drug store and by officer Falk as the driver of the car he pursued and the man who shot him and escaped. The abandoned Dodge sedan was claimed by and returned to the Dashiell Motor Company and Miller recognized it as the car from which the plaintiff in error ejected him.

The plaintiff in error was arrested at 1:30 o’clock in the morning of August 24, 1929, at 2017 West Monroe street, Chicago, the home of Alva Zaabel. He had lived with her as his wife, although not at that address. At the detective bureau, according to the testimony of police officers, he confessed that he shot a restaurant keeper on Seventy-fourth street in Chicago, some time before and added that after he left a drug store on the north side of the city in the afternoon of the same day, he was shot in the shoulder by a police officer and that he went to Cleveland, Ohio, where a doctor removed the bullet. An examination of his shoulder by local police officers disclosed the presence of a bullet wound.

Proof of an alibi constituted the defense.

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173 N.E. 155, 340 Ill. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-lenhardt-ill-1930.