The People v. Levy

17 N.E.2d 967, 370 Ill. 82
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1938
DocketNo. 24654. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 N.E.2d 967 (The People v. Levy) 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. Levy, 17 N.E.2d 967, 370 Ill. 82 (Ill. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

Martin Levy was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of receiving a stolen motor vehicle, knowing it to have been stolen, for his own gain and to prevent the owner thereof from again possessing it. He was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of one to twenty years. He has sued out this writ of error.

Fay Vick, on the morning of August 28, 1936, at about 11:00 o’clock, parked her husband’s automobile, a 1934 Chevrolet coach, on Fifty-eighth street between Cottage Grove and Maryland avenues in Chicago. When she returned at about 1 :oo o’clock the automobile had disappeared. She reported the loss to the police department. The following morning an investigator for the State’s attorney, and other police officers, went to the defendant’s place of business at 2531-39 South State street to make certain investigations. The premises consist of a two-story building on the east side of the street, separated by an enclosed driveway with a three-story building to the south. The two-story building to the north consists of three principal rooms downstairs. The front or west room is a salesroom, with a small partitioned office in the northeast corner. The second or middle room contained automobile parts and the rear room was a sort of garage. The two buildings are separated by an enclosed driveway. There is also a large garage door at the entrance of the driveway from the street. Automobiles may be driven from the street through the enclosed driveway between these buildings. There are doors on opposite sides of the driveway into each of the buildings. The first floor of the south building contained dismantled parts of automobiles.

The investigator for the State’s attorney asked permission of the defendant to see his books to ascertain whether the defendant was complying with the law, and the examination was made. The evidence for the People discloses that when the police officers were in the room to the rear of the salesroom they heard pounding in the building to the south of the driveway, and the doors being partly open, went in and saw Philip Levy, the defendant’s brother, with a sledge in his hand. The officers found in that room a dismantled 1934 Chevrolet automobile. One of the officers asked Philip Levy if he had a junking certificate and he replied that there might be one in the front office. Another officer asked the defendant if he had a junking license and the defendant at first said he had it somewhere but later said: “I might as well tell you I haven’t got anything on that merchandise.” When asked where he obtained the Chevrolet automobile the defendant stated that he did not know, and when asked if he purchased it replied that he did not care to say. Among the numerous parts of the automobile found in the south building were the motor-block, which was still hot, and from which the numbers on the lower right side had been obliterated; there were cut-up panels of a two-door automobile, a radiator-shell and grill, rear-end transmission and wheels, front-end assemblies, dashboard and lamps, spare tire, hub caps, instrument panel, broken window-glass, remnants of upholstery and padding, some of which was smoldering on the floor, a lock and cable in an inverted fly-wheel used as a crucible, which contained melted articles, still hot. A safety-sticker, oil-change tag and drinking-glass puzzle were found in a stove in the same room with the automobile parts. Parts of the automobile were marked and photographed and subsequently taken from the defendant’s place and exhibited at the trial.

Lawrence Vick, the owner of the Chevrolet automobile, (the parts of which were exhibited in court,) and Fay Vick, testified to numerous articles which had been in the automobile and markings of parts of the automobile which Lawrence Vick owned and corresponding markings on the parts taken from the defendant’s place of business. Specific articles mentioned were, the safety-sticker, which had been on the rear wind-shield, a card showing the mileage at which the oil had been changed and the drinking-glass puzzle mentioned as found in the defendant’s stove. Both the Vicks testified that these articles previously had been in the automobile. Identifying marks on various automobile parts to which Vick testified, were, a dented hub cap, a sawed-off bolt, which partly attached a radio to the automobile, an emblem of the Century of Progress showing the assembly of the automobile at the exposition, spark-plugs, different from those originally on the motor, special switch hooked to the generator, a dented air-cleaner on the carbureter, a fuel strainer, not a part of the standard equipment of the automobile, a water-hose connection for a heater, special valve covers on the wire wheels which had been placed there by Lawrence Vick, special brakeshoes on one of the tires, stains of anti-freeze solution on the radiator, the same as stains on the automobile when used by Vick, an ignition lock which a key Vick possessed, unlocked, the glove compartment which another key in Vick’s possession, opened. Vick also recognized the gear-shift and transmission as those of his automobile, by marks made by a cold-chisel, and paint had been scratched from the wheel rims by skid-chains in the same manner as scratches on Vick’s automobile. The color of the paint was the same. There was other testimony of corresponding characteristics of marking on the automobile parts which were there before its disappearance.

The evidence for the defense consisted of the testimony of the defendant, his brother, Philip Levy, Cy Wheatley and character witnesses. The defendant testified that on the morning of August 29, 1936, a man drove up to the defendant’s place of business and asked the defendant if the latter could go out to a garage on the south side in Chicago to look at some parts, which he, the prospective customer, had for sale; that the defendant said, it being Saturday and the end of the month, he could not do so; that the prospective customer then asked if he might take the material to the defendant’s place of business for his inspection, and the defendant gave his permission to do so but stated that he would not guarantee its purchase; that the caller gave no address and that was the only conversation between them; that the defendant then informed Wheatley of the conversation, and told Wheatley if the man returned, to look at the material and see if it was anything the defendant could use; that the defendant then left to go to other establishments dealing in auto parts to see if he could obtain a particular kind of radiator for a customer, and that about ten minutes after his return to his own place the police officers appeared. The defendant also testified that he did not know that the automobile parts displayed in the court room were in his warehouse when the police officers went there. He had not purchased anything from the man who called to see him the morning of August 29, and he did not own the material which the police officers took away from his place of business.

Cy Wheatley testified that the defendant had spoken to him about the material which the prospective customer might bring in; that a man called at the defendant’s place and said that he had talked with the defendant previously the same morning, and that he had some parts there.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.E.2d 967, 370 Ill. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-levy-ill-1938.