The People v. McKinnie

160 N.E. 121, 328 Ill. 631
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1928
DocketNo. 18270. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 160 N.E. 121 (The People v. McKinnie) 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. McKinnie, 160 N.E. 121, 328 Ill. 631 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

George E. McKinnie was indicted in the circuit court of Sangamon county for assault with intent to rape Emma Requarth. A jury trial resulted in a conviction and sentence to the Southern Illinois penitentiary at Chester. Mc-Kinnie prosecutes this writ of error for a review of the record.

The prosecution’s evidence shows that on November 12, 1926, Emma Requarth, a married woman upwards of forty-five years of age and a resident of the city of Springfield, went to Oak Ridge cemetery to decorate her son’s grave; that she arrived at the east gate of the cemetery about noon, walked to the new or western part of the grounds, where her son was buried, changed the flowers on his grave, and after stopping there a few minutes crossed a road to a hill in close proximity, intending to go to her father’s grave, which is located near the entrance to the cemetery; that when she passed over the hill, about 12:3o or 12 -.45 P. M., and was about a third of the way down on the opposite side, she heard a voice calling from behind, “Lady, I have lost a grave and cannot find itthat Mrs. Requarth, turning to the inquirer, who was a man, asked, “What is the name ? I know quite a few people who are buried here and it is possible I could help;” that the man replied, “The name is Clark,” and Mrs. Requarth answered, “No, sir; I don’t know anybody by that name;” that he -then grabbed her, threw her to the ground, face downward, and was immediately astride her body; that she screamed, and he put his hand on her mouth and said, “Shut up! Shut up!” and struck her on the head; that she screamed a second time and he struck her again; that when she screamed the third time he took from his pocket a tool which looked like a file and struck her on the head with it, causing her to bleed; that he did not disturb her clothing, and when he discovered that she was injured he said, “Oh, lady! Come and get up! I didn’t mean to hurt you!” that he then assisted her and picked up her hat, glasses, pocket-book and a package of grass seed which had fallen to the ground and gave them to her; that she asked, “Why don’t you take my pocket-book and let me alone?” and without answering the question he said, “Please come and get in my car and I will take you anywhere you want to go;” that he then dragged her to the front of his automobile, and as he did so the blood from her head trickled down on his coat or sweater, which was of a tannish-brown color; that as he went to open the west door of his automobile she discovered that the car bore Illinois license number 900-822 for the year 1926; that he again requested her to enter his car and inquired where she wanted to go, and she answered she was on her way to her father’s grave; that he then repeated that he would take her anywhere she wished to go, but that she replied, “No, sir; please let" me alone; you go your way and I will go mine;” that she again asked why he did not take her pocket-book and leave her; that he then jumped into his car and drove away at high speed, and that as the car, which was a Chevrolet coupe, was leaving, she again saw its license number. Mrs. Requarth further testified that after the car left she started down tire hill, screaming for help, and soon attracted the attention of R. J. Biernbaum, the superintendent of the cemetery, and some of the employees under him ; that she told Biernbaum what had happened and gave him the license number of the car, which had disappeared; that she was assisted into Biernbaum’s automobile, and at her request was taken to the home of Mrs. Smith, a friend, who lived just outside of the cemetery gate; that later she was removed to the Springfield Hospital, where she remained a week, and that the plaintiff in error was brought into her presence at the hospital and she identified him as the man who attacked her. Of the apparel worn by the plaintiff in error at the time of the assault Mrs. Requarth identified only his sweater, for she had taken no notice of his hat, cap or trousers.

R. J. Biernbaum, the superintendent of the cemetery, corroborated the testimony of Mrs. Requarth with reference to what occurred at and after the time she attracted his attention by her screams. Immediately after he took her to Mrs. Smith’s home he reported the crime to the police. He also gave them the license number of the automobile that had disappeared.

James Mclnerney, a police officer who was present at the police station when Biernbaum made his report, testified that he and officer George Pehlman ascertained that automobile license number 900-822 had been issued to Edwin E. McKinnie, 331 South Douglas avenue, Springfield; that they, the two officers, proceeded to that street number and asked McKinnie, with whom officer Pehlman was acquainted, to see the automobile; that as they passed to the rear of the house they saw a Chevrolet coupe bearing the particular license number; that upon inquiry McKinnie told them the plaintiff in error was his son and that the latter had taken the car out earlier in the day; that after obtaining information that the plaintiff in error had gone to Williamsville, a village about ten miles northeast of Springfield, the officers went there in search of him, but failing to find him they returned to Springfield and arrived at his father’s house at about five o’clock; that as they approached the house a Ford automobile bearing a Michigan license number was driven upon the premises and stopped near the garage and the plaintiff in error alighted from the car; that the officers questioned him concerning his apparel when he drove his father’s automobile about noon of that day, and he told them he then wore light trousers and a brownish-colored coat or jacket; that the officers took him first to the police station, and later, dressed in the clothes worn, as he stated, while driving his father’s car at noon, to Mrs. Requarth at the hospital; that after officer Pehlman had asked her some questions the plaintiff in error was returned to the police station, and that three days later he was again taken to the hospital, when Mrs. Requarth identified him as her assailant.

George Pehlman, the other police officer, corroborated officer Mclnerney’s testimony concerning the identification of the automobile license number, their visit to Edwin E. McKinnie’s home and inquiry about the use of the Chevrolet coupe, their trip to Williamsville and return to the elder McKinnie’s home, their questioning the plaintiff in error about the clothes he wore earlier in the day, their two trips to the hospital, and Mrs. Requarth’s identification of the plaintiff in' error on the second trip. The sweater or coat which she said he wore at the time he attacked her was admitted in evidence.

Five witnesses appeared in behalf of the plaintiff in error: Lucy McKinnie, his mother; Edwin E. McKinnie, his father; Harriet J. McKinnie, his grandmother; Lena Robertson, a servant in the home of his aunt; and the plaintiff in error himself. Lucy McKinnie testified that on November 12, 1926, at about noon, she was at the home of her sister, who was then very ill; that in response to a request over the telephone her husband called in his Chevrolet coupe and she returned home with him, reaching there shortly after one o’clock, when she found the plaintiff in error in the kitchen, and that shortfy afterwards her son left in his Ford car, stating that he was going to Williams-ville.

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Bluebook (online)
160 N.E. 121, 328 Ill. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-mckinnie-ill-1928.