The People v. Nixon

20 N.E.2d 789, 371 Ill. 318
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1939
DocketNo. 25032. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 20 N.E.2d 789 (The People v. Nixon) 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. Nixon, 20 N.E.2d 789, 371 Ill. 318 (Ill. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was, with one Earl Hicks, indicted for the murder of Florence Johnson on May 27, 1938. Hicks pleaded guilty and the cause proceeded in the criminal court of Cook county against defendant Nixon. The jury returned a verdict finding him guilty of murder and fixing his punishment at death. He brings the cause here urging numerous contentions for reversal of the judgment of conviction.

After arraignment, defendant’s counsel, on July 13, filed a motion and affidavit for change of venue, naming thirty-nine judges of the superior, circuit, and criminal courts, charging prejudice. On July 16, another motion and affidavit were filed, seeking change of venue from two of the judges of the criminal court of Cook county. The record discloses no action taken on either of these motions, but upon filing the second motion and affidavit the cause was transferred to the chief justice for reassignment, and two days thereafter it was assigned to the Hon. John C. Lewe, judge of the superior court, who tried the cause. Judge Lewe was named in the first motion for change of venue but was not named in the second. No objection appears to have been filed to proceeding with the trial before him. Apparently the motion first filed was abandoned, though it is claimed, here, that a change of venue was denied defendant to his prejudice. A motion for a separate trial was made before Judge Lewe and denied. A petition was filed by the public defender for an inquiry into the sanity of defendant. This motion was allowed, and a hearing was had before a jury impaneled to try the question whether defendant Robert Nixon was sane or insane, or feeble minded. The verdict, on hearing, was that he was sane and not feeble minded.

The undisputed facts are that on the morning of May 27, 1938, at about 5 :3o, two colored men entered the apartment occupied by Mrs. Florence Johnson, her husband, their two children, and Margaret Whitten, her sister. One of the men went into the room of the deceased and she, becoming aroused by a noise made by him, screamed, whereupon he struck her on the head with a brick, killing her. Within half an hour thereafter, defendant was arrested within a few blocks of the scene of the homicide as he was passing along a street, having stopped in the entrance of the alley to lace his shoes. He was taken to the police station. He had a cut on his index finger and some blood on his clothing, which he said he got dressing chickens. ITe gave the name of Thomas Crosby. He later gave police the name of Earl Hicks and told where he might be found. He stated to the officers that he had been at the house where Mrs. Johnson was murdered and that he and Hicks had gone there to steal a radio;, that Hicks picked up a brick along the railroad as they were going to the apartment, and that it was Hicks who struck and killed the deceased. When Hicks was brought into the police station, defendant told the officers that Hicks was the fellow who was with him and that Hicks was the man who wielded the brick.

Three statements were made by defendant, two of which were joint statements with defendant Hicks. The first was made at 11 :oo P. M. on May 28, the day after the murder. The second was a joint statement of Nixon and Hicks at 1 :oo P. M. on May 29, and the third was in connection with a reenactment of the crime by both defendants at about 5 :oo P. M. on the evening of May 29. The first statement was made in the presence of the State’s attorney, his assistant, and various police officers. In this statement defendant Nixon stated that he was eighteen years of age, had gone as far as the eighth grade in school, and had been living in Chicago since 1933. When asked whether he was in the Johnson apartment at 4631 Lake Park avenue, on Friday morning, May 27, between five and six o’clock, he stated that he was. His statement, further, was that he and Hicks reached there about 4:30 in the morning; that they had been sitting on the platform of the Illinois Central electric where they remained for about thirty minutes. He stated that he had known Hicks since the previous summer. He stated that they were looking for a place that they could break into to get a radio to sell. When they came to this apartment they found the pane broken out of a rear window and some oilcloth or linoleum put over it; that Hicks went in first and pulled him, Nixon, in behind him. He stated that when he got into the kitchen he took an apple from a basket on the refrigerator and put it in his pocket; that they went into the living room looking for something to take; that they had a brick with them — Earl Hicks had it; he had gotten it off the railroad track; that, as they looked into the rooms, they saw women asleep in two bedrooms and children asleep in the room where they came in through the window. He stated that they went about the apartment looking for a purse or a watch but did not find anything; that Hicks went into the room of the deceased and that he, Nixon, stood at the door, and when the woman awoke Hicks hit her with a brick; that they ran out and went across a fence or stone wall at the railroad tracks back of the apartment building. He stated that he did not get anything in the apartment except an apple; that they went there to rob and steal and did not touch the woman except Hicks hit her on the head with a brick. Pie stated that they picked out this apartment because they saw a window open and that it was about daybreak. He also stated that he lost the apple when he jumped over the fence to cross the street. This fence was about five feet high. The apple was afterwards found, showing that it had been partly eaten. He stated also that there was a radio sitting on the table near the window. He described the various rooms, the location of the refrigerator in the kitchen, the rooms in which the children were asleep and the method of coming in through the window. This statement as to the location of the rooms, how they were occupied, and their contents, was corroborated by Margaret Whitten and various other witnesses who later visited the apartment.

When Hicks was brought to the police station their joint statement was taken, which, in effect, corresponded with defendant’s first statement, except as to minor details, and except as to who went through the window first and as to who actually struck the deceased with the brick. Each stated the other went through the window first, and each stated the other wielded the brick. Both, in their statement, agreed that they had met, and went to this apartment for the purpose of robbery. They agreed in their statement that they got into the apartment through the window of the children’s room. Their statements in the main agreed as to what they did afterwards, with the exception that each stated the other was the one who wielded the brick.

The third statement was made in connection with the reenactment of the crime. Both Hicks and Nixon were taken, in company of numerous officers and three members of the grand jury, to the scene of the crime, where Nixon and Hicks took them over the ground from Forty-seventh street and Lake Park avenue to the Illinois Central depot to a bench on which they both stated they sat, and then took them over the ground where they had been, walked north along the track to where a brick was picked up, and back to this apartment on Lake Park avenue. In this reenactment Nixon took off his shoes and crawled through the window, helped Hicks through and proceeded through the bedroom and kitchen.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.E.2d 789, 371 Ill. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-nixon-ill-1939.