The People v. Olife

197 N.E. 777, 361 Ill. 237
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1935
DocketNo. 22949. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 197 N.E. 777 (The People v. Olife) 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. Olife, 197 N.E. 777, 361 Ill. 237 (Ill. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Herrick

delivered the opinion of the court:

LeRoy D. Oliff was indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for the crime of arson. He was tried by a jury, found guilty and sentenced to the penitentiary. By this writ of error he seeks a reversal of the judgment.

The indictment consisted of eight.counts. Nolle prosequis were entered as to the first four counts. The last four charged that the defendant and Jack Brown (otherwise called Jack Nasanov) did set fire to (fifth count) ; did burn (sixth count) ; did cause to be burned (seventh count) ; and did aid, counsel and procure to be burned (eighth count) a certain dwelling house, to-wit, rooming house situated in a two-story-and-basement brick building commonly known as 24 North Halsted street, in Chicago, the building being the property of LeRoy D. Oliff.

The structure in which the fire occurred and as established by the evidence conforms to that described at the street number mentioned in the indictment. There was a combined new and second-hand clothing business conducted on the first floor and the second floor was used as a rooming house. The front entrance to the store was by a door in the center, with display windows on either side, and separated from the main part of the store by a wooden partition. Clothing hung on racks in the center of the store, and the rear fourteen feet thereof was partitioned off as a workshop for tailoring work. The front door was locked by an ordinary lock in the door with a key, and a wire-mesh door was placed at the front at night. A padlock secured the rear door. The persons conducting the business were the defendant as proprietor, a clerk and the tailor. On the night of December 11, 1930, several companies of the fire department responded to an alarm at about 10:34 o’clock. One company reached the fire in two or three minutes. Fire was discovered coming from the front of the store and glass from the front windows was on the sidewalk. There was a small door in the partition between the display section and the store proper and a flame was coming through this small door. A fire truck company opened the locked front door. The body of the fire was extinguished in about ten minutes’ time. The suits of clothes on the racks in the center of the store were burned across the shoulders and arms, all in the same manner, the backs or under-part of the garments appearing to be untouched by the fire. The ceilings, partitions, side walls and floor were charred and scorched. Because of the characteristics of the fire the captain of the fire department testified that it was a flash-fire, or one not of natural origin. A man leaning over a bench and groaning was discovered in the workshop of the store by the firemen, but he fell to the floor before he was removed. He was taken to the County Hospital. He made no statement at the place of the fire, but at the hospital gave his name, occupation and partial information concerning the license number of his automobile. He stated that he had gone to the alley near the premises to answer a call of nature, but he did not know what happened after that time and gave no explanation of why he was in the store building. The license number of the automobile, which stood on Green street, a block west of the premises in question, was checked with the person to whom it was issued, and it was found his name was Lionel J. Nasanov, which was not the same name the police officer understood at the hospital but was very similar in sound. A navy-blue pea-jacket was found on the bench where Nasanov was first seen and was identified by Robert Nasanov, a brother, who saw Lionel’s body at the county morgue. A bunch of keys and a padlock were found near the place Nasanov fell from the bench. Nasanov’s death was attributed to the burns received in the store of the defendant.

Jack Nasanov, (sometimes known as Jack Brown,) another brother of Lionel Nasanov, testified that in December, 1930, he and his brother Lionel agreed with the defendant to set a fire in his store. They were to receive $500 and a fur coat. The witness told the defendant when he would bring' the gasoline and papers. He thereafter went in Lionel’s automobile to the store with twenty-five or thirty pounds of paper and three gallons of gasoline. He first went inside and asked the defendant if it was all right to bring the material inside. A man was present, and the defendant said it would be all right in a few minutes. Jack and Lionel went out and brought in the gasoline and papers, which were placed in a trunk in the rear room and the defendant locked the trunk. The witness was to lay the paper in the store, pour gasoline on it, and with the use of a wick which he had obtained from his mother-in-law the fire would ignite. The wick was placed in a cigar box and left behind a counter in the store. The date set for the fire was the following Thursday or the date it occurred, December 11, 1930. He was to make his exit through a small window in the rear of the store. The witness was taken sick on the following Wednesday and went to a hospital, where he remained three or four days. He saw neither his brother Lionel nor the defendant after he entered the hospital but upon leaving the hospital learned of his brother’s death. On cross-examination the witness admitted that he was arrested about six months previous to the trial here while in the act of setting fire to a building, and he thereafter made a confession implicating the defendant in the crime here charged.

Bertha Warshavsky testified that Jack Nasanov (or Jack Brown) was her son-in-law. She made a large wick which was designed to hang from strings, and matches were placed in it in contact with cotton, in such a position that after the wick had burned for from three to five minutes the matches would ignite the cotton and the material ignited would fall to the floor in the gasoline and cause a fire. She admitted on cross-examination that she had made wicks before and that she was known as the arson queen. The defendant had signed her bond in a case wherein she had been indicted.

A witness (Sam Stoll) had a place of business next door south. He resided in the rear and conducted a shoe store in the front. He testified that the defendant saw him about three weeks previous to the fire and asked permission to leave four mink coats in the rear, where the witness lived, stating that he was afraid the defendant’s store might be broken into and the coats stolen. Because the defendant was his landlord the witness consented, and the defendant brought the coats in and hung them up in a closet. Various persons thereafter called to see the coats while they were in his custody. After the fire he gave them back to the defendant.

When the defendant was asked by a representative of the National Board of Underwriters for the keys to his store the morning following the fire he fumbled in his pockets and then said he did not have them — that he might have left them at home. - The contents of the store were insured for $12,000, and the defendant collected $3000. The expiration dates of the insurance policies were, three in January, six in March and one in April, 1931.

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E. 777, 361 Ill. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-olife-ill-1935.