The People v. Palmer

184 N.E. 205, 351 Ill. 319
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1932
DocketNo. 21439. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 N.E. 205 (The People v. Palmer) 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. Palmer, 184 N.E. 205, 351 Ill. 319 (Ill. 1932).

Opinions

Per Curiam :

The plaintiff in error was indicted in the circuit court of Adams county for stealing a hog, alleged to be of the value of $40. Upon a trial by a jury he was found guilty, was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary, and has sued out a writ of error.

Plaintiff in error contends that the verdict was contrary to the evidence and that the ■ court erred in giving an instruction. In support of his contention that the verdict was contrary to the evidence it is contended that the ownership of the hog was not proved as alleged and that its value was not shown to be as much as $15.

The indictment originally contained four counts, two alleging ownership in Della Grieser and two in Nina Virginia Grieser. On the trial the State’s attorney entered a nolle prosequi as to the counts alleging ownership in Della Grieser.

Della Grieser and the plaintiff in error owned adjoining farms on Long Island, in the Mississippi river, in Adams county. Both lived in LaGrange, Missouri. Mrs. Grieser had on her farm about forty pigs and hogs, among them a dirty-white sow heavy with pig. The sow had been brought up as a pet, and Mrs. Grieser testified that she had given it to her daughter, Nina Virginia, who was seven years old. Nina and her half-sister, Juanita McDowell, who was twelve years old, made a pet of the pig. Nina testified that it was a little pig when she first got it, and its name was Betsy and it knew her. Juanita testified about the pig’s history, its disappearance, and to her afterwards seeing it on the plaintiff in error’s farm in LaGrange. Mrs. Grieser missed the sow about July 19, 1931. Nine days later she, with her mother and her two daughters, saw it with a litter of six pigs in a pen in LaGrange owned by the plaintiff in error in which he was accustomed to have hogs from time to time. These and other witnesses identified the sow found in plaintiff in error’s possession by two black spots about the size of a quarter in its skin behind its right ear. Plaintiff in error testified that his wife owned the sow; that it was one of a litter of a sow owned by his wife which had died and whose pigs had been brought up by hand; that the others of the litter had been sold, weighing from 145 to 150 pounds each, but this one had been retained because it was with pig, and to sell it in that condition would result in its being docked in weight; that he had it in LaGrange and on July 14 moved it across the river to the place on the island where the pigs were littered, and that a few days later he moved her and her pigs back to LaGrange and put them in the pen where Mrs. Grieser and her mother and children saw them.

The testimony was conflicting. The testimony of the prosecution was sufficient to sustain the allegations of the indictment as to the ownership of the sow. The testimony of the defense was sufficient to sustain the defendant’s claim as to ownership, and it was the province of the jury to determine the credit which should be given to the testimony of the witnesses. There is evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict, and we cannot say that there is clearly a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the defendant.

As to the value of the property stolen, the abstract shows that W. W. McPike, a witness for plaintiff in error, testified : “Part of the time I am familiar from time to time as to the value of hogs — the market value of hogs. To my best recollection hogs in that condition, ready to farrow, would be worth probably something like six cents a pound. Yes, it is a fact, hogs in that condition sell on the market in weight. I would not say positively how much they are docked. It is 50 to 70 pounds. Ordinarily I think there is a difference to their docking. Yes, it would cut the price of a hog down considerably well on a basis of six cents a pound. On a weight of 150 pounds it would be nine dollars. Docking at 60 pounds at the same rate it would be $3.60, or somewhere between five and six dollars. I don’t buy or sell hogs at all. Yes, sir, all I know about it is to haul hogs for hire. No, sir, when I was asked the price of hogs in July, 1931, I did not recall it to the dollar. No, sir, I can’t recall what it was in August or September in that year. I am giving the average market cost. What the prices varied I could not tell you. I hauled a lot of them at that time. There is no quotation on a hog that is about, to have pigs. I would not say that they always sold at the price when with pig. Yes, sir, a hog is docked 50 to 70 pounds in that condition. Yes, sir, that is a general rule.” An examination of the record shows that the market price and rule about which this witness testified was at the St. Louis Stock Yards and that he did not testify to any knowledge of values at Long Island or in Adams county, where the hog was stolen.

Roy Wagner, a truck driver for McPike, testified that during the month of July he hauled ten hogs to St. Louis that belonged to plaintiff in error. “I think the weight of those ten hogs I hauled there for Mr. Palmer weighed approximately around 145 or 150 pounds — something like that — apiece.” He was asked the question, “Do you know the market price of the hogs at that time?” to which he answered, “Not particularly; somewhere around $7.50 or $7.55.” The record shows that the market price with reference to "which this witness was testifying was at the St. Louis Stock Yards.

Plaintiff in error on the subject of value testified as follows: “Yes, sir, I am familiar with the fair cash market value of that kind of hog at that time. It is always customary and usual to dock them when a sow that is called a piggy sow is offered for sale on the market. I always thought it was from 40 to 60 pounds for stock. Yes, sir, I remember about what the market value of hogs was at that time. It was $7.75 at St. Louis for the top. No, sir, she was not a hog that would have sold at the top price.” The evidence does not show that plaintiff in error ever bought or sold any hogs in Adams county or that he was familiar with the price of hogs at any other place than the St. Louis Stock Yards.

While it was competent for the purpose of showing the value of the property stolen to show its market price at the place where it was stolen, if the property had a market price there, the evidence of the three witnesses just mentioned as to value was none of it competent and could not be considered in this case. Evidence as to market value at the St. Louis Stock Yards, over 175 miles distant from the place where the sow was stolen, could shed no light upon its value for farrowing purposes on the farm where it was stolen. (Newlan v. Dunham, 60 Ill. 233.) In McKee v. Trisler, 311 Ill. 536, this court said: “In such a matter as the valuation of a domestic animal like the mule, anyone who has some knowledge of values may give his opinion, but evidence of market quotations or opinions as to the value of mules in distant cities was not competent.”

On the subject of the value of the property stolen Mrs. Grieser testified as follows: “Yes, I have bought and sold hogs considerably. I am pretty well acquainted with the fair cash market value of sows and hogs. I have lived on the farm ten years. I have had hogs on the farm all the time. I bought and sold hogs three or four times a year, I suppose. I have had charge of the running of the farm and the selling and buying of the stock since my husband died. I have made deals by myself.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Middlebrook v. State
803 S.W.2d 355 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1991)
People v. Park
380 N.E.2d 795 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1978)
The PEOPLE v. Hayes
169 N.E.2d 760 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1960)
The People v. Herring
71 N.E.2d 682 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 N.E. 205, 351 Ill. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-palmer-ill-1932.