The People v. Parker

30 N.E.2d 11, 374 Ill. 524
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1940
DocketNo. 25595. Judgement affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 30 N.E.2d 11 (The People v. Parker) 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. Parker, 30 N.E.2d 11, 374 Ill. 524 (Ill. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court :

Harrison Parker was adjudged guilty of criminal contempt in the criminal court of Cook county, and sentenced to imprisonment in jail for a period of ten days. He has sued out a writ of error, arguing, among other, things, that by the judgment of conviction he has been deprived of his constitutional right of free speech.

The information charged Parker with writing two letters to the members of the Cook county grand jury, which was then in session. The letters are set forth in the information. Parker’s answer, filed after his motion to dismiss was overruled, admitted writing the letters, but denied they constituted contempt of court or that they were written with the intention of showing contempt.

The letters are quite lengthy and are couched in exceedingly vicious and inflammatory language. They state, in substance, that The Chicago Tribune, a newspaper, Robert R. McCormick, its president, Thomas J. Courtney, State’s attorney of Cook county, John S. Clark, the Cook county assessor, and a firm of attorneys which represented The Chicago Tribune, had entered into a criminal conspiracy to defraud the State of Illinois of revenue by the illegal omission from the Cook county tax rolls of personal property of The Chicago Tribune. In the first letter Parker charged The Chicago Tribune had already “stolen” from the State approximately forty-three million dollars. In the second letter the amount was stated to be one-hundred million dollars. The letters also charged the above parties, or some of them, with perjury, subornation of perjury, bribery, malfeasance in office, and specifically charged The Chicago Tribune with “influencing, intimidating or bribing the courts to prevent a trial on the law and the facts” and with “giving orders” to the courts. One of the letters states that McCormick, “under whose directions this enormous steal has been effected, is a coward, a liar, a cheat, a thief, a court-fixer and an all-around scoundrel who, after he has cunningly robbed the State that shelters and protects him, will pollute the Channels of Justice to hide his thefts.” Parker also charged McCormick with having “railroaded” two innocent men to prison and with having cheated the State out of every penny of inheritance tax due from the estate of his mother. He stated that Courtney had refused to prosecute the crimes because of his own complicity in them. He also compared Courtney with a State’s attorney in Los Angeles, California, who “was playing fast and loose with the organized thieves of Los Angeles” and who was indicted by an alert and law-respecting grand jury, tried and convicted. He also referred to the corruption which had been prosecuted in New York, Connecticut, Kansas City and Louisiana. Parker stated three attempts had been made to murder him, but neither the allurements of fortune nor the terrors of death could deter him from doing his duty. He offered to appear before the grand jury and present legal proof of the charges with reference to the conspiracy, “which is mildly described above,” to rob the homeowners of Cook county. He also warned the grand jury that great pressure would be brought to bear upon it to ignore his letters.

The position of the People is that defendant was in contempt of court for voluntarily communicating with the grand jury at all, and that, in any event, it was a contempt of court to address the grand jury in a manner so as to leave the grand jurors’ minds in such a state that they could not fairly and without prejudice investigate the charges made. Defendant contends any citizen has the right, without any previous authorization, to communicate in writing to the grand jury, informing it of evidence of crime in his possession which he offers to produce before the grand jury, on a subject not then before it for consideration, and charging that the State’s attorney refuses to bring the evidence before it because of his own complicity in the crime. He also contends his motive was praiseworthy; that he did not intend to be contemptuous or seek to influence the action of the grand jury but to give it information, if desired, and that the language of the letters is calculated to aid, rather than impede, the action of the grand jury in the performance of its duties. The criminal court found Parker guilty of “acts and conduct directly calculated to impede, embarrass and obstruct the court in the due administration of justice.”

There is no authority in this State as to when a communication to a grand jury is a contempt of court. In Storey v. People, 79 Ill. 45, the defendant was tried for contempt of court in publishing articles censuring the grand jury and questioning its integrity in returning three indictments aganst defendant. We held that they were not a contempt of court, though libelous, since the publications did not concern matters then pending before the grand jury, but were about completed acts and concerned matters on which the grand jury had already discharged its duty. We laid down as the test of when a publication concerning a grand jury was a contempt of court whether the articles had a tendency to directly impede, embarrass or obstruct the grand jury in the discharge of any of its duties remaining to be discharged after the publications were made.

The authorities in other jurisdictions cannot be harmonized. Sotne courts hold that a stranger has a right voluntarily to bring facts to the knowledge of the grand jury. (In re Lester, 77 Ga. 143; State v. Stewart, 45 La. Ann. 1164.) On the other hand, Wharton, in his treatise on Criminal Practice and Pleading, eighth edition, section 307, states: “Sending an unofficial volunteer communication to the grand jury, inviting them to start, on their own authority, a prosecution, is a contempt of court, and a misdemeanor at common law.” To this same effect is Commonwealth v. Crans, 2 Pa. L. J. 172.

Mr. Justice Field announced the same rule in his charge to the Federal grand jury, (30 Fed. cases 992,) which is frequently quoted. He charged: “You will not allow private prosecutors to intrude themselves into your presence and present accusations. Generally such parties are actuated by a private enmity and seek merely the gratification of their personal malice. If they possess any information justifying the accusation of the person against whom they complain they should impart it to the district attorney who will seldom fail to act in a proper case, but if the district attorney should refuse to act they can make their complaint to a committing magistrate before whom the matter can be investigated and if sufficient evidence be produced of the commission of the public offense by the accused, he can be held to bail to answer to the action of the grand jury.”

Mr. Justice Field is also quoted by Wharton on Criminal Procedure, tenth edition, section 1295, as follows: “There has hardly been a session of the grand jury of this court for years at which instances have not occurred of personal solicitation to some of its members to obtain or prevent the presentment or indictment of parties. And communications to that end have frequently been addressed to the grand jury filled with malignant and scandalous imputations upon the conduct and acts of those against whom the writers entertain hostility, and against the conduct and acts of former and present officers of this court and of previous grand juries of this district.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E.2d 11, 374 Ill. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-parker-ill-1940.