The People v. Payne

194 N.E. 539, 359 Ill. 246
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1935
DocketNo. 22669. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 194 N.E. 539 (The People v. Payne) 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. Payne, 194 N.E. 539, 359 Ill. 246 (Ill. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shaw

delivered the opinion of the court:

Herman Harold Rich, Clarence Russell Sefried, Raymond Bailey, Virgil Summers, Fay Payne and Lillie S. Riggs were indicted in the circuit court of Jefferson county for the murder of Rosier Green. Rich entered a plea of guilty and was sentenced to a term of fourteen years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. The other defendants, except Lillie S. Riggs, were tried together by a jury and a sentence of seventeen years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary was imposed upon each of them. Payne sued out this writ of error.

Rosier Green and his brother, Wiley Green, resided about nine miles east of Mt. Vernon and two miles southeast of Bluford, in Jefferson county. The house is on the east side of a highway extending north and south and consists of two small rooms of log construction joined at the southeast corner of one room and the northwest corner of the other. A screened porch extends along the south side of the north room and on the west side of the south and east room, forming a corner at that part of the house. Rosier Green and Wiley Green, and the latter’s grandson, eight years of age, were the only occupants of the house on December 8, 1933. The evidence for the People is that three or four days previous to December 8, 1933, Fay Payne, the plaintiff in error, met Rich in Mt. Vernon and told him that a man residing near Bluford was supposed to have $3000 in money upon his premises which could easily be obtained. Thereafter Rich met the plaintiff in error and requested him to go to the home of Ross Moore and wait for him. Rich then went to an apartment occupied by Sefried and there met Sefried, Summers and Bailey. These four men went to the home of Moore. The plaintiff in error was already there, and related to Sefried, Summers and Bailey the substance of the statement he previously had made to Rich. He said that he could not accompany the four men to obtain the money for he had to have an alibi but would show them the house, and if they obtained $3000 he expected to receive $500. Sefried, Summers, Bailey, Rich and the plaintiff in error on the night of December 7, 1933, about dark, went in a Ford V-8 automobile driven by Bailey but directed by the plaintiff in error, east from Mt. Vernon to the second cross-road east of the Illinois Central railroad and turned and drove south for some distance. After driving up and down the road the plaintiff in error was unable to point out the residence of the man who he thought had the money on his premises and they returned to Mt. Vernon. The plaintiff in error told Sefried to meet him at the home of Moore the following morning and he would have a way to take him out and show him the house which he failed to find the previous night. It was agreed that Sefried, Summers, Bailey and Rich, but not the plaintiff in error, should meet at 5 :3o o’clock the following night at an iron bridge about a mile east of Mt. Vernon. The four men, accompanied by Mrs. Bailey, met at the bridge, and the latter was taken back to Mt. Vernon. The men then drove east and south to the house which Sefried identified, reaching there about 6:30 o’clock. All of the' men were armed and all of them left the automobile and went toward the house except Bailey, who drove the automobile some distance south of the house. It was agreed that when a light signal was flashed to him by one of the other men he would drive back north and stop near the house. Bailey received the signal, drove back, and when about opposite the house sounded the automobile horn. Wiley Green saw the automobile pass the house and it appeared to him to stop and that the lights were turned off. When the automobile horn was sounded Rich and Sefried were at the south part of the house and Summers was in the rear. Rosier Green went to the porch and toward Rich and Sefried. Rich approached Green and pointed a revolver at him, and the latter started back toward the front door and began shouting. Rich and Sefried followed him. Wiley Green about the same time went to the porch door with a revolver in his hand, and, according to his testimony, as he reached the door he heard two shots fired. He then shot and afterward heard several more shots fired. He also used a shotgun and fired at the automobile as it moved away. Rich testified that Wiley Green was the first to fire and that he (Rich) then fired, and after that time he heard several other shots fired. Rosier Green was struck on the head and was shot in the right side of his body. Sefried was shot through the left ear. Wiley Green went to the home of another brother residing in the vicinity to have him notify a doctor, and he then immediately returned home. Rosier Green lived about twenty minutes after the return of Wiley but died before the doctor arrived. Immediately after the shooting the defendants departed and by an indirect route returned to Mt. Vernon. The following morning Payne went to Sefried’s apartment and met Bailey and Rich. He asked Rich how they “got along” the previous night, and Rich replied, “Not so good; somebody got hurt.” Payne then said that he had better leave.

The defense was an alibi. The plaintiff in error testified in his own behalf that on December 7, 1933, he did not see Rich, as the latter testified, and that he was at his home in Mt. Vernon until he left for his father’s farm in Wayne county, where he went to meet his sister, who had come from St. Louis for a visit. He reached there about 12 :oo o’clock and remained until about 5 :oo o’clock in the afternoon, when his brother and two sisters took him back to Mt. Vernon in an automobile. They stayed in the automobile and talked until about 6:oo o’clock. He went to Bluford on December 8 in an automobile driven by Lillie S. Riggs and afterward went to his father’s home, reaching there about 3 :oo o’clock and remained all night and until about 9:00 o’clock the following morning. At that time he went to the hard road, where he previously had agreed to meet Mrs. Riggs, and he returned with her to Mt. Vernon. He testified that he became acquainted with Sefried when they met in the court room; that he had met Summers at the time of their arrest; that he had met Bailey a few times, and had known Rich for about six months. He denied that he told any of the defendants that anyone had money which might be obtained by a robbery, or that he entered into a conspiracy with the other defendants, or that he was to receive any part of the proceeds of a robbery.

Rose Payne, the mother of the plaintiff in error, Albert Payne, a brother, and Olla Payne, a sister, corroborated the testimony of the plaintiff in error that he was at the home of his father on December 7 and remained there until about 5 :oo o’clock; that he was again at the same place the following day at about 3:00 o’clock and remained all night and until 9 :oo o’clock the following morning, and was not away from the home of his father between those hours. Mrs. Terrell, another sister, offered corroborative testimony concerning the plaintiff in error’s presence at the home of his father on December 7, 1933.

Each of the defendants testified in his own behalf except Sefried. Three witnesses testified in support of the alibi of Bailey with respect to his movements on December 7 and 8, and there was some testimony as to his whereabouts on December 9. Bailey admitted that Rich approached him about a week previous to the time Green was killed, but he told Rich he would have nothing to do with the proposition which Rich made.

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Bluebook (online)
194 N.E. 539, 359 Ill. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-payne-ill-1935.