The People v. Peterson

4 N.E.2d 37, 364 Ill. 80
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1936
DocketNo. 23523. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 N.E.2d 37 (The People v. Peterson) 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. Peterson, 4 N.E.2d 37, 364 Ill. 80 (Ill. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shaw

delivered the opinion of the court:

Charles Peterson, who will be referred to as the defendant, was convicted of manslaughter in the criminal court of Cook county and seeks review of the record of that conviction by this writ of error. The indictment charged him with having caused the death of Glenn Peters by means of the felonious, wantonly-negligent driving and willful mismanagement of an automobile. One of his contentions is that the record fails to establish his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and it will therefore be necessary to review the evidence.

Peters was killed on Franklin avenue, in the city of Chicago, not far from the intersection of that avenue with Atlantic street. From a plat in evidence' Franklin avenue appears to be eighty feet wide and to be a diagonal street obliquely intersecting Belmont avenue and the other streets in the vicinity. On behalf of the People, Beulah Peters testified that she was the wife of the deceased and that together they drove up and parked their car in front of a confectionery store on Franklin avenue, near Belmont, at 9:50 P. M., December 16, 1934; that their car was facing west at a point directly north of the intersection of Atlantic street at Franklin avenue and on the north side of Franklin avenue. She testified that the car was parked up against the curb; that her husband got out of the car on the left-hand side into the street and that she followed him; that they talked for about a second, she having asked him for money and he having just placed a small sum in her hand; that there was a crash, and she saw her husband thrown in the air, turn a complete somersault and come down at a distance of fifty feet from where he was hit, and that his head hit a post when he came down. From this injury Peters died, and neither the fact of his death nor the cause thereof is in dispute.

Josephine Herff testified that at the time and place of the accident she was standing at the intersection, talking with a friend, and heard the crash; that she saw Peters’ body making a somersault in the air, and that she saw an automobile pass, going east on Franklin avenue, about twenty feet from the north curb; that she saw no difference in the speed of the car from the time it hit Peters and the time it passed her. In her judgment it was going about thirty-five miles per hour, and it was about a block away from her when it stopped.

Charles Hart, for the People, testified that he was near the intersection at the time in question; that he heard a woman scream and that he saw a body lying on the north side of Franklin avenue, and that the body was about fifty feet from the place where the Peters car was parked. He further testified that the car which caused the accident stopped about two blocks from the scene thereof; that when he first saw the moving car it was driven about ten miles an hour and then speeded up to about eighteen or twenty miles an hour.

Walter Inda testified that he was walking east on the north side of Franklin avenue when he heard a crash and a woman scream; that he saw a car pulling out from the north side of the street about ten feet from the curb and about four hundred feet from where the witness was standing ; that he put his hand out and “hollered” at the traveling automobile, but it kept on going and was driven at about twenty-five miles an hour wdien it passed him; that he saw a man at a gas station run out to flag the defendant’s car, and that he went on to the scene of the accident.

Max Nettleton, the gasoline station attendant referred to by the last witness, testified that he heard a scream and saw a car coming down the street; that he went out and called to the driver to stop, and that the car went by him one hundred feet before it stopped. In his opinion it was going about twenty-five miles an hour when it passed him. He testified that he went over to the car and got its number, which he copied down on a piece of paper; that the defendant was sitting behind the wheel and another man was with him in the car and no one else; that he said to the defendant, “You must have hit someone up the street,” and that the defendant said, “No, I did not hit anybody. Somebody passed by me up there but I did not hit anybody.” He further testified that the hood of the defendant’s car was bent, the left head-light bent over, and the shell of the radiator was bent above the lamp; that he did not observe the defendant’s condition; that Harry Anderson was present at this conversation, and that a police officer placed the defendant and the other man in the car under arrest at that time. Harry Anderson testified to somewhat similar facts. He stated that he asked the driver if he hit anybody, and the driver said, “No; what is it all about?”

Victor Casper testified that he heard the crash, ran to the scene of the accident and saw the body of Peters lying forty-five or fifty feet from where the Peters car was parked.

C. E. Freyberger, a physician, testified that he saw the defendant in the police station about one and one-half hours after the accident and examined him; that he asked him if he had been drinking, and he said he had five steins of beer and several whiskies; that on further examination the defendant swayed some when he stood with both feet together and that when he walked a chalk line he swerved, to one side; that the witness smelled alcohol on the defendant’s breath and that the pupils of his eyes were constricted but that he could read printing. Pie also testified that at that time the defendant gave two different addresses on Hirsch street. It was his opinion, after making the examination, that the defendant was somewhat under the influence of liquor but that he was not intoxicated.

Ralph H. Gohrsch, the chief of police of Franklin Park, testified that he saw the defendant about 9:15 P. M. on the night of tlie accident in a tavern, in company with three other people. He testified to the defendant’s leaving the tavern; that Franklin street is about fifty feet wide; that there are lights on the north side of that street about one hundred feet apart, and that these lights were burning on the night of the accident. He further testified that the streets were icy in spots. He did not notice the condition of the defendant at the time he saw him at the tavern, as there was nothing unusual about him to attract his attention.

Robert N. Connell, a police officer in Franklin Park, who arrested the defendant, testified that he asked the defendant what happened, and that he replied, “We hit somebody down there,” and that the witness said, “If you hit somebody down there a couple of blocks what are you doing away down here ?” The defendant did not answer that question. The witness testified that he noticed nothing out of the ordinary in the defendant’s speech or walk. He further testified that he found about a half bottle of liquor in the defendant’s car and that he took it to the police station and locked it up, and that the bottle produced in court is supposed to be the same as it was when he found it. He also testified that he was present when Dr.

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Related

Patterson v. State
342 A.2d 660 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
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68 N.E.2d 467 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1946)
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18 N.E.2d 885 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1938)
The People v. Allen
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Bluebook (online)
4 N.E.2d 37, 364 Ill. 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-peterson-ill-1936.