The People v. Pokosa

174 N.E. 544, 342 Ill. 404
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1930
DocketNo. 20377. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 174 N.E. 544 (The People v. Pokosa) 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. Pokosa, 174 N.E. 544, 342 Ill. 404 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

John Pokosa, fifty years of age, was indicted in the circuit court of Winnebago county for the murder of Gordon Saaf on May 4, 1930. A jury found him guilty of the charge and fixed his punishment at life imprisonment -in the penitentiary. Motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled and judgment was rendered on the verdict. By this writ of error defendant seeks a review of the record.

On May 4, 1930, at about 3 :3o o’clock in the afternoon, Gordon Saaf was found dead by police officers in the home of defendant in the city of Rockford. The body was lying in a pool of blood just inside of the front door of the house. Saaf had been shot in the head, directly back of the left ear. Another bullet wound was two inches below the shoulder line on his right side. Powder burns were visible around the wound in his head. Saaf was the son-in-law of Pokosa, having married Estelle Pokosa on April 29, 1930, which was the Tuesday immediately preceding the tragedy. Early in March, 1930, Pokosa had been divorced by his wife, and from then until April 28, 1930, the day before her marriage, his daughter Estelle had kept house for him. She was of legal age and several months before had promised to marry Saaf regardless of her father’s objections because of religious differences. They were secretly married at Oregon, Illinois, going from there to Chicago, where they remained for five days. From Chicago the daughter had written to her father, saying in part: “We didn’t mean to deceive you and I’ll explain all if you’ll only forgive me. * * * Please, dad, don’t think too ill of me.” Saaf and his wife returned to Rockford on May 4, 1930. Shortly after two o’clock in the afternoon, while on their way to the radio shop owned by Saaf, they met Pokosa. He approached their automobile, a one-seated car, and at their invitation got in with them. The three then drove to the radio shop, where they stopped and had a talk without leaving the car. Then, at Pokosa’s request, all three drove to his home. While in the car Pokosa occupied the right end of the seat, his daughter the middle and Saaf was driving. When they stopped at his house Pokosa opened the door of the car, using his left hand, a fact his daughter noticed and testified she then considered rather odd. The daughter entered the house first and was followed by Saaf and Pokosa. What then took place is disclosed in the record solely by the testimony of Estelle, who was within the house, and also to some extent by the testimony of Dan DeVelin, a visitor at the house next door to Pokosa’s.

From the testimony of Estelle Saaf it appears that while Saaf was examining the radio, which was out of order, Pokosa handed her a letter which had come during her absence. She then went into the bed-room, leaving the door open, and her father walked in and said to her, “Are you going to stay here as I ask you to?” to which she made no reply, noticing at the time an expression on his face and a look in his eyes which frightened her. She also noticed that his right hand was in his pocket, and she reached over to feel of it, taking hold of him in so doing. She called twice to her husband before her father got away from her. She then went back into the bed-room, and before closing the door she thought she heard her father say something but did not hear what he said. Upon closing the door she started for the window, then returned to the door and locked it, then went to the window and jumped out after hearing two shots. In the interval between her father’s breaking away from her at the bed-room door and the shooting she did not hear Saaf speak.

Dan DeVelin testified that while he was on the front porch of his niece’s house, which was next door north of the Pokosa home, he observed the arrival of the Saaf car. What first attracted his attention was Estelle Saaf being alone on the Pokosa porch and entering the house. DeVelin said that he then saw Saaf and Pokosa coming up the walk leading to the house. The two came up to the steps, Saaf entering first, and as Saaf entered the house DeVelin observed Pokosa had a revolver in his hand. When DeVelin saw the gun he stepped inside and spoke to someone in the house, and on looking out again he saw Estelle come to the window, raise it and jump out. As she jumped he heard her scream and also heard the first shot, followed in about five seconds by a second shot. Shortly afterward he heard a banging noise.

Immediately after the killing Pokosa fled from the scene by way of the back door and up an alley. About nine o’clock that evening he was seen at the residence of William Wishard, in Rockford. Pokosa said to Wishard, “I didn’t mean to kill him; I am sorry; I just meant to scare him,” and then requested Wishard to hide him or let him sleep in the basement of Wishard’s house until he could get his check, change clothing and leave town, and it was here that he was taken into custody.

A 38-calibre revolver with which it was alleged the shooting was done was found by a policeman under the cushion of a large chair in Pokosa’s house, and when found it had three empty and two loaded cartridge cases in its magazine. It was also discovered that the banging noise described by DeVelin had evidently been made by Pokosa in breaking down the bed-room door which Estelle had locked before she jumped out of the window.

The evidence discloses that Pokosa harbored ill-will toward Saaf and on several occasions had made threats to kill him. Soon after Saaf’s engagement to Estelle her father told Saaf’s father: “That has got to be broken up; I will never stand for it; if he don’t keep away from my daughter I will hurt him; I might do something to harm him, and if there is no other way to stop it a bullet will stop it.” He told Mrs. Arvid Saaf, mother of deceased, that he did not like her son, and that if he married his daughter he would rob her of three things: her nationality, her family and her religion. He told Ben Skeyhan, his next door neighbor, that he did not like the idea of his daughter marrying Saaf, and “if Saaf ever entered his house he would get him.” He went to the radio shop and inquired for Saaf the day following his daughter’s elopement, saying to Gwendolyn Lundin, the book-keeper: “He took my girl; I am Estelle’s father; . I’ll get him.” While talking to William Wishard, a contractor, in the middle of the week preceding May 4, he said if “Saaf stole his daughter away and married her he would kill the son-of-a-bitch.” In a conversation with Augusta Honl, a girl friend of Estelle’s, on the evening of Friday, May 2, he said that unless his daughter came back she would be a widow within a couple of days.

At the trial the defense was that Pokosa was insane when he killed Saaf, and evidence was introduced to show how he acted and talked during the week before the killing. Frank A. Culhane, a real estate man, testified that Pokosa came to his office a day or two before May 4 to have his house sold, and he said Pokosa was broken-hearted about his daughter being kidnapped by Saaf and seemed nervous and excited and in the judgment of witness was then insane. R. J.

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.E. 544, 342 Ill. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-pokosa-ill-1930.