The People v. Pueschell

169 N.E. 12, 337 Ill. 84
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1929
DocketNo. 19535. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 12 (The People v. Pueschell) 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. Pueschell, 169 N.E. 12, 337 Ill. 84 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Odo Pueschell was indicted in the circuit court of Lake county for the murder of Wilma Miller. A jury trial resulted in a verdict finding Pueschell guilty and fixing his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for life. Judgment was rendered upon the verdict and he prosecutes this writ of error.

Wilma Miller was an unmarried woman, thirty years of age, and on May 7, 1927, had been employed as a servant in the home of Thorne Donnelley, at Lake Forest, in Lake county, for about six months. Mr. and Mrs. Donnelley were on their way home from Europe at the time and during their absence the house had been left in charge of Miss Miller. A short distance northeast of Donnelley’s house stands the residence of Mrs. A. F. Ferry by whom Odo Pueschell, the plaintiff in error, twenty-two years of age, was employed as a chauffeur. Joseph Hairston, a colored man and a resident of Lake Forest for twenty years was an employee of that city. After his day’s work for the city was done, he would go to Donnelley’s residence and mow the lawn, attend the furnace, wash windows, polish floors and render other services similar in their nature. He had been so employed by Donnelley for three or four years.

A statement of the substance of the evidence introduced by the prosecution follows. It appears that Miss Miller desired to go to Chicago on the evening of Saturday, May 7, 1927, and had requested Hairston to turn on the lights in the house about the time of her departure. Hairston entered the house by way of the basement door between 6:30 and 6:45 P. M. He first looked to see whether the pilot light of the oil furnace was burning, then went up-stairs to the front hallway, turned on a light and found Miss Miller lying near the foot of the stairway leading to the second floor. Her dress was raised to her knees. He called her but she did not answer. About that time Pueschell descended the stairway. Hairston asked him where Miss Miller was and Pueschell answered, “She is out.” Hairston replied, “Don’t tell me that; what’s she doing lying on the stairway with her clothes up ?” to which Pueschell rejoined, “Huh, she’s all right.” Pueschell then turned and entered the hall. Hairston left the house through the basement, drove his automobile to the police station, told Earl Dunn, a police officer, what he had discovered, and with the officer, each in his own car, returned to Donnelley’s residence. Hairston entered the basement and ascended the stairway to the door through which he had passed to the hallway, but found the door locked from the inside. He went to the front door where officer Dunn was waiting, and it, too, was locked. Entrance to the house was finally gained through a side door. Hairston and the officer advanced to the hallway and they found Miss Miller still lying at the foot of the staircase. She was breathing and blood covered her head and face. A handkerchief had been thrust into her mouth, and Hairston withdrew it. There was also much blood on the first three or four steps of the staircase. Since life was not extinct, the two men removed Miss Miller to a hospital where she was examined by a surgeon. He found, in addition to the blood on her head and body, that her eyes were swollen, that she had five lacerated wounds on her head, some of which were depressed skull fractures, and that portions of the brain protruded from one or more of the wounds. Death soon ensued, and the surgeon expressed the opinion that it was caused by a skull fracture with lacerations of the brain tissue, and that the injuries could not have been caused by falling and striking the head against the steps or railing of the staircase.

After Hairston and officer Dunn had taken Miss Miller to the hospital, they went to Mrs. Ferry’s residence and inquired of Ida Pueschell, a servant and aunt of the plaintiff in error, where he could be found. She answered that he was not at home. The men returned to the police station and later called at the Chicago and Northwestern railroad station to find him but they did not succeed. Accompanied by George Densmore, another police officer, they went to the home of John Dunn, a brother of Earl Dunn and also a police officer. Hairston and Earl Dunn returned to Donnelley’s house, while officers Densmore and John Dunn drove to Mrs. Ferry’s house. Plaintiff in error had arrived at the home of Mrs. Ferry, his employer, a few minutes before in a taxicab driven by Frank Baldwin, and the latter was waiting to drive him back to the electric railway station. The same servant told officer Dunn that the plaintiff in error was not present but he left the house about that time through a rear door and was arrested. The two officers then took him to Donnelley’s residence, where officer John Dunn asked Hairston whether the plaintiff in error was the man he had seen in the house earlier in the evening, and Hairston answered in the affirmative. Plaintiff in error, angered by the accusation, leaped at Hairston and pushed him back. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff in error was taken to the police station and questioned in the presence of the mayor of the city and others concerning his acquaintance with Miss Miller, his presence in Donnelley’s house, and his whereabouts during the preceding two hours. He denied that he was acquainted with Miss Miller or that he had ever entered Donnelley’s house. He stated that he had boarded an interurban train bound for Chicago, but discovering that he had forgotten the keys to his aunt’s apartment in that city, left the train at Fort Sheridan and returned to Lake Forest to get them.

A certain photograph taken from a drawer in Miss Miller’s dresser showing her standing alongside an automobile, and a man’s hat on the running-board, was exhibited to the plaintiff in error, but he denied any knowledge of the picture or acquaintance with the person photographed. He was asked whether the automobile shown in the picture belonged to Mrs. Ferry, and he answered that the car looked like the one she owned and that some chauffeur formerly employed by her might have taken the picture. A gold necklace and locket and gold ring with a green setting were taken from a pocket in his coat. He first denied any knowledge of them or of their presence in his pocket, but later asserted that they belonged to his deceased mother and that he was going to show them to a girl named Freda and take them to Chicago for safe keeping. Two photographs were taken from the room in Mrs. Ferry’s house occupied by the plaintiff in error. One, he admitted, showed him on the front porch of Donnelley’s house. In the other, Miss Miller appeared alongside an automobile and there was a man’s hat on the running-board. This picture was identical with the one taken from the drawer of the dresser in Miss Miller’s room. Plaintiff in error afterwards admitted that he had seen Miss Miller but added that he was not well acquainted with her. Pie denied that Plairston had seen him in Donnelley’s house.

Plaintiff in error was taken from the police station where he had been detained about two hours, to an undertaking establishment where the body of Miss Miller was held and he was asked whether he had been acquainted with her. He answered in the negative and denied striking or killing her. He was then taken to the county jail at Waukegan, and after further questioning retired at 2:30 A. M. On the following day, Sunday, May 8, the State’s atorney, his assistant and the sheriff took the plaintiff in error back to Donnelley’s house and questioned him.

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 12, 337 Ill. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-pueschell-ill-1929.