The People v. Savage

156 N.E. 310, 325 Ill. 313
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1927
DocketNo. 17682. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 310 (The People v. Savage) 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. Savage, 156 N.E. 310, 325 Ill. 313 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of the crime of robbery with a gun, and he brings the case here for review.

The defense was that of alibi. Plaintiff in error, who is a negro, was at the time of the alleged crime employed by a colored club known as the DeLuxe Club. The evidence for the State consisted of the testimony of Fanny Bachechi and two police officers who made the arrest. The evidence of the prosecuting witness was that she lived at 1831 Wesley avenue, in Evanston, and on the evening of February 25, 1926, had been at the home of her employer in the neighborhood of her own residence; that about 9:15 o’clock, as she was walking north on Wesley avenue, she heard a man from behind her command her to stop; that he pointed a gun at her, forced her to turn around and walk east into the alley; that upon reaching the door of a garage he tried to open it, and failing in this he attempted to commit rape upon her; that at that time the lights in the adjoining house were turned on and frightened him and he seized her purse and ran. She further testified that she found her way to the doorstep of the home of a farm ily by the name of VanDusen and there fainted. It appears further from the testimony for the People that the police were notified, and the complaining witness gave the description of her assailant as a negro about five feet in height, heavy-set, with a black overcoat and black hat or cap, and that he was very dark and had a Roman nose,, It also appears that there was snow on the ground, and the tracks of the complaining witness and of her assailant were distinctly shown in the snow. It appears from the testimony of the policeman making the arrest that they followed the tracks of the assailant for several blocks; that he wore no rubbers, and the imprint in the snow was made by a large shoe with a wide sole and “stubby” toe, — an army-shaped shoe or a so-called Munson last. Later in the evening a negro was picked up by the police and taken before the complaining witness, but she said he was not the man and he was released. The next day plaintiff in error was taken to the home of the complaining witness by the police and she identified him as her assailant. The day following plaintiff in error’s arrest the complaining witness, at the request of the police, went to the police station and identified plaintiff in error as her assailant while he was in a line of five other negroes. She testified that the gun held by her assailant was a “shiny” revolver. She was shown a rusty revolver with a broken spring, which one of the police officers testified he found at the DeLuxe Club after the arrest of plaintiff in error. She identified it as the revolver, giving as her reason for such identification that as the plaintiff in error was the assailant that was the revolver. She also testified that there was no light in the alley where the attempted assault was made but that there was snow on the ground.

Officer Busseau, who arrested plaintiff in error, testified that when he found the revolver at the DeLuxe Club he asked plaintiff in error if it belonged to him, and that he said he supposed it did as much as anybody, as it was around the club. His testimony was corroborated by that of officer Bell, who also testified that the gun found at the DeLuxe Club and offered in evidence was rusty and not “shiny” and that the spring and handle were broken; that they searched the club for bullets after the arrest and searched plaintiff in error’s room and clothing, but found no purse or money or loads for the gun or anything that would indicate the connection of plaintiff in error with the crime charged.

The testimony for the defense consisted of that of numerous witnesses that plaintiff in error was at the DeLuxe Club all of the evening of the crime, and that of a number of character witnesses. The testimony of the complaining witness was "that the assault and robbery occurred at 9:15 P. M. Officer Ernest B. Leavell testified that he had been connected with the Evanston police force for over eleven years and had known plaintiff in error seven or eight years; that on the night of the alleged crime he heard of it at the patrol box at 10:30; that his beat included a number of clubs where colored men congregated; that on the evening of February 25, 1926, he saw plaintiff in error at this club at eight o’clock, or a quarter after, and at nine o’clock; that his visits to the club took place as he was making his rounds; that at nine o’clock plaintiff in error was playing pool with two or three other men, one of whom was named Branch.

John Geischecke testified he had been an officer in the city of Evanston for sixteen years; that on the evening of the alleged crime he and officer Schultz went to the home of the complaining witness and got a description of her assailant; that they visited the scene of the crime with officers Feeley and Neathery, who showed them the foot-tracks. He testified that he saw the sticks used to measure the foot-tracks at the police station. This witness testified that the tracks of the assailant showed a shoe with a wide toe, a wide heel and a wide sole. He also testified that when they went to the club they compared the feet and shoes of plaintiff in error with the size of the tracks; that his shoes were much smaller and narrower, with pointed toes, while the tracks were broad toes, and that was the reason he was not arrested; that at the time of their examination of plaintiff in error his shoes were dry, as was his clothing. He testified, also, that the foot-prints in the snow were made with shoes without rubbers and appeared in no way like those worn by plaintiff in error; that another reason for not making the arrest was that plaintiff in error did not tally with the description of a heavy-set and very dark man, as he was neither heavy-set nor dark. Officer Schultz corroborated the testimony of officer Geischecke.

It appears from the evidence that from the DeLuxe Club, where plaintiff in error was employed, to the place of the crime is about six blocks by the most direct route.

Officer Neathery testified that about 9 ¡43 on the evening of February 25 he made an examination of the footprints in the snow at the place of the commission of the crime; that the tracks were made by a broad, round-toed shoe. This witness was corroborated by the testimony of officer Feeley. Officer Paasch testified that the sticks were brought to the headquarters that had been used for measuring the tracks in the snow, but that he did not know where they were at the time of the trial.

Elijah Irwin testified that he was at the DeLuxe Club on the evening of February 25, 1926, after eight o’clock and was there fifteen or twenty minutes, and that a man by the name of Branch and another man were present. The witness played a game of pool with plaintiff in error; that he left the club room in the neighborhood of nine o’clock and that plaintiff in error was there at the time; that he looked at his watch before leaving, because it was necessary for him to go back to his own place.

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 310, 325 Ill. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-savage-ill-1927.