The People v. Saylor

149 N.E. 767, 319 Ill. 205
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1925
DocketNo. 16952. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 767 (The People v. Saylor) 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. Saylor, 149 N.E. 767, 319 Ill. 205 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Elmer Saylor, Leonard Saylor and Earl Saylor, together with Grace Saylor, the wife of Elmer, were indicted in the circuit court of Rock Island county for mayhem. Upon a trial Grace was found not guilty, but the three men, who are brothers, were found guilty, and the court entered judgment sentencing each of them to imprisonment in the penitentiary for not more than twenty years nor less than one year. The defendants prosecuted a writ of error to the Appellate Court, which affirmed the judgment, and they have sued out a writ of error from this court.

There were three counts in the indictment, which the plaintiffs in error moved to quash. The motion was sustained as to the first count but overruled as to the other two, and it is argued that it was error to deny the motion to quash the second and third counts. Those counts charged that the defendants on October 24, 1923, made an assault upon Mark Pendleton with the malicious intent to maim and disfigure him, the second count charging that with such intent they cut off and disabled a part of his organs of generation, and the third count that with the same intent they mutilated and disabled his testicles. -

The plaintiffs in error contend that castration is not within the terms of the statute. Mayhem by castration seems always to have been a felony at common law. (4 Blackstone’s Com. 206.) By the Coventry act (22 and 23 Car. II, chap. 1,) it was enacted that “if any person shall, of malice aforethought and by lying in wait, unlawfully cut out or disable the tongue, put out an eye, slit the nose, cut off a nose or lip, or cut off or disable any limb or member of any other person with intent to maim or disfigure him, such person, his counselors, aiders and abettors, shall be guilty of felony without benefit of clergy.” Paragraph 448 of our Criminal Code is, that “whoever, with malicious intent to maim or disfigure, cuts or maims the tongue, puts out or destroys an eye, cuts or tears off an ear, cuts, slits or mutilates the nose or lip, cuts off or disables a limb or other member of another person, shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than one nor more than twenty years, or fined not exceeding $1000, and confined in the county jail not exceeding one year.” This does not vary in any substantial way from the English act. It is not ambiguous and there seems to be no room for construction. The statute is directed against the removal or disabling of any limb or member of any person with the malicious intent to maim or disfigure him. There can be no question that the testicles are members of a man and that their removal maims and disfigures him. The motion to quash the second and third counts was properly overruled.

The evidence shows that the act charged was committed. Pendleton testified that it was done by Elmer, Leonard and Grace; that he went with Elmer and Leonard in an automobile to Elmer’s home, and in the barnyard Elmer, who was in the back seat of the automobile, struck him over the head with a bottle; that Grace came from the house and' struck him with a club; that he was dazed and Leonard and Grace tied him while Elmer cut out his testicles. Elmer testified but did not deny that he did the act. He claimed that he had no recollection of it, and his defense was that his action was the result of an insane impulse brought on by his belief that Pendleton had drugged his wife, Grace, and ravished her, and that Pendleton was diseased with syphilis and gonorrhea.

Leonard testified that he was employed at the Moline Body Corporation in Moline and was at work there on October 24 when Elmer came there. Elmer was incoherent, apparently, talked unintelligibly and seemed unconscious of what was going on around him. Leonard had not heard of any trouble between Pendleton and Elmer but gathered from Elmer’s incoherent words that Pendleton had interfered with Elmer’s family. Elmer was in the shop only two or three minutes, when he rushed off. Leonard, from his actions and appearance, feared that he was out of his head, crazy, and that he might do Pendleton some harm, and ran outside the shop to follow him. He did not see him anywhere, but some workmen who had seen Elmer go told Leonard the direction in which he had gone. Leonard followed and eventually saw his brother, who was in his automobile, drive up in front of John W. Bearner’s house and stop. He ran up there and found Elmer talking over the telephone. Elmer came out and jumped into his car. Leonard had no time to say anything but got in the car with him. He asked Elmer where he was going, but Elmer did not answer. He then asked what he was going to do, and Elmer said, “I have got to see Pendleton.” By that time he had got down to First street and stopped in front of a garage. He jumped out and ran to the door of the garage and Leonard got out on the other side. By the time Leonard got to the garage Elmer had gone in and he and Pendleton were coming out. The only conversation that he heard was that Elmer said something to Pendleton about going up to “Shorty’s,” and Pendleton asked Elmer if he called Shorty up, and Elmer said “yes.” Leonard did not know who Shorty was. They all then got into the car, Pendleton and Elmer in the front seat and Leonard behind. Leonard did not know where they were going, but when they got out to Forty-eighth street, near where his brother lived, Elmer said, “I have got to run in home and get some jugs.” He then turned north on Forty-eighth street, and as they came to the house he asked Leonard to go in the barn and get some jugs which were under the straw in the barn. Leonard got out about one hundred feet from the barn before the car had stopped. At that time nothing had occurred between Pendleton and Elmer. When he got out of the car he saw Grace in the yard one hundred feet or more away, raking and burning leaves. He went to the barn, spent four or five minutes looking for the jugs, and when he got them he walked back to the car. Elmer was on one side of the car, Grace on the other and Pendleton was on the front seat. He seemed dazed and had a cut on the side of his head. He asked Elmer what he had done to Pendleton and Elmer made no answer. Elmer and Leonard got in the car with Pendleton and drove back to Beamer’s. Leonard said that he did not strike Pendleton or help tie him or have anything to do with the assault and did not know of it at the time it was committed; that he knew when he saw Elmer at the Moline Body Corporation that he was greatly excited and very angry at Pendleton, and he feared that Elmer might kill Pendleton and went with him to prevent it. Grace did not testify.

Earl was not present when the act was done but was at his house, several miles away. The testimony connecting him with the crime was given by Beamer, who testified that in the spring of 1923 he went into partnership with Elmer in the making of whiskey and they employed Pendleton in that business. Elmer’s family and Beamer’s family and Pendleton all lived at Elmer’s house until August 14, when Beamer and his family and Pendleton moved into another house. The partnership continued until the commission of the crime. On October 24 Beamer and Pendleton were on familiar terms with Earl and his wife. In the morning of that day Elmer and Beamer drove to Earl’s house and had a controversy there in which Earl’s wife, Zora, was involved. A fight between Elmer and Beamer was prevented by Earl. Elmer left, saying he was going to get Pendleton and kill him or cut him, and told Earl to watch Beamer, and if Beamer moved, to blow his brains out.

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149 N.E. 767, 319 Ill. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-saylor-ill-1925.