The People v. Sikes

159 N.E. 293, 328 Ill. 64
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1927
DocketNo. 18148. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 159 N.E. 293 (The People v. Sikes) 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. Sikes, 159 N.E. 293, 328 Ill. 64 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county on the charge of manslaughter and brings the cause here for review.

The first count of the indictment charged that plaintiff in error feloniously and unlawfully made an assault upon the body of Charles Rechsteiner with an automobile, which he unlawfully and recklessly ran upon the public street, by reason of which assault Rechsteiner was killed. Under the statute involuntary manslaughter is the killing of a human being “without any intent to do so, in the commission of an unlawful act, or a lawful act, which probably might produce' such a consequence, in an unlawful manner.” The effect of the first count was to charge involuntary manslaughter. The second count charged a felonious assault with an automobile, by which Rechsteiner was killed. The jury found defendant guilty of manslaughter as charged in the indictment and found his age to be fifty-three years. As all of the testimony on the part of the People tends to establish involuntary manslaughter and not murder or voluntary manslaughter, no further attention need be given in this opinion to the second count of the indictment.

The People offered proof tending to show that Charles Rechsteiner left the home of his parents at 710 East Thirty-sixth street, in the city of Chicago, about 6:3o o’clock P. M. on January 7, 1926; that on January 8 the coroner’s physician conducted a post mortem over the body of Rechsteiner and found cuts and bruises on the head, face, arms and chest and evidences of internal injuries, on which he based his opinion that Rechsteiner died by shock, due to traumatic injuries received. The State’s evidence also shows that shortly after seven o’clock in the evening of January 7, 1926, a street car running south on Vincennes avenue, (or Vincennes road,) in the city of Chicago, stopped at Seventy-sixth street to discharge passengers. The conductor on the street car, Harry Hynes, testified that when the car stopped, two men who were passengers got off the rear end of the car; that an automobile came by at a rate of about forty miles per hour and struck one of the men, throwing him in the air about ten feet and he landed between the sidewalk and the curb; that this was the only man whom he saw hit; that the automobile kept on going, and that he went over to the man who was struck and found that he was dead; that he came back to his car and gave the signal to the motorman to chase after the automobile that he saw, and that they came upon an automobile standing near Seventy-seventh street; that he and the motorman got out of the car and went to the automobile and there found plaintiff in error; that plaintiff in error’s machine was standing still at the time. He described the automobile as having curtains on it and as being a two-seated car. He also testified that the front glass of the headlights was broken, and that the automobile was the one that hit the man at Seventy-sixth street. He gave as his opinion that plaintiff in error was intoxicated. He testified, however, that he did not talk to him but that he stood within arm’s length of him.

Ella Schulte testified that she was driving behind the street car referred to, at a distance of about seventy-five feet, when another machine swerved in front of her and struck a man,-throwing him to the curb; that she stopped and got out of her machine and took the man to the hospital; that the man she took to the hospital was named Benedict; that he seemed to be unconscious for a while; that she saw another man lying there about eighteen or nineteen feet further south than Benedict.

Benedict testified that as he was getting off the back of the street car, at the corner of Seventy-sixth street and Vincennes avenue, he was struck by an automobile and knocked unconscious.; that a lady picked' him up and took him to the hospital; that while she was looking for his hat he heard her exclaim: “Oh! There is another man laying there!” That a Yellow cab came along and the driver took the other man into the cab and left with him.

Clarence Westerman testified that he was the motorman on the street car referred to; that after he had stopped at Seventy-sixth street he heard a crash; that after he had received a signal to proceed and had started the car the conductor ran forward through the car and told him to put on as much speed as he could; that he stopped alongside the machine in which plaintiff in error was riding, which at the time was standing still; that he got off the front end with the conductor and a passenger who was on the car; that plaintiff in error attempted to start his machine and he told him to wait, — that he had killed a man, — but plaintiff in error started up his engine and witness turned the key and took it away; that plaintiff in error asked him his badge number four or five times; that he noticed the condition of plaintiff in error and could smell liquor on him; also that he made an examination of the automobile and found the glass in the left headlight broken; that he kept the automobile key until an officer came along on a motorcycle and he gave the key to him, and that he did not remember any cars passing his street car before he got to Seventy-sixth and Vincennes.

Charles H. Blaul testified for the People that he was a motorcycle police officer, and as a result of a call from the station at Eighty-fifth and Green streets he rode to Seventy-seventh and Vincennes, where he noticed an automobile standing in the street near a street car; that he asked as to the trouble and received the reply that “this gentleman just killed a man down here;” that he examined the automobile, which was a Cadillac roadster, and that he later found that it belonged to the plaintiff in error; that he found the left front headlight had been broken and the bumper and left side of the car had been brushed; that he asked plaintiff .in error if he had hit anybody, and he replied “No;” that he took him to the police station, and later on that evening plaintiff in error told him that he had been at a funeral at Blue Island and was on the way back; that he had stopped at some lodge hall on Sixty-ninth street and Stewart avenue and had had á drink. This witness also identified a cap, which he testified a man named Hal-pin had given him on January 22, 1926, some two weeks after the occurrence at Seventy-sixth street. He stated on cross-examination that he would not say that plaintiff in error was intoxicated but stated that he was not intoxicated; that if he had been he would have booked him in the station under another section, but that he admitted he had had something to drink though he did not tell witness what it was.

Michael Cohen testified that on the evening of January 7, 1926, he was driving south on Vincennes avenue and at Seventy-seventh street he saw an automobile standing opposite a street car and several men standing by the car; that in the presence of plaintiff in error the street car man told witness that plaintiff in error had struck two people at the intersection of Seventy-sixth street and Vincennes; that the motorman had taken the automobile keys and kept them until the police arrived; that one of the men asked witness to back up and take the injured man to the hospital; that he backed up to Seventy-sixth street and found a Yellow cab alongside where the man lay on the sidewalk, and he helped them put the man into the Yellow cab and directed the cab driver how to reach Auburn Park Hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
159 N.E. 293, 328 Ill. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-sikes-ill-1927.