The People v. Tillman

50 N.E.2d 751, 383 Ill. 560
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1943
DocketNo. 27161. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 50 N.E.2d 751 (The People v. Tillman) 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. Tillman, 50 N.E.2d 751, 383 Ill. 560 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court:

On a trial by jury, in the criminal court of Cook county, plaintiff in error, Merwyn Tillman, was found guilty of the murder of Frank Hubbard. After- overruling various motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment the court entered judgment on the verdict. Plaintiff in error was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of twenty years, in accordance with the verdict of the jury. He has sued out the writ of error in this case to review that judgment. The errors assigned are the insufficiency of the evidence and that the verdict was the result of passion and prejudice, as evidenced by the term of imprisonment fixed by the jury.

It is the contention of plaintiff in error that on account of previous difficulties between them, one Nathaniel Byrd had threatened and assaulted him on several occasions. He further contends that Byrd and some of his associates had followed him and threatened his life. The evidence tends to show that prior to the fatal shooting, plaintiff in error had been associating with Byrd’s wife, from whom Byrd was separated but not divorced. Plaintiff in error knew this. The difficulties between Byrd and plaintiff in error, prior to the shooting of Hubbard, obviously grew out of plaintiff in error’s clandestine associations with Mrs. Byrd. The previous attacks on him, alleged by plaintiff in error to have been made by Byrd, occurred when plaintiff in error was in the company of Byrd’s wife, or leaving her apartment. Plaintiff in error claims that because of these previous attacks and threats against his life by Byrd, he was justified in believing that he had been “marked” by Byrd and his associates, and that they were seeking an opportunity to kill him. He does not claim that any attacks upon, or threats against, him, were made by Hubbard. He only associates the deceased with these alleged attacks and threats because he testified that the deceased was the constant companion of Byrd. While there is some controversy in the testimony concerning the previous difficulties, there is little dispute as to the facts surrounding the actual killing of Hubbard.

In-the view we take of the case, the facts surrounding the killing, as stated by plaintiff in error when he was first arrested and in his testimony as a witness on the trial, may be accepted as true. Another eyewitness to the killing was a friend of plaintiff in error who was a passenger in his car. He gave substantially the same version of the transaction as plaintiff in error. The only other eyewitness to the shooting, called as a witness, was a pedestrian who was standing on the sidewalk nearby. He testified that when plaintiff in error got out of his own car and started toward the car occupied by Hubbard, he had the pistol in his hand.

The killing occurred on February 20, 1940, at the intersection of Fifty-fifth street with Michigan boulevard, in the city of Chicago. It occurred at about 10:00 o’clock P. M. Immediately following the fatal shooting, plaintiff in error left the scene. He concealed himself at the home of his father and at other places in the city of Chicago for some two days after the shooting. He then, in company with Byrd’s wife, left Chicago by bus. They first stopped in Omaha, Nebraska. From there they went to Glenwood, Iowa, where they stayed for several days at the home of the grandparents of plaintiff in error. From there they went to Tulsa, Oklahoma, where some of Mrs. Byrd’s relatives resided. Shortly before Christmas in 1940, Myrtle Byrd became ill. She returned to Chicago and spent some time in the county hospital there. In the spring of 1941 she returned to Tulsa, where, some three weeks later, she died. Plaintiff in error, after the death of Mrytle Byrd, quit his job in Tulsa and returned to the home of his relatives in Glenwood, Iowa. He remained there until October, 1941. He then returned to Chicago where he remained only a few days. He next went to Detroit where he stayed for two weeks. He then returned to Chicago where he obtained employment at the stockyards. He was arrested on April 12, 1942, charged with the murder of Frank Hubbard on February 20, 1940.

On the day following his arrest, plaintiff in error signed a written statement, concerning the killing of Hubbard. This statement was admitted in evidence without objection. In this statement he detailed the facts preceding the killing. He stated that on February 20, 1940, at about 8:30 P. M. he parked his automobile at 4931 Indiana avenue. He further stated that at about 9:15 P. M. he returned to his car and found the windows broken and a dent in the top of the hood; that he later took a cab to Fifty-fifth street and Michigan boulevard. When he got out of the cab at the southwest corner of that intersection, he saw Byrd’s car coming north on Michigan; that he got into the Byrd car as it passed him; that there was only one man in the car; that when he saw that Byrd was not in the car he asked the driver where Byrd was; that the driver turned in the driver’s seat and that he thought he was searching for something when plaintiff in error shot him; that he did not know Hubbard, who was the driver of the car, personally, but had seen him with Byrd on prior occasions.

In his testimony on the trial he gave a slightly different version of the occurrence. He testified that he had known the deceased for about a year before the shooting; that on the night of February 20, 1940, he saw the deceased and Byrd together at Fifty-fourth street and Prairie avenue; that plaintiff in error was driving his own car. Accomparrying him in the car was Myrtle Byrd; that he parked his car in front of a place of business on Michigan boulevard; that he left the car for the purpose of transacting some business; that Mrs. Byrd remained in the car; that when he returned to his car Mrs. Byrd told him that Byrd and Hubbard had just passed; that aá they passed they said to her that they were going to get her and plaintiff in error, both; that she locked the door of the automobile, closed the window and sounded the horn for plaintiff in error; that this was about 8:30; that he got in the car and then went on about his business of collecting policy tickets and distributing drawings at various places; that when he left the last place where he made a business call, he saw the deceased on Michigan boulevard; that Mrs. Byrd screamed and said, “There is Frank;” that the deceased was driving Byrd’s car at that time on Michigan boulevard, between Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth streets; that the car driven by the deceased moved up to the left of the car of plaintiff in error, and crowded'him into the curb; that they both stopped because the crossing light had changed; that plaintiff in error got out of his car and went around to Hubbard in the other car; that plaintiff in error asked Hubbard “what this called for;” that he then walked around to the other side of the car and Hubbard said, “We get you” and, “He know’d he’d get us yet;” that Hubbard then struck the plaintiff in error in the face with his fist; that Hubbard then reached down in the car as if reaching for something; that plaintiff in error “was kind of dazed;” that he then drew the pistol out of his pocket and fired the shot; that the pistol was given to him by Mrytle Byrd before he left his car; that after he fired the shot he got back in his own car and left the scene. He went to his home at 4559 Evans avenue and then to his father’s home where he spent two days in hiding before he left for Omaha, as already indicated.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E.2d 751, 383 Ill. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-tillman-ill-1943.