The People v. Weiss

12 N.E.2d 652, 367 Ill. 580
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1937
DocketNo. 24258. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 12 N.E.2d 652 (The People v. Weiss) 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. Weiss, 12 N.E.2d 652, 367 Ill. 580 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant, Norman Weiss, also known as Norman Plenn, was indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for burglary. He was tried by the court without a jury, found guilty, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary. Weiss prosecutes this writ of error.

During the evening of February 23, 1937, the basement of an apartment building, located at 5144 Nelson street, in Chicago, was burglarized and twenty-six jackets, valued at approximately $160, stolen. The jackets were never recovered. John L. Hoffsted, who lived in the apartment on the first floor, used a part of the basement for the purpose of storing samples of men’s sports-wear belonging to his employer, Frank Ditto. The samples were kept in cabinets especially constructed for that purpose. Hoffsted and his wife were absent from their home between 8:2o o’clock in the evening of February 23 and 1 :oo A. M. of the following day. From Hoffsted’s testimony it appears that when he departed the sample cases and the door leading to the basement were securely locked. As he was backing his car from his garage in the rear of the building into the alley, parallel with Nelson street, the witness related that he observed another car approaching at a high rate of speed; that he turned his own automobile to the right to allow it to pass; that the second car stopped about seventy-five feet from his car; that a man got out of the car, passed him, and, when opposite the rear entrance to the apartment building, looked down the areaway, turned and called to the occupant of the car, a woman, exclaiming, “Yes, they are home.” The man, Hoffsted stated, was the defendant, whom he had seen in the front hall of the apartment building on a previous occasion three or four weeks prior to the burglary. The witness testified further that upon his return to the alley, after closing his garage door from the inside, the other car was still there; that his suspicion was not, however, aroused and that he drove away.

Frances Baker resided in an apartment on the first floor at 5142 Nelson street in the building next to Hoffsted’s building. Her living room, considerably farther back from Nelson street than the front entrance to Hoffsted’s building, faced a long courtway or lawn between the two buildings, affording an excellent view of the rear of Hoffsted’s premises. The side hallway to the building leading to her apartment faced the Hoffsted building. There were lights at the entrance facing the courtway and also in the hallway. Mrs. Baker testified that from the vantage point of her living room, about 7:3o P. M. on February 23, she observed defendant, smoking a cigarette, cross the lawn and go into the hallway where he remained about three minutes; that he then walked over to the next building, came out five minutes later and again entered her hallway; that a woman crossed the lawn, joined him and then went in the back way of Hoffsted’s building. Mrs. Baker added that after defendant entered the Hoffsted building the second time she saw a light in the basement, and that it was about a half-hour before she again saw him. The witness testified that the woman tapped a basement window, ran across the street and honked the horn of the car, an Oldsmobile, after which defendant came out of the building, jumped into the car and drove from Nelson street to the alley, but had nothing with him at this particular time. Later, the witness testified, she went into another room of her apartment and saw the same automobile parked in the alley and a woman sitting inside. A third time, she recounted, defendant went into the Hoffsted building and this time came out with a salesman’s sample case, together with objects over his arm, went to the alley gate and threw the jackets into the back seat of the car.

Police officers Hall and Will, in response to a radio call, went to the rear of Hoffsted’s premises at 10 :oo P. M. where they saw a man whom they identified as defendant and a young woman sitting in an Oldsmobile car in the alley. The policemen, according to Mrs. Baker, arrived five minutes after she had seen defendant throw the jackets into the car. When interrogated by the officers, defendant explained his presence by stating that he and his companion, who, he said, was his wife, were waiting for IToffsted. Officer Hall testified that defendant gave his name as Edward Weiss, identifying himself by exhibiting a State automobile license made out in that name. Although the officers examined the back of the car, they neither looked into the trunk nor inspected Hoffsted’s office in the basement. In obedience to their command defendant drove away. On Hoffsted’s return he noted that his office was lighted and, upon investigation, found marks on the door leading to his office in the basement indicating it had been jimmied with a screw-driver. The locks on the door to the cabinet case containing the jackets had been removed, all the sample cases opened and one large case left open on a table. Defendant was arrested on February 24 and taken to the police station where he was identified by Hoffsted and Mrs. Baker. His companion was not identified.

Defendant, at the time of the trial, was twenty-eight years of age. He interposed the defense of an alibi, maintaining that on the evening of February 23, he, his wife and son, and a friend, Mrs. Herman, attended a performance of a movie at a “Loop” theater, tickets for which he had purchased the previous day; that the three first mentioned left their home about 8 :oo P. M. and Mrs. Herman joined them on the way down town; that they parked the car, an Oldsmobile, owned by his wife; that they were in the theater from 8:45 until 11:00 P. M., or shortly thereafter; that they then repaired to a restaurant, after which he, defendant, returned for his car and discovered it was gone; that Mrs. Herman took the child home while he and his wife went to the First District police station to report the theft of their car. The car was reported stolen about 12 :3o A. M. on February 24. It was not recovered until February 27. Defendant testified further that on February 24, he exhibited a program and ticket stubs to police officers Heuttig and DeLaurentis at his home; that one of the officers took them and that he never saw the program and stubs after-wards. Mrs. Lerman. who had known defendant’s wife for several years, corroborated defendant’s testimony in essential particulars. On examination by the court officer Heuttig stated that defendant showed him a program but no stubs, and, further, that there was no reference to stubs in the conversation with defendant. John DeLaurentis corroborated him, adding that the folder or program given to them by defendant for examination was left in his apartment.

Additional facts and circumstances are disclosed by the record. Mrs. Baker saw defendant smoking a cigarette in the hallway of the building where she lived. She later picked up the stub of a “Kool” cigarette which he dropped and gave it to Hoffsted the next morning. The latter preserved the stub and delivered it to the sergeant of police at the station. The cigarette stub was admitted in evidence. Numerous stubs of the same kind of cigarettes were also found in defendant’s car when it was recovered on February 27. Defendant smoked several brands of cigarettes, it appears, including Kools.

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12 N.E.2d 652, 367 Ill. 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-weiss-ill-1937.