The People v. Wilson

166 N.E. 40, 334 Ill. 412
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1929
DocketNo. 19462. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 N.E. 40 (The People v. Wilson) 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. Wilson, 166 N.E. 40, 334 Ill. 412 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Theodore Wilson was indicted in the criminal court of Cook county jointly with Joseph Allman and Frank Wilson for robbery while armed with a pistol. His co-defendants pleaded guilty and he was put on trial alone and convicted and has sued out a writ of error.

The defense was an alibi. Margaret Halliday, the victim of the crime, testified that she conducted a delicatessen store at No. 1353 West Seventy-ninth street, in Chicago. Mrs. Norman, a colored woman, was in the back room when three men entered the store, one of whom, the plaintiff in error, bought some groceries and handed witness a dollar-bill in payment. She was handing him the change when one of the other men pushed a gun at her and told her to be quiet and everything would be all right. The other man was Frank Wilson. He was at the door and went into the back room ahead of witness with his gun in his hand and ransacked the place back there, and while he was taking her back Allman told the plaintiff in error to wait on the store. The two women were in the back room from 9:10 until about 9:35 o’clock. They tied witness and the colored woman together, binding their feet and hands and heads. Witness’ fur coat, ring and vibrator and $25 from the cash register were taken. Mrs. Norman got her bandage loose and started to scream. A man came in, and without waiting to untie them ran out on the street, calling, “Hold-up!” Two motorcycle policemen who were passing came in, and after talking with witness arrested Allman and Frank Wilson at about 9:40 o’clock, about three blocks from the store. They found on them all the property which had been taken, including the $25, and a loaded gun on each of them. Mrs. Halliday testified that the plaintiff in error did not have a gun, and on cross-examination said that Mrs. Norman did not see him, as she was not in the store, and that witness could not see him while she was in the back room. The plaintiff in error was arrested on the night of October 3 at the place where he roomed and boarded with Mrs. Bergamin, 713 West Fiftieth street.

The plaintiff in error testified that on October 3 he was at 713 West Fiftieth street, where he roomed and boarded with Mrs. Bergamin, as he had been doing for about a year and a half. He got up about seven o’clock in the morning and went to a poolroom. Afterward he took a bath and went back to bed. About half or three-quarters of an hour later he got up and called his mother on the telephone. That was a little after eight o’clock. His mother came down to him with some underwear and a clean shirt and left two dollars with him. She got there about 8:45 or 9 :oo o’clock, sat down and talked with him and left about 11:3o. He had been a truck driver, employed for about six years for the Consumers Company, but had quit because he was sick. He had kidney trouble. He was arrested about 10:3o o’clock that night. His mother and sister were there at the time. He did not go into Mrs. Halliday’s store on October 3 and make a purchase, was not near the store and never saw it, and had nothing to do with the robbery.

Frank Wilson testified that he is a brother of the defendant and is in the penitentiary at Joliet. He was indicted with his brother and Joe Allman, and he and All-man pleaded guilty and were sentenced to the penitentiary but his brother was innocent. He saw his brother at the police station the day after he was arrested and previous to that had not seen him for ten or twelve months. About 8:3o o’clock on the morning of October 3 he and Allman entered the store of Mrs. Halliday — just the two of them. Mrs. Halliday was alone in the store. He entered first and went to make a purchase. While he was making the purchase Allman came in and held up the front of the store and witness ran in the back room. Allman came in immediately afterward. Witness met the colored woman just coming into the store from the rear room and told her to go back and sit down and nothing would happen, and All-man brought Mrs. Halliday back. Witness talked to her and told her nothing would happen to her and asked her where the money was. She said the money had already left. He told Allman, “Let’s leave immediately,” and went out in the store and took some money from the cash register and went back again. Allman was taking Mrs. Halliday’s coat. She said, “Please don’t take that,” and witness said, "Leave it there and let’s go.” They walked out in the street and were not out of the place a half minute when somebody entered, and they were about a block and a half away when they were arrested. His brother was not with him that day. There were only two men in the store during the progress of the hold-up, witness and the other man who participated in the robbery.

Bridget Wilson, the mother of the plaintiff in error, testified that she had been living for two years at 1116 West Seventy-second street with her daughter, Mrs. Kennedy. The plaintiff in error went to board with Mrs. Bergamin in 1926, when witness broke up housekeeping and went to live with her daughter. Before that the plaintiff in error lived with witness. On October 3 she received a telephone call about eight o’clock in the morning from her son, telling her he was sick and asking her to bring some clean underwear. She went over to see him and gave him a couple of garments. He was there when she got there, about 8:3o o’clock. She stayed until about half-past eleven. It was a couple of minutes before 12 :oo o’clock when she got home, and the plaintiff in error was there when she left. That evening she told her daughter about it, and they went over and saw the plaintiff in error there at that time. The next day she went to see Mrs. Halliday and asked her how she knew Ted was there at the time. Mrs. Halliday told her he had something sore on his neck. Witness said that Ted hadn’t anything sore on his neck, and Mrs. Halliday said, “Well, there was some lump on his neck; he bought a can of soup and loaf of bread;” that he had a lump on his neck and she recognized him from his Adam’s apple. She told witness that the man with something on his neck came into the store and asked to make a purchase. She was not positive that Ted was the man, but she said the police told her if she did not prosecute him that she would not get any more protection from them. She said she did not want to do it, but she had to do it or they would not give her any more protection. Mrs. Wilson also testified that she heard Mrs. ITalliday testify before Judge Padden in the police court on October io, and she then testified that the man who came into the store first purchased a can of soup and a loaf of bread and paid for it and walked out and a minute or two later Allman and Frank Wilson came in. She said that the boys were there; that Theodore walked out after he bought the loaf of bread and the can of soup and she did not see him any more. She said the man with the sore throat was the one who made the purchase and he was the one who walked out, and she was not positive whether it was Wilson or not.

Pearl Bergamin testified that on October 3, 1928, she lived at 713 West Fiftieth street and had lived there about a year. She was a widow and lived there with her two little girls and had worked for five years at 210-212 West Lake street, where she was then employed. She had known the plaintiff in error three years. He came first to her home in 1926 and had roomed and boarded with her about two years and paid $10 a week.

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Bluebook (online)
166 N.E. 40, 334 Ill. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-wilson-ill-1929.