The People v. Zukas

169 N.E. 9, 337 Ill. 161
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1929
DocketNo. 19606. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 9 (The People v. Zukas) 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. Zukas, 169 N.E. 9, 337 Ill. 161 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Peter Zukas was convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of the manslaughter of John Dembowski. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were denied. Judgment was rendered on the verdict and Zukas was sentenced to the penitentiary. He prosecutes this writ of error for a review of the record.

On Sunday, February 5, 1928, at about ten o’clock P. M., John Dembowski, Bessie Dembowski, his wife, and Chester Dembowski, their infant son, and Edward Kozlowski and Walter Kozlowski, nephews of Bessie Dembowski, alighted from the rear platform of an east-bound street car at the southwest corner of Blue Island avenue and Leavitt street, in the city of Chicago. An automobile stood waiting to the rear of the street car while the latter discharged its passengers. A second automobile, .driven by Zukas, passed to the right of the first and struck the persons who had just alighted from the street car. Chester Dembowski and Walter Kozlowski were killed. Bessie Dembowski and Edward Kozlowski were injured and both were taken to a hospital where the former remained six weeks and the latter three days. John Dembowski received injuries from which he died within three days.

At the time the accident occurred, Joseph Zmuda and George Vana were going east on Blue Island avenue in an automobile at a point about half a block west of» Leavitt street. Zmuda saw Zukas’ car driven at such speed that, to avoid' a collision with the automobile ahead, Zukas turned to the right and Zmuda next discovered persons lying in the street. Zukas did not stop his car, but drove to his garage in the vicinity. Zmuda followed him and attempted to engage him in conversation at the garage, but Zukas refused to speak. The odor of liquor was detected on his breath. Vana saw several persons lying in the street immediately after the accident. When he asked Zukas, at the latter’s garage, whether he knew what had happened, Zukas answered he did not know. Vana saw him shortly thereafter at the police station. At that time he did not appear to be able to walk straight.

Joseph Cikanek, a police officer, was notified of the accident by Zmuda and Vana. He had been acquainted with Zukas about eleven years, and went to his garage. He found Zukas there, and the latter accompanied the officer to the police station. The officer asked Zukas what had happened at Leavitt street and his answer was that he did not know. Zukas seemed to be dazed, his face was flushed, his eyes were bloodshot and his breath smelled of liquor.

Lieutenant William P. O’Brien asked Zukas at the police station whether in driving his automobile he struck any person at Leavitt street, and he answered that he knew nothing about it. When the officer inquired whether he had been drinking, he replied that he had two drinks of schnapps and two glasses of beer.

Dr. Charles A. Janda examined Zukas shortly after the accident occurred. His pulse beats were one hundred six per minute or thirty-four in excess of the normal rate, and his throat was congested. The condition of his throat was caused by drinking liquor. Both Lieutenant O’Brien and Dr. Janda found that Zukas’ eyes were bloodshot; that his breath carried the odor of alcohol, and that his walk was unsteady. Both were of the opinion that Zukas was under the influence of liquor at the time.

Charles J. Touzinsky, a police officer, took a written statement from Zukas at the police station. In this statement Zukas set forth that on the evening in question he had two drinks of schnapps and two glasses of beer; that he drove his automobile east on Blue Island avenue at the rate of fifteen or twenty miles an hour; that as he approached Leavitt street he overtook a street car but saw no person about it; that he passed to the right of the car and then discovered people, in the street; that he became excited, his wife started to cry and his car struck certain persons, and that he did not stop but continued on his way home to the garage from which a police officer took him to the police station. A post mortem examination of Dembowski’s body was made by Dr. N. Badzmierowski, a coroner’s physician. The examination disclosed external and internal injuries, from which, in the doctor’s opinion, death ensued.

Zukas testified that he was sixty years of age and a grocer and butcher; that, driving his automobile, accompanied by his wife, he stopped, on the evening of February 5, 1928, at the home of one Ivanauskas, a debtor, to collect a claim; that he found. Ivanauskas in poor circumstances, returned to his store and brought to Ivanauskas some bread, meat and a gallon of home made beer; that he and his wife had supper at Ivanauskas’ home; that he had a cold and Mrs. Ivanauskas prepared a remedy consisting of honey, ginger and herbs, for him; that he also drank two glasses of beer; that he and his wife left about nine o’clock and drove at the rate of fifteen or twenty miles an hour; that when they reached the intersection of Blue Island avenue and Leavitt street, driving in an easterly direction, he turned to pass an automobile and his wife cried out that there were people in the street; that he attempted to put his foot on the brake but that his foot slipped and it struck the accelerator; that the automobile moved forward at increased speed and struck certain persons who commenced to scream; that he became excited, a severe pain seized him about the heart, and he proceeded to his home without knowing what had occurred; that he was arrested soon after reaching his garage, and that subsequently, in November of the same year, he went to a hospital and was treated there four weeks for heart trouble.

Anasthasia Ivanauskas corroborated Zukas’ testimony with respect to what occurred in her home on the evening of February 5, 1928, except that she said he drank a glass of honey and one glass of beer. Charles Praidis, who called at Ivanauslcas’ home while Zukas and his wife were there, saw Zukas drink one glass of beer. He had been acquainted with Zukas for seventeen years and neither he nor Mildred Zukonis, Zukas’ daughter, had ever seen him intoxicated. Several witnesses testified that Zukas’ general reputation for sobriety, peaceableness and law-observance in the neighborhood of his residence was good.

Dr. C. C. Gibson treated Zukas on February 5 and 6, 1928. He found him suffering from extreme nervousness and inability to sleep. His blood pressure was high and his heart was enlarged. Zukas told the doctor he had suffered from pain over the heart, in the left shoulder and down the left arm for a number of years. The doctor’s diagnosis was that Zukas suffered from angina pectoris, high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis and mitral regurgitation; that his condition was chronic and that it had existed from five to twenty years. Dr. Gibson further testified that attacks of angina pectoris are precipitated by anger or excitement, and that in this condition the patient’s countenance becomes flushed, there is a rigidity of the muscles of the body and he is obsessed with a sense of impending death in which everything is forgotten save his pain and misery. On cross-examination, Dr. Gibson admitted that a heightened color of the face and bloodshot eyes might result from the excessive use of intoxicating liquors.

Dr. Benedict F. Shanahan treated Zukas for embolism of the lung in November, 1928.

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