Westbrook v. People

18 N.E. 304, 126 Ill. 81
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 N.E. 304 (Westbrook v. People) 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
Westbrook v. People, 18 N.E. 304, 126 Ill. 81 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the September term, 1887, of the Macon circuit court, plaintiff in error was indicted for the murder of one William Gross. On a trial at the next term he was found guilty, the jury fixing his punishment at death. Motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment being overruled, he was sentenced to be executed on the 30th day of March last. At the Ottawa term of this court, begun in the last named month, a writ of error was ordered, and the same made a supersedeas, and the record now comes before us for final review.

Deceased resided in the village of Blue Mound, where he and Charles Gross, his brother, kept a dram-shop. There had been no intimate acquaintance'between'the prisoner and either of the brothers, nor was there any unfriendly feeling between them. On the 27th of June, 1887, the prisoner wrote a letter to Charles, in which he stated that .he had seen him sell liquor to a minor, and threatening him with prosecution unless he was paid $25. This letter, was received by Charles on the 29th of June, and handed to deceased the same day. On the first day of July the defendant went to Blue Mound, and while there that afternoon, inquired of the post-master if “Gross Bros.” had sent him a letter at Stonington. He at the same time stated that he had seen the Grosses sell liquor to a minor, and said: “If they don’t give me $25, I’ll fix them.” To another witness: “If they don’t give me $25, I’ll give it away, or do them up.” To a third party: “He was going to have $25, and if he did not get it he would cut their hearts out;” and to still another witness: “I want $25, and if the. Grosses don’t pay me I will cut the guts out of them.” Unnatural and unreasonable as these threats of personal violence seem, the witnesses who testify to them are uncontradicted, and for the purposes of our opinion they must be accepted as proved. Charles Gross met him that evening, and asked him if he wrote the letter above mentioned, and he answered he did. No angry words passed between them at that time. The prisoner remaining in the village that night, stated to one or more parties early the next morning, “that he had caught the Gross Bros, selling liquor to a minor, and unless they made it right, he was going to give them up.” The people of the village were, at this time, in a state of excitement, growing out of prosecutions, pending and previously tried, against saloon keepers for illegal sales of intoxicating liquors.

On the morning of the 2d of July, between nine and ten o’clock, defendant was standing by the side of a locomotive which -had just stopped at a street crossing in the village. No one was near him, and he seemed to be looking at or examining the engine. Deceased, passing along the sidewalk, approached the locomotive from the opposite side, and as he crossed the railroad track in front of the engine, seemed to discover the defendant, and immediately turned and went to where he was standing. Almost immediately they were Seen striking at each other, and were very soon both down, struggling with and striking each other. Just before they separated, Gross was on top of and striking the defendant about the head. None of the witnesses heard anything said between them. They were seen by different persons,—some from the beginning of the fight, by others after the first blow was struck, and still others not until they were down. These persons were in different directions from them, and all more or less distant. Some of them could see plainly, while the view of others was more or less obstructed. That their testimony should be conflicting, is not to be wondered at. No definite conclusion can be reached, from their statements, as to who struck first, or at what time in the struggle the stabbing was done. Deceased got up, leaving the defendant lying on the ground, and walked about one hundred feet to the porch of a building occupied by one Schwab as a saloon, and there showed a wound in his left side, saying, Westbrook, the defendant, had stabbed him. On the trial, the prosecution' proved that immediately after the affray the prisoner stated to one party that if he cut Gross he did not know it. To.another he said, “The son of a bitch hit me, and then I cut him.” On the preliminary trial he said Gross cursed him and knocked him down, and that he must have fallen on the knife.

The conduct of defendant in writing the threatening letter to Charles Gross, and in making threats against him and deceased, was reprehensible in the extreme, and his contradictory statements as to how the- cutting was done, though doubtless made under ‘ excitement, can not be reconciled with honesty of purpose; and yet, from the evidence of all the witnesses, it is clearly shown that the encounter in which the mortal blow was struck was not of his seeking, but brought on by the deceased. The evidence all shows that he left the sidewalk and approached the defendant, who was unconscious of his presence, and we think the weight of the proof is, that the deceased struck the first blow. At least, it must be conceded that, most strongly construed against the defendant, the testimony of all the witnesses who saw the affray would leave in the mind a reasonable doubt as to whether or not the fatal stroke was made with malice aforethought, or in a sudden heat of passion, caused by an assault made upon him by the deceased, thus reducing the crime to manslaughter. Or, if it could be maintained, on the testimony of these witnesses, together with the previous threats and subsequent contradictory statements proved, that the killing was murder, still it could scarcely be contended that the crime is so clearly proved, and so manifestly wanting in mitigation, as to justify the infliction of the death penalty.

The prosecution, however, proved, over defendant’s objection, a statement made by deceased on the afternoon of the day of the stabbing, which the court below held competent as a dying declaration. That statement, as sworn to by Dr. Harvey, one of the attending physicians, is as follows: “He said he did not know Westbrook. He was very slightly acquainted with him. He saw this man standing down by the railroad; thought it was Westbrook; walked down to him; asked if he was the man that wrote this letter to him; that Westbrook turned around and struck him with a knife—had the knife in his hand; he struck Westbrook with his hand; found he was wounded; got up and started for the saloon.” The effect of this statement was to prove a most cruel and unprovoked assault, and no doubt went far to secure defendant’s conviction and the infliction of the extreme penalty of the law, hence its competency becomes a question of the first importance.

The preliminary proof submitted to the judge, as a basis for its introduction, consisted of the testimony of witnesses who described the wound, and its immediate effect, and the statements of Dr. Harvey as to what he told the deceased about the wound, and its probable effect. Several medical witnesses describe the injury, and they agree, substantially, in their statements. They say the wound was a vertical cut, two inches long and about three inches deep, penetrating the lower lobe of the left lung, three-quarters of an inch below the apex of the heart. A rib was severed, and a small artery cut. The most satisfactory evidence as to the immediate effect of the injury, is that of Dr.

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18 N.E. 304, 126 Ill. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westbrook-v-people-ill-1888.