Young v. People

61 N.E. 1104, 193 Ill. 236
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 1104 (Young 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
Young v. People, 61 N.E. 1104, 193 Ill. 236 (Ill. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This writ of error brings into review the record of the proceeding in the criminal court of Cook county in which the plaintiff in error was adjudged to be guilty of the crime of larceny as a bailee, and was sentenced to be confined in the penitentiary of the State at Joliet.

The evidence abundantly established the guilt of the accused. In November, 1894, he negotiated a loan of $1000 of the money of Mrs. Louisa Stammler to one Robert W. Taylor. The borrower executed his note for the said sum of $1000, payable to his own order three years after date, bearing'interest from date at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and to secure the same executed a mortgage on certain real estate. Taylor, the borrower, endorsed the note in blank, and the note and the mortgage securing it were delivered to Mrs. Stammler. In 1897, a short time prior to the maturity of the note, the plaintiff in error wrote to Mrs. Stammler that Taylor wished to renew the loan for a further period of two years, and directed her, if she desired to extend the time of payment of the loan, to send the note to him and he would have the extension properly made for her. The note was delivered to him for that purpose. He sold the note to one John Schwartz and applied the money received from Schwartz to his own use. He subsequently reported to Mrs. Stammler that Taylor had paid the note to him, but she failed in her efforts to get him to pay the money to her. He finally induced her to place in his hands the additional sum of $500 on his representation that he would invest such additional sum, and the sum of $1000 which he falsely represented to her Taylor had paid to him, in a good loan of $1500 for her. He converted the sum of $500 to his own use, and finally absconded from Chicago and was detected and arrested in New York City. The indictment contained a number of counts, all charging him with larceny. In some of the counts the plaintiff in error was charged with larceny as bailee of the note and of the moneys of Mrs. Stammler; in others with larceny as bailee of the moneys only.

The rulings of the court in the matter of granting and refusing instructions are assigned as for error. Certain of the instructions were printed in large, bold-faced type, but of uniform size, and without italics or other attempt to attract attention or emphasize any portion of them. Counsel concede that under the ruling in Hagenow v. People, 188 Ill. 545, it is not necessarily erroneous to use instructions printed in large “display” type, announcing ordinary general principles of law and not involving a reference to specific facts of the case, but it is urged in the case at bar,- that by one of the instructions so printed “the attention of the jury is called to a tprom^rien't feature’ of the case,—in fact, to practically the only evidence introduced by the defendant.” The instruction is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury, as a matter of law, that the defendant has put in evidence his general reputation for honesty and integrity; that such evidence is permissible under the law, and is to be by the jury considered as a circumstance in this case. But the court further instructs the jury, that if, from all the evidence in this case,. they are satisfied, beyond a reasonable doubt, of the guilt of the accused, then it is the duty of the jury to find him guilty, notwithstanding the fact, if such be the fact, that heretofore the accused has borne a very good character for- honesty.”

It is not contended the instruction announced an erroneous rule of law for the guidance of the jury, but the argument is, the effect of the use of such large type in printing this instruction would naturally be to give it undue .prominence and weight in the view of the jury, and to correspondingly minimize the value and importance, in the minds of the jury, of type-written instructions given for the plaintiff in error as to the value of proof of good character in defense of the charge against him. Other instructions upon other features of the case than that of good character of the accused as a defense were printed in the same character of type. The evidence bearing on the facts relating to the offense with which the plaintiff in error was charged removed all question of his guilt of the offense from the realms of doubt or debate. Eight witnesses testified that the general reputation of the plaintiff in error for honesty, integrity and fair dealing was good; five witnesses testified that it was bad. That a conviction so manifestly just and merited should not be reversed on the suggestion that possibly the jury may have been influenced by the mere fact that an instruction correctly advising them as to a general principle of law applicable when the defense of good character is interposed, was printed in type of larger size than ordinarily used in printed instructions, is a proposition that surely does not need argument and discussion in its support.

The court, in giving the instructions to the jury, so grouped those asked in behalf of the People and those asked in behalf of plaintiff in error, that all instructions on each particular subject, whether given at the request of the People or of the plaintiff in error, would be read to the jury together. It is complained by the plaintiff in error that the instructions in his behalf were not read separately to the jury. We are inclined to approve the practice adopted by the court in this regard. It operates to present the law to the jury in a more connected and orderly manner than if all instructions asked in one behalf upon all principles of law involved in the hearing are read together, then all asked upon the other behalf. The relation of each instruction to all others upon the same subject will be more readily perceived and more clearly understood if all that is contained in the entire charge on each subject be read in the same connection. The modifications and qualifications of general principles of law growing out of opposite theories of fact will be more readily apprehended if all the instructions relating to each branch or phase of the case are read together, forming a connected charge on the point, than if separated by instructions upon other doctrines of the law. In Crowell v. People, 190 Ill. 508, we held it was not error or objectionable to so arrange the Order of the presentation of the instructions to the jury.

It was not error to refuse to grant plaintiff in error’s sixth refused instruction. The instruction was as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that when a man has lived past middle life with a good reputation among his neighbors and with an apparently honorable record, has a wife and a growing family, and occupies and has occupied positions of trust and confidence in the community, the evidence to convict him of a crime such as William S. Young is charged with should be clear; and in this case, if you believe, from the evidence, that these things are true of said William S. Young, you should give them weight in determining in your mind whether there is a reasonable doubt of his guilt.”

It assumed that the plaintiff in error had maintained a good reputation and apparently honorable record among his neighbors with whom he lived until he had reached middle life, while the evidence upon the point of his general reputation for integrity and honor was directly in conflict.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 1104, 193 Ill. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-people-ill-1901.