128 Ill. 595 | Ill. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The purpose of the proposed amendment of the record, as we learn from the argument of counsel, is to make it appear by the record that these plaintiffs in error have been deprived of an important constitutional right,—that of being present when this court rendered judgment affirming the judgment of the Criminal Court of Cook county,—they contending, that without their presence such judgment could not be pronounced. The effect which it is claimed will result from the proposed amendment, is, therefore, in derogation of the judgment,—as they contend, to nullify and destroy it. It must, hence, be manifest, that this motion ought to have been made at the term at which that judgment was rendered, for, not having been made then, it can avail nothing as to Spies, Parsons, Lingg, Engel and Fischer, and but for executive clemency, under which, and not any judgment of court, Fielden and Schwab are now in the penitentiary, they could not cause the motion to be made.
Under our practice, amendments of the record in affirmance of the judgment, when there is anything to amend by, may, upon notice, be made at a term subsequent to that at which final judgment is rendered; but amendments not in affirmance, but in derogation, of the judgment, are not allowed at a term subsequent to that at which final judgment is rendered. Planing Mill Co. v. Merchants' Nat. Bank, 97 Ill. 294. See, also, Powell on Appellate Proceedings, appendix, p. 387, note 1. The amendment in Phillips v. The People, 88 Ill. 161, was made before final judgment, and that in May v. The People, 92 Ill. 346, was also before final judgment, and it was, moreover, in affirmance of the judgment. The other cases cited by counsel are less pertinent, and therefore demand no comment.
This motion not having been made at the same term at which final judgment was rendered, nor until the case had passed beyond the power of this court to stay, by its order, the execution of the judgment, clearly comes too late.
But it must not be understood that we concede that the amendment, if made, could have affected the validity of the judgment. In our opinion, the amendment, if made, would be inconsequential, and would not affect, in the slightest degree, the rights of the parties under the judgment. The common law required, when any corporal punishment was to be inflicted on the defendant, that he should be personally present before the court at the time of pronouncing the sentence. 1 Ghitty’s Grim. Law, (5th Am. ed.) 693, *696. Seasons given for this are, that the defendant may be identified by the court as the real party adjudged to be punished, (Holt, 399); that the defendant may have a chance to plead a pardon, (3 More, 265); that he may have a pardon to plead or move in arrest of judgment, (King v. Speke, 3 Salk. 358); that he may have an opportunity to say what he can say why judgment should be not given against him, (2 Hale’s Pleas of the Crown, 401, 402); and that the example of the defendants, who have been guilty of misdemeanors of a gross and public kind, being brought up for the animadversion of the court and the open denunciation of punishment, may tend to deter others from the commission of similar offenses. 1 Chitty’s Crim. Law, (5th ed.) 693, *696. It is manifest that none of these can apply to this court, because, first, it acts and decides only upon the record made in the court below. It can therefore have nothing to do with the question of the identity of the party whom the sheriff shall have in his custody for punishment. Nor can it entertain a motion in arrest, or a plea of pardon. And since its opinion is prepared and written out and filed with the clerk without being read from the bench, there is, when judgment of affirmance is given, no animadversion and open denunciation of punishment which could benefit bystanders. If the present plaintiffs in error and their counsel had been actually present in court when the judgment of affirmance, here, was entered, the law allowed them to then say or do nothing which, by any possibility, could have benefited plaintiffs in error. They were, after judgment was entered, entitled only to move for a rehearing,—and this could only be done on printed petition; but thirty days were allowed in which to prepare it. (93 Ill. 11, rule 43.) Undoubtedly, if plaintiffs in error or their counsel had been actually present in court when the decision was announced, they would - then have known what the decision was; but that fact was equally "well made known to them by notice from the clerk,—in ample "time to avail of their right to file a petition for rehearing. And if, indeed, without any fault of theirs, more.time would have been needed within which to prepare the petition for rehearing, it was within the recognized practice of this court to have extended the time for that purpose beyond the thirty days. But no claim is here made-that plaintiffs in error were not infprmed of the decision in the case in time to file a petition for rehearing. They did not seek to avail of that right, but voluntarily waived it, and prosecuted a writ of error upon the record from the Supreme Court of the United States, and it was not until after that was decided adversely to them, that they discovered the claimed error in the record of which amendment is now sought.
In The People v. Clark, 1 Park. Crim. R. 360, the Supreme Court of New York, at general term, held, that on a writ of error brought to reverse a judgment in a capital case, the personal attendance of the defendant on the argument or at the decision in the appellate court is not necessary to give such court jurisdiction. And there was like ruling in Donnelly v. The State, 2 Dutch. 463. See, also, in principle, to like effect, Bales v. The State, 18 Mo. 318, and Commonwealth v. Costello, 121 Mass. 371.
We may add, moreover, it has not been the practice of this court, from its organization to the present time, to have the plaintiff in error in a criminal case actually present in court at the hearing and when final judgment is given; and it is clear, from the different provisions of the statute, that it not only does not provide for their presence, but it contemplates that they will not be present. Thus, under division 15 of our Criminal Code (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 415,) it is provided, in section 6 : “When the court or judge is of opinion that the party obtaining such writ ought to be bailed until the determination of the writ, and he is at the time in custody, the said court or judge may make an order to admit- such prisoner to bail, upon his entering into a recognizance, * * * conditioned that the prisoner will appear”—not in this court, as would be required were his presence here indispensable, but—“at the next term of court in which his trial took place, and each subsequent term of said court, on the first days thereof, until the determination of such writ of error.” In section 7 it is provided : “If the prisoner is in custody .of the sheriff, he shall take the recognizance; if in custody of the warden of the penitentiary, he shall take the recognizance. In either ease, the recognizance shall be returned to the next term of the court in which the prisoner was sentenced.” And it is provided in section 11: “In case of the reversal of any judgment upon which any person has been committed to the penitentiary, and the granting of a new trial by the Supreme Court, it shall be the duty of the warden of the penitentiary, upon receiving a certified copy of such judgment of the Supreme Court, to deliver the person so committed, to the sheriff of the county where such new trial is to be had, ” etc. If such person were in court at the time the judgment is pronounced, and in custody, he would necessarily be in the custody of the sheriff of the county where this court is then being held; and the statute, instead of providing as thus quoted, would then have provided that the prisoner be delivered by the sheriff having him in custody, to the sheriff of the county where such new trial is to be had.
We are not unmindful that it is guaranteed by section 9 of article 2 of the constitution of this State, that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right to appear and defend, in person and by counsel.” But it is clear, from the connection of the clause, that this has reference to trials at nisi prius, only. The entire paragraph reads thus: “In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right to appear and defend in person and by counsel, to demand the nature and cause of the accusation and to have a copy thereof, to meet the witnesses face to face, and to have process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf, and a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county,”—all of which rights these plaintiffs in error have fully enjoyed on the trial in the Criminal Court resulting in their conviction. But they are not now defending against a prosecution. They are, themselves, prosecuting a suit to reverse the judgment by which they were convicted, and it is therefore impossible that these provisions can have any application to it. Tooke v. The State, Texas Ct. of App.
The mere naming of the day on which the sentence was to be executed was but the exercise of a ministerial power, which, at common law, was sometimes exercised by the sheriff, (1 Chitty’s Grim. Law, 5th Am. ed. p. 782, *783,) and is in this State exercised by the Governor in case of a temporary reprieve.
At common law, a bill of exceptions could not be taken in case of a felony, (1. Chitty’s Crim. Law, 5th Am. ed. p. 622, *623,) and it is by our statute only authorized to be taken on trials at nisi prius. There is, in our opinion, no authority, either common law or statutory, authorizing this court, or ány member of it, to sign a bill of exceptions.
The motions are overruled.
Motions overruled.