delivered the opinion of the court:
The motion to quash the indictment seems to have been made after plea. Such a motion cannot be considered after a plea is entered, unless, upon leave obtained, the plea is first withdrawn. The basis of the motion was that the description of the money (two dollars) which the prosecuting witness, Cahill, claimed was taken from him, was included with the -description of many pieces of money of other kinds, so that it was impossible for the defendant to tell what money he was.charged with taking by force from Cahill. This is not ground for quashing- the indictment. If the defendant is entitled to any relief under such circumstances, for the purpose of enabling him to determine which of the money described in the indictment the prosecution seeks to show was stolen by him, it is by motion of another character.
After the motion for a new trial had been overruled, defendant below sought first to have the record amended by striking out the plea of not guilty which appeared upon the record, for the reason that the defendant never had pleaded and for the reason that the plea of not guilty had been entered by a mistake of the clerk of the court, and, upon this motion being overruled, made a motion in arrest of judgment based upon the same grounds, which motion was also overruled. Where a defendant charged with a felony has not pleaded, he may, in the event of conviction upon trial, have the judgment arrested, (Johnson v. People,
When Patrick Cahill was testifying he stated that he recognized McKevitt at once when he saw him after his arrest; that he had been taken by the police to see several other men, but knew that none of them was the right man. Defendant moved to strike out the statement in reference to other men, which was overruled by the court. Whether he had been to look at other men was wholly "immaterial, unless, indeed, it could be shown that he had identified some other man as being the man who did the things with which he charged McKevitt. The testimony might well have been stricken out, but it seems to have been given without any objection being made prior to the statement, and we do not think a failure to strike it out prejudiced the defendant.
During the cross-examination of Cahill, counsel for defendant called Michael McKnight to come into court, and Cahill then testified, (indicating McKnight,) “that man is very like the McKnight with whom I said I was fighting.” When McKnight testified on the part of the defendant, the assistant State’s attorney was permitted to show, on his cross-examination, that he had been imprisoned in the penitentiary at Joliet for robbery. This was highly improper. In a criminal case it is proper to show that a witness has been convicted of an infamous crime for the purpose of affecting his credibility, but this can be done only by the introduction of the record of the conviction. (Bartholomew v. People,
It is also urged that it was improper to show that McKevitt resisted the police officers at the time of his arrest. We think this was proper in the first instance. If the person arrested was under the impression that he was being arrested for some other offense than the one for which he is being tried, and resisted because he did not want to be apprehended for such other offense, or for any reason other than a desire to avoid a prosecution and trial for the offense for which he is being tried, the burden rests upon him to show that fact, by cross-examination or otherwise.
The defendant testified in his own behalf, and for the purpose of affecting his credibility the People offered in evidence the record of the criminal court of Cook county, showing that he had theretofore been convicted of robbery and sentenced to the Illinois State Reformatory at Pontiac. This is said to have been improper, for the reason that the legislature has relieved persons who have undergone punishment in the reformatory from the consequences attendant upon a conviction of infamous crime where the punishment is by imprisonment in the penitentiary. This is a misapprehension.„ The statute .of 1845, which is still in force, provides:
“No person shall be disqualified as a witness in any criminal case or proceeding by reason of his interest in the event of the same, as a party or otherwise, or by reason of his having been convicted of any crime; but such interest or conviction may be shown for the purpose of affecting his credibility.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1901, chap. 38, sec. 426.)
By a statute passed in the same year it was provided as follows: “Every person convicted of the crime of murder, rape, kidnaping, willful and corrupt perjury or subornation of perjury, arson, burglary, robbery, sodomy or other crime against nature, incest, larceny, forgery, counterfeiting or bigamy, shall be deemed infamous, and shall forever thereafter be rendered incapable of holding any office of honor, trust or profit, or voting at any election, or serving as a juror, unless he is again restored to such rights by the terms of a pardon for the offense, or otherwise, according to the law.” In 1899 the legislature amended this section by adding thereto the words following: “Provided, however, that the foregoing shall not apply to any person who has been heretofore convicted and sentenced, or who may be hereafter convicted and sentenced to the Illinois State Reformatory at Pontiac.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1901, chap. 38, sec. 279.) This amendment relieves the person who has been convicted and imprisoned in the reformatory for one of the crimes specified in the last mentioned section, from those civil disabilities^ visited by that section upon one who has been convicted of the same crime and whose age is such that imprisonment in the penitentiary is th.e lawful punishment, but the amendment does not in anywise affect the operation of section 426 above quoted. The purpose of the legislature evidently was to lessen the misfortunes consequent upon conviction of any of the specified offenses in the cases of persons who, on account of their youth, were imprisoned in the reformatory instead of in the penitentiary, the object being to extend a leniency to the youthful offender which is denied to one of greater maturity. If the legislature took the view as urged by the plaintiff in error, that when a young culprit was discharged from the reformatory his reformation would be such that the fact that he had been convicted of one of the crimes denounced as infamous should no longer affect his credibility and should not be offered in evidence for that purpose, that body failed to express that view in any legislative enactment. Section 426, supra, is not altered by the amendment to section 279, supra, made in 1899. It is the conviction for infamous crime, and not the nature or mode of punishment, that may affect credibility. Bartholomew v. People, supra.
The indictment charged McKevitt with robbery, and further charged that he was at the time armed with a revolver, with the intent,, if resisted, to kill and maim Patrick Cahill, and that McKevitt had two confederates present, armed in the same manner, to aid and abet him in the robbery. The jury found him “guilty of robbery in manner and form as charged in the indictment.” By the judgment of the court the defendant was sentenced for the crime of “robbery, etc.,” and it is said that this is so indefinite that it is impossible to tell whether the sentence was for robbery in the ordinary acceptation of the term, in which event the maximum punishment is imprisonment for fourteen years in the penitentiary, or whether it is for robbery in the more aggravated form, which may be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary for the natural life of the offender. Following the reasoning of this court in Turley v. People,
A patient examination of this record reveals no reversible error.
The judgment of the criminal court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
