People v. Donahoe

223 Ill. App. 277 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1921

Mr. Justice Barnes

delivered the opinion of the court. '

This writ of error brings up for review the order of the lower court dismissing a motion in the nature of a writ of error cor am nobis, made by plaintiff in error under section 89 of the Practice Act (Cahill’s Ill. St. ch. 110, ¶ 89), to correct wrhat is alleged to have been an error of fact committed at the trial of a criminal case entitled as above, in which he was defendant.

The record discloses that the indictment in said case was returned in July, 1912, and charged plaintiff in error with a “conspiracy at common law,” the precise character of which, however, is nowhere set out in the record; that plaintiff in error was convicted thereunder and fined $2,000; that the conviction was affirmed by this court (at the February term, 1917, vol. 198 Ill. App. 1) and by the Supreme Court (at the October term, 1917, vol. 279 Ill. 411); and that the mandate of this court was stayed by the court below pending its consideration of said motion, which was made December 5, 1919, and dismissed June 7, 1920, and during the time allowed for filing a bill of exceptions which expired December 6, 1920. From our records it appears that on December 6,1920, after suing out this writ, plaintiff in error was denied a supersedeas, and as he has appeared personally before us a full year later, presumably the judgment has in the meantime been enforced and satisfied, and therefore this proceeding is seemingly a moot one. For if he has paid the penalty of his conviction and were granted a new trial, it is apparent that he could successfully plead that he had been once in jeopardy.

But considered upon its merits the motion was properly dismissed. The court at once overruled the motion to dismiss the proceeding and over the State’s objection permitted plaintiff in error to introduce evidence. At the close of his evidence the motion to dismiss was renewed and granted. The 'first motion to dismiss was equivalent to a demurrer to plaintiff in error’s motion or petition, and the second motion to a demurrer to the evidence, and they properly present the question before us. (People v. Noonan, 276 Ill. 430-433; Cramer v. Illinois Commercial Men’s Ass’n, 260 Ill. 516-518.)

Plaintiff in error’s motion was supported by a verified petition which is too verbose and diffuse to set forth .at length. It contains much argument and conclusions of the pleader, and while it refers to the indictment in the criminal case and the bill of exceptions‘preserved therein and offers to produce them, neither is set forth in the verified petition or otherwise preserved in this record. Without knowledge of the specific charges on which the conviction rested it , cannot be told whether had the alleged mistake of fact on which plaintiff in error’s motion is based been known to the court it would have prevented his conviction. The burden was upon plaintiff in error in the first place to aver and then to prove the facts sufficiently to enable the court to determine whether the alleged mistake of fact was of that character. The absence both of sufficient averment and proof justified the dismissal of his motion.

We shall, however, state his main contentions. Briefly they are that at the trial of the criminal case the State introduced evidence of certain proceedings had in a civil case in the circuit court of Cook county, entitled John Henning v. Clarence S. Funk, that was referred to in said indictment; that Judge Mazzini Slusser of the Sixteenth Judicial District presided at such trial; that he was not authorized to preside in such court as he was not duly assigned thereto by the Supreme Court or a justice thereof, as required by the Act approved June 5, 1909, or by compliance with the statutes relating to the interchange of judges, or the Act of 1905, providing for branch circuit courts; that neither plaintiff in error, nor his counsel, nor the presiding judge in the criminal case knew of the failure to comply with such statutes, and that plaintiff in error did not learn thereof until long after the disposition of the criminal case; that because of the lack of authority of Judge Slusser to preside at the trial of said Henning case the proceedings therein were null and void and could not be used as competent evidence against him, and that the failure to discover these facts at the time of the trying of the criminal case constituted a mistake of fact that should now be remedied by granting him a new trial.

The character of facts intended to be reached by a writ of coram nobis, or a motion made under section 89 of the Practice Act (Cahill’s Ill. St. ch. 110, ¶ 89), are referred to in People v. Noonan, supra, and enumerated in 5 Encyc. Pl. & Pr. 27, as follows:

“The office of the writ of coram nobis is to bring the attention of the court to and obtain relief from errors of fact, such as the death of either party pending the suit and before judgment therein; or infancy, where the party was not properly represented by guardian; or coverture, where the common-law disability still exists; or insanity, it seems, at the time of the trial; or a valid defense existing in the facts of the case, but which, r without negligence on the part of the defendant, was not made, either through duress or fraud or excusable mistake, these facts not appearing on the face of the record, and being such as, if known in season, would have prevented the rendition and entry of the judgment questioned.”

The alleged mistake of fact in the case at bar does not seem to come within the scope of such a proceeding. If it does, it is such as is referred to in the last-quoted clause.

But from anything that appears in this record we do not think it can be said that the alleged disqualification of Judge Slusser to try the Henning case constituted a “valid defense” to the entire indictment, nor that the failure to resort to such defense was “without negligence” on the part of plaintiff in error or “through excusable mistake,” nor that the alleged mistake of fact was “such as, if known in season, would have prevented the rendition and entry of the judgment in question.”

It appears that plaintiff was charged with a: conspiracy at common law. It is fundamental that the essence of such a conspiracy is the unlawful agreement, and that it may exist and be proven without showing any overt act to consummate it. While the Supreme Court held that the,record of the Henning case was admissible “as one of the elements or steps in the controversy” (People v. Donahoe, 279 Ill. 429), it may be inferred, not only from the failure to show the contrary in this record, but from the long recitation in said decision of incriminating facts that preceded the trial of the Henning case, that its proceedings were not essential to establish the unlawful agreement. The court said:

“There was proof made by the prosecution tending strongly to show a conspiracy, and plaintiff in error’s connection with it, before the files and papers in Henning v. Funk and the testimony in that case were offered in evidence.” (p. 429.)

From this quotation it would appear that there was enough proof to sustain a conviction without proof of matters with respect to which plaintiff in error claims there was a mistake of fact, and there is not a sufficient showing in this record to the contrary.

It .is well settled that “error in fact which may be assigned in a motion must be some fact unknown to the court, which, if known, would have precluded the rendition of the judgment” (Cramer v. Illinois Commercial Men’s Ass’n, 260 Ill. 516; 5 Encyc. Pl. & Pr. 27). If, therefore, as may be presumed without a showing to the contrary, there was enough other evidence to sustain the conviction, then so far as the merits of this motion are concerned it is immaterial whether Judge Slusser was not duly authorized to try the Henning case, for that fact would not have precluded the rendition of the judgment. Hence, had the court known the alleged state of facts relied upon in support of the motion, it would merely have led to the exclusion of evidence not vital to a conviction. Under such circumstances its admission was at most an error at law.

As a basis for “excusable mistake” and “want of negligence” the petition contains the remarkable statement that plaintiff in error and his attorney and the trial judge were ignorant of the statutes which plaintiff in error contends were not complied with. We need not call attention to the elementary rule that one is presumed to know the law, or to the familiar maxim that ignorance of the law excuses no one. But it appears from the petition that plaintiff in error participated as a lawyer for Henning in the trial of the Henning case and hence must have known as a matter of fact that the judge presiding at the trial was not a judge of this judicial district and should have been duly assigned thereto. If under such circumstances he is not estopped from questioning the authority of that judge to preside in the trial of a case he was prosecuting, he can hardly be excused from negligence in failing to investigate the validity of the proceedings when he had notice from the indictment that his connection with that case and trial were to be used against him in the criminal case.

We have already stated that the indictment nowhere appears in this record. But referring, as we may, to the Supreme Court decision in People v. Donahoe, supra, for enlightenment as to its character, it appears that the indictment charged a conspiracy for various unlawful objects, among* them, to defame the good name, etc., of Clarence S. Funk, to obtain money by accusing him of adultery with Henning’s wife, and to extort money from him by maliciously bringing an action against him for damages for alienating the affections of Henning’s wife. Evidence of the actual trial of the case of Henning v. Funk, or of what there took place, was manifestly not indispensable to the proof of any of these charges, there being proof, as shown by the Supreme Court decision, of bringing the Henning suit and of antecedent facts connecting plaintiff in error with the unlawful conspiracy to bring it.

It appears from the petition that this very evidence was objected to at the trial of the criminal case, and that the objections were “broad enough to cover the illegality” of the proceedings in the Henning case. Even if we may not infer, therefore, that the question before us was passed upon by the reviewing court, nevertheless under such a “broad objection” it could have been raised, and what might have been presented under the objection must be deemed adjudicaba.

But even if the averments of fact in support of the motion were sufficient to present an issue of fact, and even if the evidence introduced to support it was sufficient, yet only an unimportant part of such evidence is preserved in the bill of exceptions. It appears therefrom that certain pages of the abstract of the bill of exceptions filéd in the criminal case were considered by the court as evidence in support of the petition, but such evidence has not been preserved. Not having been preserved, plaintiff in error must fail in his assignment of errors based thereon. (Maine v. Cosner, 67 Ill. 536.)

We feel that we have given more space to the consideration of this question than its merits deserve. This motion was made about 5 years after the judgment of conviction and after it had been sustained in the court of final resort. If a new trial can now be had on such grounds as are set forth in this record then the finality of judgments and the policy- of the law to end litigation stand on weak foundations.

The action of the court in dismissing the petition will be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Gridley, P. J., and Morrill, J., concur.