52 N.E.2d 710 | Ill. | 1944
Plaintiff in error was indicted in Cook county for the crime of burglary. He was tried by the court without a jury, found guilty, and thereafter, on January 29, 1932, judgment and sentence were entered against him for said crime. He now, after a period of more than eleven years, brings the case here by writ of error for a review of the common-law record.
It is first argued that the record fails to affirmatively show that plaintiff in error was represented by counsel; that the language appearing in the final judgment and other orders of the court that counsel appeared for him at the trial and throughout the proceedings are mere recitals or conclusions of the clerk for which the record shows no substantial basis. The record of the court proceedings on December 4, 1931, when plaintiff in error was arraigned and entered a plea of not guilty; that of January 20, 1932, when the trial was had; and of January 29, 1932, when motion of plaintiff in error for probation was argued and denied and judgment entered, recites, in each instance, that plaintiff appeared in court in his own proper person and also by counsel. Plaintiff in error now seeks to impeach this showing by his own affidavit and that of his mother, which were filed in the office of the clerk of the trial court on September 3, 1943, and by the clerk, on that day, included *394
in and certified as a part of the common-law record. These affidavits have no place in the record and cannot be made a part thereof by the fact that the clerk has incorporated them therein.(People v. Tielke,
Plaintiff in error's contention that a jury was not properly waived because the record does not show that he signed a written jury waiver cannot be sustained. He cites no statute or other authority and we know of none requiring the waiver of a jury trial to be in writing.
The court, after hearing the evidence, found plaintiff in error "guilty of burglary as charged in the indictment." Plaintiff in error contends that as the indictment specifically charges him with the crime of "burglary with the intent to commit larceny" and as the gist of said crime is the intent to commit larceny, this was a finding that he was guilty of only one element of the crime, and the judgment based thereon is void because not responsive to the charge in the *395
indictment. This same contention was recently presented in the case of People v. Hoffman,
The above-mentioned case of People v. Hoffman,
Other errors assigned not being mentioned in the brief or referred to in the argument, need not be considered.
As we find no reversible error in the record before us, the judgment of the criminal court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *396