delivered the opinion of the court:
A jury in the criminal court of Cook County found the defendant, George Duszkewycz, guilty of forcible rape and incest. The two offenses were charged in separate counts of a single indictment. Upon the count that charged forcible rape, the jury fixed the penalty (111. Rev. Stat. 1957# chap. 38, par. 801) at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of five years. Upon the count that charged incest, the judge fixed the penalty at imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than 19 nor more than 20 years. The judgment provided that the two sentences should run concurrently.
The two offenses of which the defendant was found guilty involved a single act — the defendant’s forcible rape of his ten-year-old daughter. On this writ of error the defendant contends that “the imposition of two sentences was improper and prejudicial where one act and one victim were alleged.”
There is no doubt that it was proper to join the two charges in a single indictment, and to try them together, since they were both based upon the same occurrence. (People v. Wilfong,
Force and lack of consent are essential elements of the charge of rape upon which the defendant was convicted, (People v. Jeanor,
None of our decisions appear to have dealt with the precise problem. The closest of our cases is People v. Stingley,
In People v. Schlenger,
While neither the Stingley case nor the Schlenger case is precisely in point, the views there expressed indicate the basis of decision in the present case. The Stingley case makes it clear that two punishments can not be imposed for a single act, even though different ingredients are involved in the two crimes. In that case, however, the two sentences were identical, and it was not necessary to decide which should be set aside. It was sufficient to hold, as the court held, that “the satisfaction of one will satisfy both.” (
In the present case we are of the opinion that only one sentence should have been imposed, and that sentence should have been for the greater offense. The relative gravity of the two offenses involved in the single act in this case can not depend upon the sentences actually imposed, on the rape charge by the jury and on the charge of incest by the judge. A touchstone more reliable than the subjective reaction of different tribunals to the same facts is required, and we therefore turn to the appraisal made by the General Assembly.
When this case was tried, the punishment for incest between father and daughter was imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than one year nor more than 20 years. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1961, chap. 38, par. 374.) Sentence was to be imposed by the judge. The punishment for rape, however, was a definite sentence of imprisonment for a definite term of not less than 1 year, and extending to life. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1961, chap. 38, par. 490.) For many years treason, murder, rape, and more recently kidnapping, have been set apart from all other offenses. In the case of these offenses a definite rather than an indeterminate sentence has been required, and if the case is tried by a jury the jury has been required to fix the punishment. It is clear that the General Assembly has regarded rape as the more serious of the two offenses involved in this case. It follows that the sentence imposed on the charge of incest must be set aside.
A further contention is made on behalf of the defendant that certain statements made to the jury by the trial judge resulted in a coerced verdict. The jury retired to deliberate on the morning of Thanksgiving eve. About five o’clock in the afternoon, the jury was brought into open court and the foreman of the jury was asked how the vote stood. He replied, “Eight-four, sir.” The judge then asked, “If I give you another hour, do you think you will be able to reach a verdict ? Do you think so, in your judgment ?” The answer was “No, sir.” And when the judge asked, “Do you think it will take longer than one hour?”, the answer was, “Well, after discussion and all that, I believe it’s going to — it just isn’t going to be reached. The judge then said, “Well, I will send you back for one hour, six o’clock. You see if you can’t reach a verdict.”
Shortly before six o’clock, the jury was again brought into the courtroom and informed by the judge that dinner had been arranged and that cigarettes would be distributed to them. They had dinner and continued their deliberations. Later that night after a further interval, the duration of which is not indicated by the record, the jury returned its verdicts.
The defendant asserts that “the action of the trial court in asking the jury for its numerical division and in setting a time limit on its deliberations was prejudicial to the defendant.” What was said in People v. Golub,
Finally, the defendant argues that his guilt was not proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The testimony of the prosecutrix was corroborated by her brother and her mother. Against this we have the defendant’s denial. No witnesses were called to corroborate the alibi to which he testified. We see no reason to interfere with the jury’s appraisal of the credibility of the witnesses.
The judgment of the criminal court of Cook County upon the count of the indictment charging rape is affirmed, and its judgment upon the count charging incest is reversed.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
