155 N.E. 316 | Ill. | 1927
Patrick P. Dwyer having been convicted in the criminal court of Cook county of robbery, being armed at the time with a dangerous weapon, has sued out a writ of error to reverse the judgment.
The transcript of the record contains no bill of exceptions, but it is argued that the indictment, which consisted of a single count, was insufficient because it did not charge that the defendant was armed with a deadly weapon at the time of the robbery. The indictment charges the robbery in terms which are not questioned, and continues, "that the said Patrick P. Dwyer then and there was armed with a certain dangerous weapon, to-wit, a certain pistol." The plaintiff in error contends that the allegation that he was armed with a pistol is insufficient without the further allegation that the pistol was loaded, because a pistol not loaded is not a dangerous weapon per se. A deadly weapon has been defined as one dangerous to life; (Cosby
v. Commonwealth,
The objection is made that the sentence of the court, which under the terms of the Parole act sentenced the plaintiff in error for the crime of robbery, being at the *366
time armed with a dangerous weapon, to confinement in the penitentiary from his delivery to the warden, provided such imprisonment should not exceed the maximum term for the crime for which the defendant was convicted, without setting forth in the sentence what the maximum was, imposed upon the warden of the penitentiary or the members of the Division of Pardons and Paroles the duty of determining the term for which the plaintiff in error was sentenced and was an attempt by the court to delegate its judicial powers to ministerial officers or bodies. This sentence was in accordance with the requirements of the Parole act and left nothing to be determined as to the term for which the plaintiff in error was sentenced, the term for the crime for which he was convicted being fixed by the statute at any term of years not less than ten years or for life, but subject, under the provisions of section 2 of the Parole act, to be terminated earlier than the maximum by the Department of Public Welfare, with the approval of the Governor. The provision of the Parole act for an indeterminate sentence has been held valid (People v. Nehrkorn,
It is also objected that the record does not show that anymittimus or other writ or process was ever issued authorizing the sheriff to deliver the plaintiff in error to the warden of the penitentiary or authorizing the warden to take him into custody or imprison him. The object of the writ of error is to review the record of the judgment and not the proceedings for its execution. That judgment is free from error, and such proceedings, if any, as have been taken for its enforcement are not brought before us by this writ.
The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *367