178 N.E. 907 | Ill. | 1931
The grand jury of Franklin county returned an indictment against Delbert B. Cobb, Ed. P. Loden and Lon Fox, charging them with larceny by embezzlement of funds of sub-district No. 9, district No. 12, of the United Mine Workers of America, in the amount of $10,500. After Fox, upon his motion, was given leave to be tried separately, Cobb and Loden were placed on trial before a jury, found guilty and sentenced to the penitentiary. Their motions for a new trial were overruled and their case was reviewed by this court. The judgment was here affirmed, (People v. Cobb,
Fox urges that the judgment should be reversed because of what he terms his primary and subordinate contentions. They are, (1) that since he is a member of sub-district No. 9 he is not an agent, servant or officer within the meaning of the embezzlement statute as he owns a fractional interest in the funds and therefore cannot be lawfully convicted of embezzlement; (2) that the special statute (Cahill's Stat. 1929, chap. 38, sec. 196,) providing that it is not a defense to the charge of embezzlement that the accused had an undivided interest in the funds embezzled when the money, goods or property belongs to a fraternal beneficiary society or subordinate lodge thereof does not apply to his case, for the reason that sub-district No. 9, or district No. 12, or the United Mine Workers of America, is not a fraternal beneficiary society. On the other hand, the People contend that Fox cannot bring these contentions forward in this court as an argument against the sufficiency of the indictment, inasmuch as he at no time had raised these particular contentions in the court below. However, it is argued by Fox that these contentions were raised in the court below on three different occasions: First, when he orally made his general motion to quash the indictment; second, in his motion for a new trial; and third, in his motion in arrest of judgment. Each of these motions will be examined in the order named.
It is a well established rule of law in this State that an oral general motion or a general written motion to quash an indictment, made without specifying any particulars wherein the indictment is defective, operates as a general demurrer. (People v. Nelson,
The indulgence by the law of certain legal presumptions is in aid of the endeavor to render justice fairly and impartially. When the reason or purpose for the operation of the presumption ceases it cannot be availed of. When a party makes a general motion to quash an indictment he is presumed to have advanced every objection to which the indictment is subject. When the matter is decided in the trial court and no specific objections have been made he cannot avail himself of that presumption if the record placed before the court of review shows that certain specific objections were solely relied upon. If it be established by the record that the party confined his objections to certain specified matters he is then placed in the same category with one who gives certain specific reasons in writing in support of a motion for a new trial and is deemed to have waived all other objections not therein specified. A judicial record connotes verity. It is a precise history of a suit from its commencement to its termination, including the conclusion of law thereon drawn by the proper officer for the purpose of perpetuating the exact state of facts. (Burge v. Gandy,
Fox states that he made his two contentions for the second time in the trial court when he filed his written motion for a new trial. In support of this motion he assigned specific reasons, the third one being, "The court erred in refusing to quash the indictment, and each count thereof, returned in said cause and upon which defendant was placed upon trial." That third point was improperly incorporated into his motion for a new trial, as this court has said in Guyer v. Davenport, RockIsland and Northwestern Railway Co.
Fox points to his written motion in arrest of judgment as his third effort to present his contentions in the trial court. This motion has one similarity with his motion for a new trial in that he assigns the same specific reasons in support of this last motion, word for word, that he gave in his motion for a new trial. After argument thereon the *380 court overruled his motion in arrest of judgment the same as it had the motion for a new trial, Fox in each instance excepting to the ruling.
Fox argues that even though his written motion in arrest of judgment might not have incorporated his two contentions, he would be saved by the fact that he also made an oral motion in arrest of judgment. The record fails to show the making of such an oral motion. He cites People v. Goldberg,
Fox states that every question he seeks to raise was raised before the lower court and argued at length. The record is our sole available source of information of what actually happened in the court below. His assertion is not borne out by the record, and we cannot accept his statement in preference to the record.
It is also contended that there was an absence of proof of the allegations of the indictment. The indictment charged that the United Mine Workers of America was an unincorporated fraternal beneficiary organization, and John T. Jones, one of the district officers of the organization, testified, *381 without objection or contradiction, that it was. The indictment alleged the funds to be the property of a subordinate branch of the United Mine Workers of America and the proof amply showed this to be true. The record shows that Fox had a fair trial before a jury and that his guilt was clearly established.
Finding the record free from reversible error, the judgment of the circuit court of Franklin county is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.