77 N.E.2d 701 | Ill. | 1948
On June 26, 1936, three indictments were returned in the circuit court of Madison County, charging plaintiff in error with having participated with others in the commission of three separate felonies. In cause No. 4653 the indictment charged that plaintiff in error and two others, on February 28, 1936, while armed, robbed Henry Mensching *302 of the amount of $40. In cause No. 4654 plaintiff in error, Frank Moore, and Curtis Steele were charged with having made felonious assault upon Richard Beuttel on March 4, 1936, with the intent to rob him. In cause No. 4655, the same codefendants named in No. 4654 and plaintiff in error were charged with having assaulted Richard Beuttel on March 4, 1936, with the intent to murder him. The record discloses that on July 2, 1936, plaintiff in error appeared in court in custody in each case, and was furnished with a copy of the indictment and a list of witnesses and jurors. He tendered a plea of guilty in each case. It also appears the court advised him of the consequences of his plea and that he persisted in entering a plea of guilty. Thereupon the court accepted the several pleas and sentenced plaintiff in error to terms in the penitentiary in each case. In No. 4653, the armed robbery case, he was sentenced for a term of one year to life. In each of the others he was sentenced for a term of one to fourteen years. The judgment orders in the latter two cases directed that the sentences were to run concurrently with each other, but no mention was made of the sentence imposed in the armed robbery case. This writ of error is prosecuted limited to a review of the common-law record. Plaintiff in error appears pro se.
The common-law record in the several cases imports verity and cannot be contradicted by allegations in plaintiff in error's brief or statements embodied in the assignment of errors. (People
v. Evans,
Plaintiff in error states that after he was sentenced to imprisonment in each case he protested to the judge, stating that he wanted a lawyer, and that he had entered his plea of guilty on the representation of the State's Attorney that he would receive a penalty of one year in prison. It is stated in the brief that the trial court advised him that sentences had been imposed and that it was too late to consider such matter. There is no bill of exceptions and consequently there is no record showing such facts. Court records are so conclusive and final that the existence of the record or the facts recited therein cannot be contradicted or impeached by the affidavit of either parties to the record or bystanders, or by notes of a stenographer who reported the proceedings, or upon the recollection of the clerk of the court where the sentence was imposed. People v. Evans,
The rule is well settled that two or more sentences of a defendant to the same place of confinement run concurrently in the absence of specific provisions in the judgment to the contrary. (People v. Wooten,
The errors assigned which may be considered on the common-law record are without merit and the judgments of the circuit court of Madison County are affirmed.
Judgments affirmed.