delivered the opinion of the court:
Defendant was convicted of burglary after a jury trial held in the then criminal court of Cook County and sentenced to a term of not less than 10 nor mоre than 20 years in the penitentiary. He prosecutes this appeal from the conviction, alleging that certain constitutional infirmities warrant a reversal.
The testimony indicates that the Bower Photocopy Service in Chicago was broken into sometime between Novеmber 25 and November 27, 1959. Missing from the store on the latter date were a checkwriter, artists’ materials, an air brush, 35 checks marked "Bower Photoсopy Company” and numerous other items. Roy Barsema testified that he found some of the above items on January 25, i960, in a shopping bag in his yard at Round Lake, Illinois, and that defendant lived temporarily at his home for about two weeks in January, i960. The found articles were transferred to the рolice and subsequently were used in confronting defendant.
Several Chicago police officers testified that on January 26, i960, defendant rеadily admitted burglarizing the Bower Company. They testified that defendant said he and a man named “Frank” broke into the store and took the above mentioned items. Evelyn Manson testified that defendant, known to her as “J. E. Hickman”, cashed one of the stolen checks for $40 payable to that name and signed Richard K. Bower. Mr. Bower’s middle initial was shown to be “G”, not “K”, and Bower testified that the signature on the check was not his.
The defendant, thе only witness for the defense during the trial, testified that he did not burglarize the store, stating that he was with friends on November 26, 1959, until 2 :oo A.M. on the 27th and was not at the store. He testified that the only reason he confessed was because the police threatened to “put his wife in jail” and that he feаred for her safety.
In order to corroborate his alibi, defendant sought to have his wife and stepson testify. The trial court allowed him to make several phone calls, and issued subpoenas to insure the wife’s and stepson’s appearance. Three unsuccessful attempts to serve the subpoenas were made, and the trial was concluded without these prospective witnesses.
Prior to the denial of the motion for a new trial and during the argument thereon, defendant’s wife testified that she had hurt her ankle and had gone to a friend’s house on the days thе subpoenas were attempted to be served. She said she did not know of the pendency of the trial, and steadfastly maintained her husband’s innocence, corroborating his alibi. However, defendant’s wife had visited the defendant in jail and had admittedly discussed the trial with him, both before and аfter its occurrence, and the refusal to grant a new trial on this ground was not error.
Since the only ground set forth in defendant’s motion for new trial was the alleged denial of his right to have witnesses called in his behalf, and since he did not raise any of the questions sought to be advanced here in his written motion for a new trial, they are deemed waived. (People v. Greer,
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is accordingly affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
On petition for rehearing defendant calls attention to his oral motion in arrest of judgment, made in addition to his written motion for a new trial, and argues that since the State’s objectiоn to the oral motion was overruled, all errors appearing in the record were thereby preserved for review. He relies upоn People v. Prohaska,
It is thus apparent that the alleged errors now sought to be raised (admissibility of" confession, improper cross-examination and prejudicial argument), which were not contained in the original written motion for a new trial, all require reference to the evidence for their resolution and were not embraced within the scope of the oral motion in arrest of judgment mаde in the trial court. The fact that objections to the motion were overruled does not preserve for review that which was never included therein.
We accordingly adhere to our original opinion.
