delivered the opinion of the court:
The criminal court of Cook County, trial by jury having been waived, found the defendant, Cecil Pride, guilty of the crime of burglary as charged in the first count of the indictment upon which he" was tried. .The court sentenced the defendant to the Illinois State Penitentiary for a term of not less than one year nor more than five years. Following the substitution of defendant’s present counsel for the counsel who represented him at the trial, arguments were heard on motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment. The motions were overruled, but the court vacated the original sentence and imposed a sentence for a term of not less than one year nor more than four years. Defendant prosecutes this writ of error to reverse the judgment.
Defendant’s original counsel stipulated that if one Francis Nash were called as a witness he would testify that he was an employee of the Kenny Construction Company, that on the morning of January 17, 1957, he examined the company’s movable trailer field office in which he had worked the day before and which he had locked when he left it, and that from such examination he discovered a window in the trailer had been smashed and 18 articles of personal property which had been in there when he locked the trailer were missing. On or about February 21, 1957, an engineer’s transit, which defendant’s counsel stipulated was one of the 18 articles burglariously taken from the trailer, was recovered from a pawn shop in Chicago.
Morris Bartman, an appraiser at the pawn shop, identified the defendant as the man who pawned the transit. Bartman testified that the defendant came to the pawn shop a week prior to February 16, 1957, and tried to pawn the transit but they could not agree on a price. He said the defendant came back a week later at which time the transit was pawned for $25. An application for .loan was filled out at the time of this transaction. Upon the application card is a signature purporting to be that of the defendant. On the back of the card is the name of the transit and its serial number, the defendant’s name and address, his driver’s license number and his social security number.
The defendant denied that he committed the burglary, that he ever had possession of any of the property burglariously taken and that he pawned the engineer’s transit. He testified that about a year prior to the time he was arrested his wallet containing his social security card and driver’s license was either stolen or lost.
The defendant contends that venue was not proved in this case, and, therefore, the conviction must be reversed and the cause remanded. It is a well established rule that the charge that a crime was committed in a particular county is a material averment and must be proved to sustain a conviction. (People v. Allen,
It is true that there was no direct evidence to establish in which city, county or State the burglary occurred. The only evidence of venue was that a trailer office belonging to the Kenny Construction Company and located at 8900 S. Anthony Avenue during the progress of construction work on the Calumet Skyway was burglarized.
In many of its earlier decisions this court adhered tо a technical view and insisted upon positive and strict proof of venue precisely as alleged. (See e.g. Moore v. People,
The defendant, nevertheless, cites People v. O’Gara,
An examination of the O’Gara case, the Strook case and many others following that line of reasoning leads to the inescapable conclusion that the court felt the witnesses had not stated the place where the crime was committed with sufficient specificity. This reasoning, however, presents a paradox in that it is inconsistent with common experience.
The statement attributed to Mr. Justice Holmes that judges need not be more naive than other men is particularly appropriate. They should use their common sense, common observation and general knowledge in considering evidence and drawing the proper inference from it. What is obvious to the layman should not be confounded by labeling it indefinite to the courts.
When a person is within a city or village and is talking with another person within the same city or village, he will describe a location within the said city or village by merely saying at the corner of such and such streets, or within the so-many-hundred block of such street or givе the exact street and number. The person who hears this incomplete address knows to what city and State the speaker is referring, since this is the common way (though not the best way) to describe locations. If the location is in some other city or village than where the speaker and listener are, the name of that other city or village will often be given for clarification. This incomplete manner of description is also common when referring to a city or village. Thus, when persons in and around Springfield, Illinois, speak to each other of Springfield they naturally mean Springfield, Illinois; if they mean Massachusetts or Missouri they say Springfield, Massachusetts, or Springfield, Missouri.
This method of describing locations is not used solely by the. man on the street. Our city newspapers when reporting an occurrence within the city of publication merely state the street and street number where it happened. If the occurrance was outside the city, the city wherein it happened is named either in the article or the date line. There is no reasonable doubt in anyone’s mind who reads the newspaper just where the occurrence took place. Local television news-broadcasters use a like .description in giving locations, and business men sponsoring local television programs will often so identify the location of their business establishment.
Describing a location by street and number is so much a part of our every day life that it cannot be ignored. A witness’s testimony should not be considered in a vacuum divorced from our general knowledge as to the manner in which things are said. And so, common experience dictates that a witness testifying in Chicago, when speaking of 8900 S. Anthony Avenue, is speaking of 8900 S. Anthony Avenue in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, although there very well may be an 8900 S. Anthony Avenue in some city other than Chicago, in some county other than Cook and in some State other than Illinois.
We would indeed be naive if we said under these circumstances that 8900 S. Anthony Avenue is an indefinite location. To suppose that the witness was speaking of 8900 S. Anthony Avenue in some other city, county or State would be unrealistic in the light of common knowledge as hereinbefore expressed. This is especially true since the trailer was being used in conjunction with the construction of the Calumet Skyway, a toll road located wholly within Cook County.
We recognize that the view expressed herein is not only a departure from our early holdings but tends to extend the scope of the Long and Allen cases. However, we are of the opinion that it will improve and accelerate the administration of justice, a goal which we constantly strive to attain, without prejudicing the legal rights of an accused. To hold otherwise would be to protect an accused by the naivety of the court.
The next question presented is whether it was proved that the defendant committed the burglary. The stipulation by defendant’s counsel as to what Francis Nash would testify if called as a witness amounted to a stipulation establishing the corpus delicti of the crime of burglary. He also stipulated that the engineer’s transit recovered from the pawn shop was one of the 18 items burglariously taken from the trailer. This court in People v. Pierce,
It is a well-settled rule that the recent, exclusive and unexplained possession of stolen property by an accused person in and of itself gives rise to an inference of guilt which may be sufficient to sustain a conviction in the absence of other facts and circumstances which leave in the mind of the jury, or the trial court if a jury is waived, a reasonable doubt as to his guilt. (People v. Wheeler,
The evidence pertaining to exclusive possession was the testimony of Bartman, the pawn shop appraiser. He identified the defendant as the man who tried on one occasion to pawn the transit for $100 and who later returned to the shop and pawned the same transit for $25. He testified that the defendant signed the application for loan card and that he, Bartman, wrote on the back of the card the license number and social security number the defendant gave him.
The defendant denied that he was the man who pawned the transit and stated that he was never in the рawn shop until after he had been arrested for this crime. He also testified that about a year before his arrest his wallet containing his social security card and driver’s license was either stolen or lost.
The defendant argues that Bartman has identified him, not as the man who pawned the transit, but as the man he saw in a picture from the bureau of identification. We see no merit in this contention. Bartman testified that the police showed him a picture of a man who he (Bartman) said looked like the pawner of the transit and that later while at the police station he identified the pawner of the transit in a “show up.” Thus, Bartman identified both a picture of defendant and the defendant in person as the man who pawned the transit.
Much is made of the fact that defendant and his wife at the time of his arrest expressly consented to the search of their home and that none of the articles taken in the burglary were found therein. Defendant asserts that a guilty person would not willingly consent to a search of his home. We do not believe that this fact adds to his assertion of innoсence; it may show only that the defendant and his wife were reasonably sure that none of the stolen articles would be found in their home.
It has been held repeatedly that the testimony of one witness alone, if it is positive and the witness credible, is sufficient to convict even though the testimony is contradicted by the accused. (People v. Arnold,
It is argued that even if Bartman’s testimony is true, the possession by the defendant of the transit is not evidence that he acquired it in the manner alleged by the prosecution. This argument is based on the fact that the transit was first offered to Bartman approximately 25 days after the burglary. The defendant contends that 25 days is not so recent or soon after the burglary as to raise any inference that he took it as alleged.
The defendant cites People v. Bennett,
In People v. Malin,
In People v. Litberg,
The rule in this State, notwithstanding the statement made in the Bennett case, is that precise time limits cannot be fixed as to when, as a matter of law, exclusive possession of stolen goods ceases to be recent. (People v. Nixon,
Defendant contends that because the items that were stolen (twelve hats, two engineer’s transits, one engineer’s level, one сalculator and two steel tapes) are not readily disposable, this fact tends to establish his innocence. He reasons that since the police searched his home and found none of these items, it should be inferred that he did not steal any of them. It .must be remembered that where a jury is waived, the credibility of witnesses, the. weight to be given their testimony, and inferences to be drawn therefrom are for the trial court who saw and heard the witnesses testify. (People v. Arnold,
Defendant contends next that his counsel at the trial represented him in such an incompetent manner that he was deprived of a fair and impartial trial. He asserts that his attorney improperly entered into numerous stipulations concerning evidence necessary to establish the People’s case, that he improperly injected into the case certain irrelevant and immaterial evidence concerning prior arrests and "incarcerations of defendant and that he failed to object to improper questions by the prosecutor and failed to move to strike improper and prejudicial evidence elicited by the prosecutor.
We have held that where a defendant in a criminal case employs counsel of his own choice, his judgment of conviction will not be reversed merely becausе his counsel failed to exercise the greatest skill or for the reason that it might appear, in looking back over the trial, that he had made some tactical blunder. (People v. Stephens,
There are three stipulations to which defendant’s counsel consented and which are now complained of. The first was to the corporate entity of Kenny Construction Company. The corporate entity of this company is not disputed. Counsel is not required to insist upon useless formalities and it is likely that the defendant gained rather than lost by eliminating the necessity for formal proof of a matter that could not be controverted. (People v. Kirkrand,
It is alleged that the defendant was prejudiced in the eyes of the trial judge when his counsel elicited from defendant and his wife testimony of defendant’s prior arrests, incarceration and general misconduct. Defendant’s counsel brought out the fact that the defendant 22 years earlier was involved in a robbery, that he was incarcerated for about five years and that he has worked continuously since he got out of the penitentiary in 1940. The aрparent theory of injecting this evidence into the case was to establish the defendant as a hard working, industrious man who had learned his lesson. This court has held that the previous good character of an accused is a circumstance to be considered in applying the rule of recent, exclusive and unexplained possession of stolen property, and in cases where all the circumstances fail to do more than create but slight evidence of guilt, evidence of previous good character mаy repel all presumptions of guilt. (People v. Litberg,
On cross-examination the defendant volunteered that he had been incarcerted for 17 months in Bridewell during 1953 and 1954. This, of course, tended to rebut the testimony of his good character for the past 17 years. Defendant’s counsel, in an attempt to restore some credence to the theory that defendant would not have committed this burglary, had defendant’s wife testify to the circumstances leading to his incarceration at Bridewell. She testified that defendant got “mixed up” with some young girls in the neighborhood and that it was she who had defendant incarcerated. She went on to say that- he is a playboy with ladies but after being married to him for 22 yеars she had never known him to steal anything.
It is argued that it was a mistake to permit Mrs. Pride to testify as she did. It would seem, however, that her testimony helped the situation as it then existed rather than harmed it.
We feel that endeavoring to prove good character when defendant’s character was subject to question shows at most poor judgment. It should be remembered, however, that we, along with defendant’s present counsel,.have.the benefit of hind sight in evaluating the tactics defendant’s ■first; counsel-used. The situation is like the Monday morning quarterbаck who says that the team should have run rather than passed after he knows that the pass did not work.
. In examining defense counsel’s conduct as a whole, the most that can be said is that he may have made some mistakes, particularly with regard to his failure to" interpose objections or motions to strike when some should have been made. In People v. Stephens,
The last contention of the defendant is that the conduct of the prosecutor was grossly improper and highly prejudicial and that consequently he was deprived of a fair arid impartial trial. He alleges that the prosecutor deliberately -attempted to establish the corpus delicti by hearsay evidence; ■ that- he-referred to and improperly attempted" to introduce in evidence a certain bureau of identification picture of defendant; and that he cross-examined the defendant and his wife concerning the details of other and unrelated offenses committed by the defendant.
The prosecution sought to establish the corpus delicti of the crime in this ■ case by its first' witness, Bernard J. Condon. On cross-examination it was discovered that the witness’s knоwledge of the crime was derived from a fellow employee, and the court, on defense counsel’s motion, ordered that all the testimony based on hearsay be stricken. We fail to see that this hearsay evidence engendered prejudice, because it was later stipulated that Francis Nash would testify to the corpus delicti of the burglary if called as a witness.
It is alleged that defendant was prejudiced because there was interrogation concerning a picture obtained from the bureau of identificatiоn. The defendant argues that the only inference that could be drawn was that he had a police record of other and unrelated arrests or offenses. The defendant cannot complain of prejudice on this ground, for it was he who freely and voluntarily appraised the court in his case in chief that he had a police record.
The defendant contends that when he was cross-examined the prosecutor deliberately sought, and actually succeeded in improperly injecting into the trial, evidence оf the defendant’s prior conviction for another unrelated offense, as well as his prior general misconduct. The defendant on direct examination testified that he had worked continuously since 1940. The prosecutor on cross-examination asked the defendant if he had worked for nine months after September 28, 1953. The defendant’s voluntary and unresponsive answer was, “If you mean about the stretch I did over in Bridewell, no, I wasn’t working then.” Under these circumstances, People v. Donaldson,
The defendant’s wife testified in direct examination that she had her husband incarcerated because he had gotten mixed up with some young girls in the neighborhood. On cross-examination the prosecutor asked Mrs. Pride about the girl involved. This was obviously an improper question and the People concede this fact in their brief. Although the question was improper, we are of the opinion that it could not have reasonably affected the result.
Since the record is free from substantial prejudicial error and the defendant’s guilt has been clearly established, the judgmment of the criminal court of Cook County is hereby affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
