48 N.E.2d 367 | Ill. | 1943
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *590 Plaintiff in error, Noah D. Rife, and his wife, Mabel, operators of a junk yard in the city of Danville, were jointly indicted at the January term, 1941, of the circuit court of Vermilion county, charged in three counts with receiving, buying and aiding in concealing 132 pounds of engine brass and 167 pounds of journal brass, and in a fourth count with receiving, buying and aiding in concealing 299 pounds of brass, all of the property of and stolen from Benjamin Wham, trustee of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway Company, a corporation. Each of the counts charged that defendant knew that said brass had been stolen. Defendants pleaded not guilty and were tried by a jury. Plaintiff in error was found guilty and the value *591 of the property received was found to be $9.35. His wife, the other defendant, was found not guilty. Motion for a new trial was denied and plaintiff in error was sentenced to the Illinois State Penal Farm at Vandalia for one year and fined $1000. A writ of error was sued out of the Appellate Court for the Third District, and on May 20, 1942, the Appellate Court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. A petition for rehearing was denied, and defendant has sued out this writ of error for a further review.
The roundhouse foreman in the Chicago and Eastern Illinois railway yards at Chicago, in October, 1940, supervised the replacing of brass on engines 3643 and 1908. The old brass taken off these engines was loaded into two freight cars, sealed and shipped to the railroad shops or roundhouse at Danville. One of these cars arrived on October 22, 1940, and was unloaded and put in the bins at the Danville shops on October 22 and 23. The other car came in November 2, 1940, and from that time until it was unloaded on November 8, stood upon the company's track at the storeroom in the Danville yards of the C. E.I. On November 5, 1940, plaintiff in error bought 187 pounds of railroad brass from a negro boy named Henry Brandon. On the day previous he had also bought brass from Brandon. On November 5, 1940, W.B. Sloan, the chief of police of the railway company, Theodore Alberts, general foreman of the company, and Robert Meade, a deputy sheriff, went to the junk yard of plaintiff in error, where they recovered 132 pounds of railway-engine brass and 167 pounds of journal brass. This brass was positively identified by Mr. Alberts from the engine numbers, 3643 and 1908, and the patent number A-D 830 stamped on the various pieces.
The contention is made that the evidence is not sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the brass described in the indictment was ever stolen, and also that *592
the evidence is not sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that plaintiff in error knew the brass had been stolen at the time he purchased it from Henry Brandon. Before there can be a conviction for receiving stolen property the evidence must show beyond a reasonable doubt, first, that the property has, in fact, been stolen by a person other than the one charged with receiving the property; second, that the one charged with receiving it has actually received it or aided in concealing it; third, that the person so receiving the stolen property knew that it was stolen at the time of receiving it; and, fourth, that he received the property for his own gain or to prevent the owner from again possessing it. (People v. Dalke,
Claude Mills, a deputy sheriff, testified that he and the sheriff were at the junk yard of plaintiff in error two or three times during the month of October, 1940, checking for stuff that had been stolen, and that they told Rife on these occasions that brass had been stolen from the railroad and also told him that if any of the brass came in and there was any ground that might be suspicious to notify the officers. The sheriff also testified that a little before the middle of October, 1940, he was at the junk yard, in *594 company with Mills, and had a conversation with Mr. and Mrs. Rife, in which he told them that people had been stealing brass, copper wire, and "stuff like that," and advised plaintiff in error not to buy any property he thought was "hot," but to call the sheriff. Harry Boucier, an employee of plaintiff in error at the time in question, testified that he was not working on November 5, 1940, but he saw Mr. and Mrs. Rife that evening at the Dixie lunch car, where he had a conversation with Rife in which Rife told him that he had a little business to take care of and wanted the witness to go with him, that the officers had been at his place that day and found railroad brass, and that he had something to get out of the way. The witness further testified that he then went with plaintiff in error to his place of business where they put some brass in sacks and a basket in the trunk of Rife's car, and the three of them, plaintiff in error, his wife, and the witness, then drove in Rife's car to the Diamond mine where they buried the brass in a slack pile and covered it up with slack; and that while they were there, Louis Byerly and his wife came down to the mine and Rife told Byerly that he had some stuff he wanted to hide away for a few days until the heat blew over. Byerly, operator of the mine, testified that on the night of November 5, 1940, he and his wife drove down to the mine, and saw there plaintiff in error, his wife, and Harry Boucier; that Rife came over to witness's car and talked to him, while Rife's wife sat in her car about fifteen or twenty feet away; that witness asked Rife what he was doing there, and Rife said he had come down there to hide some stuff; that when witness left Mr. and Mrs. Rife and Boucier were still there; that he did not see Boucier in Rife's car that night, but saw both Boucier and his car at the mine; that Boucier had not come in Rife's car but had driven his own car; that there were two other cars there that night besides witness's car; that he saw foot tracks from Rife's car to the slack pile; that on November *595 28, 1940, the sheriff and a deputy came to the mine and made inquiry, and on November 29 another deputy sheriff, Robert Meade, and Sloan, the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway Company chief of police, came down; that witness showed them where to dig, and upon digging into the slack pile they found about 600 pounds of brass in sacks and baskets; that on Saturday night, November 30, 1940, plaintiff in error accompanied by his wife came to witness's home and asked the witness to say, if he was called before the grand jury, that all plaintiff in error came down for on that particular night was to see the witness about buying some coal; that witness told him that he was not going to say anything until he saw a lawyer and plaintiff in error told him to go see a lawyer, and he would pay for everything. The witness further testified that Mrs. Rife also mentioned paying for the lawyer, and told the witness that if he did not testify as they wished he also might be implicated in it. Mrs. Byerly, wife of Louis Byerly, testified that about ten o'clock on the night of November 5, 1940, she and her husband drove to the mine; that she saw plaintiff in error and his wife there; that plaintiff in error came up and talked to witness's husband and witness heard him say he had come down to hide something. She also testified that there were two cars parked by the tipple not over two or three feet from the slack pile. Clint A. Larson, who was Byerly's partner in operating the mine, Sloan and Meade also testified that they were present when the brass was dug out of the slack pile.
Both plaintiff in error and his wife denied in toto the evidence of Boucier, Larson, Sloan, Meade, and Mr. and Mrs. Byerly, above set out. They testified that on the night of November 5, 1940, they drove down to the mine to see if there was any slack that should be moved from the mine because they had a contract with the mine to keep the slack hauled away, that Boucier did not go with them, but he was there when they arrived, and that he rode back with *596 them, leaving his car at the mine. They also denied positively that they had ever been warned by the officers in regard to stolen brass, but admitted that they had never made any report to the sheriff or his deputies in connection with any brass. Plaintiff in error testified that when Brandon sold him the brass, he told him that the brass was not stolen, that he had found it, that it was all right for plaintiff in error to buy it, and that if anyone inquired he could say that he had bought it from Brandon. He also testified that the possession of a large amount of heavy brass by a negro boy who claimed to have found it did not arouse his suspicions. Plaintiff in error, for impeachment purposes, proved that Harry Boucier was indicted and pleaded guilty in 1938 to petit larceny.
There was no direct evidence that plaintiff in error purchased the brass in question knowing it to have been stolen. The People relied upon circumstantial evidence for such proof, but this does not militate against the prosecution. (People v. Brunkala,
In the instant case plaintiff in error, after recent and repeated warnings to be on the alert for stolen railroad brass and to notify the sheriff's office of any suspicious circumstances, failed to report the circumstance to the officers when a negro boy offered him a large amount of such brass with no explanation other than that he had found it and had not stolen it. Plaintiff in error made no inquiry into the details of the negro's improbable story of his acquisition of such a large amount of brass. The story of plaintiff in error, of his purchase of this brass in good faith and innocence, is not supported either by any direct or circumstantial evidence. On the contrary, all the evidence points conclusively to, and is sufficient to warrant the jury in believing, beyond a reasonable doubt, that plaintiff in error knew when he purchased this brass that he was handling stolen property. Certainly, the evidence in regard to his actions, on the same day and immediately after the officers had discovered the brass in question in his possession, in hiding more railroad brass in the slack pile, together with his statement that he wanted to hide some stuff until the heat blew over, and the subsequent attempt of plaintiff in error and his wife to influence the testimony of the witness Byerly, are all strongly indicative of a consciousness of guilt. Plaintiff in error denies that he ever concealed brass in the slack pile, and suggests that Boucier, an ex-convict, stole the brass and hid it in the slack pile himself. Boucier's prior conviction of petit larceny was in evidence and was for the consideration of the jury as to his credibility and the weight to be given to his testimony. The jury was afforded the opportunity of observing the conduct and demeanor of this witness while testifying, as well as all other witnesses both for the People and the plaintiff in error, and is therefore in a better position to determine the credibility and the weight to be accorded their testimony than *598
is a reviewing court. (People v. Moore,
Plaintiff in error contends that it was error for the State's Attorney to ask Mrs. Rife, on cross-examination, if she was married to plaintiff in error, and when and where; that these questions could have no other purpose but to prejudice the jurors against the defendant by insinuating they were guilty of adultery and was an attempt to prove a separate and distinct offense. In view of the fact that the defendants put in evidence their marriage certificate, without objection, the jury could not have been prejudiced against the defendants by this cross-examination.
The admission of evidence in regard to the brass found in the slack pile is assigned as error, as an attempt to prove a separate and distinct offense. In a criminal case the guilt *599
of the accused cannot be established by showing that he committed offenses separate and distinct from the crime charged, but no principle of law forbids the introduction of relevant evidence tending to prove a fact material to the issue merely because the evidence discloses that the defendant committed other indictable offenses. (People v. Lenhardt,
Plaintiff in error complains of instructions 3, 5, 6, 9 and 11, given at the request of the People. Instruction 3 is identical with an instruction given for the prosecution in the case ofPeople v. Lenhardt, supra, wherein this court said there was no error in the giving of said instruction. While the giving of instructions defining reasonable doubt, especially when they are long and involved, has been repeatedly criticised by this court on the ground that the *600
term itself is usually more clear than any elaboration of it, and an attempted definition serves more to confuse than to enlighten the jury, (People v. Shapiro,
It is further assigned as error that the trial court refused to give instruction 4 tendered by the defendants. This instruction is as follows: "The jury are instructed by the court, that if they can reconcile the evidence in this case upon any other reasonable theory or hypothesis than that of the defendant's guilt, it is your duty to do so and acquit the defendants." Instruction 3 given at the request of defendants is an instruction of similar import and is substantially a repetition of the refused instruction. Said given instruction is as follows: "If under all the evidence there are two reasonable conclusions that may be drawn from all of the evidence, one of guilt and the other of innocence, then under the law, if you may do so as reasonable men, it is your duty to adopt the conclusion of innocence rather than guilt, and find the defendants not guilty." Neither the State nor the defense is entitled to a repetition of instructions, and to restate a proposition of law in different language is but a repetition. (People v. White,
It is contended that the circuit court erred in denying the motion of plaintiff in error for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence which rebutted the testimony of Harry Boucier, a witness for the People. The so-called newly discovered evidence is merely impeaching and not of such a character that it would probably change the result if a new trial were granted. There was no abuse of discretion in the overruling of the motion for a new trial. The evidence in this case fully sustains the verdict of the jury and there is no reversible error in the record.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.