Davids v. People

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—The first error assigned by the plaintiff in error is that the court below erred in sustaining the People’s demurrer to plaintiff in error’s plea in abatement.

Plaintiff in error was indicted under the name of William Davids. He filed the following plea in abatement:

“Now comes William David, Jr., who is indicted by the name of William Davids, in his own proper person, and having heard the said indictment read, says that William David, Jr., is his name, and that by that name he was always called and known; without this, that he, the said William David, Jr., now is or at any time heretofore has been called or known by the name of William Davids, as by the said indictment is supposed; and this he, the said William David, Jr., is ready to verify, wherefore he prays judgment of the said indictment, and that the same may be quashed.”

This plea was sworn to by the plaintiff in error on January 22, 1901; and the People filed a general and special demurrer thereto which was sustained.

It is claimed by plaintiff in error that the two names, “William Davids” and “William David, Jr.,” cannot be regarded as the same name under the doctrine of idem . sonans. It is well settled that the word “Junior,” or its abbreviation, “Jr.,” is not part of a person’s legal name. “The word ‘Junior,’ or ‘Jr.,’ is merely a matter of description and is no part of a person’s legal name.” (Bonardo v. People, 182 Ill. 411.)

In Gonzalia v. Bartelsman, 143 Ill. 634, this court held that “the doctrine of idem sonans cannot be made to apply to two such distinct names as Meyer and Meyers.” It would seem to follow, therefore, that the doctrine of idem sonans cannot be applied to the names “David” and “Davids.” It is true that, in Stevens v. Stebbins, 3 Scam. 25, where suit was brought by one “Stevens Stebbins, ” and the note introduced in evidence was payable to “Steven Stebbins,” it was held that there was no material variance; but there, inasmuch as the name “Stebbins” began with “S,” “Steven Stebbins” and “Stevens Stebbins” would come under the rule of idem sonans, because the two names, pronounced together, would have the same sound, whether the first name was Steven or Stevens.

Although it may be true, however, that the doctrine of idem sonans is here inapplicable, nevertheless we are of the opinion that the court below committed no error in sustaining the demurrer to the plea in abatement. “As to pleas in abatement, it is to be observed that great strictness is required in framing them as they are dilatory, not going to the merits of the action. They must be signed by counsel—they must specify truly the parties in the cause.” (Holloway v. Freeman, 22 Ill. 197.) “When a dilatory plea is filed, * * * the law requires the strictest technicality, especially in the title of the cause, the court, and term, and time, and everything which serves to identify it with the cause in which it is intended to be filed.” (Fowler v. Arnold, 25 Ill. 284.) Again, pleas in abatement and of misnomer cannot be pleaded after a general imparlance or continuance. (Holloway v. Freeman, supra; Archer v. Claflin, 31 Ill. 306; Union Nat. Bank v. First Nat. Bank, 90 id. 56; Roberts v. Thomson, 28 id. 79). In Feasler v. Schriever, 68 Ill. 322, it was held that pleas in abatement, being calculated to defeat justice, are required to be drawn with strict accuracy, even as to form, and, if there be the least inaccuracy in them, they cannot be supported.

In the case at bar, the plea in abatement was signed by plaintiff in error in person, and not by counsel. The plea was not properly entitled, and did not truly specify the parties in the cause. It is entitled “The People of the State of Illinois v. William David, Jr.” The proper entitlement of the cause is, “The People of the State of Illinois v. William Davids.” Again, in this case the cause was continued from the October term, 1900, to the January term, 1901, upon the motion of plaintiff in error, supported by affidavit; and, at the January term, a motion for a further continuance was made by plaintiff in error, which was overruled. By entering his appearance and moving to continue the cause the plaintiff in error acknowledged the jurisdiction of the court, and thereafter it was too late to plead in abatement. The demurrer filed by the People specifies, as grounds of demurrer, the objections which have been thus indicated; and a defective plea in abatement may be demurred to. (Nixon, Ellison & Co. v. Southwestern Ins. Co. 47 Ill. 444; 1 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. p. 39). In some cases, a plaintiff is allowed to practically defeat a plea in abatement without any replication by showing on the trial facts, which render it nugatory. (1 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. p. 39).

In the case at bar, the plea in abatement admits in its opening words that plaintiff in error, who claims that his real name is William David, Jr., is indicted in this case by the name of William Davids. Plaintiff in error thereby admits that William David, Jr., and William Davids are one and the same person. The proof also sustains this averment, inasmuch as the witness W. A. Schafer has sworn that the plaintiff in error, who was seated at the time in the court room, is the same person who is designated as defendant in the suit; and that he is known both as William Davids and as William David, and is called by both names. (Feasler v. Schriever, supra). The evidence is clear that the person indicted and tried is the same person who is named in the indictment. (Bonardo v. People, supra).

Second—The second error, assigned by the plaintiff in error, is the overruling by the trial court of his motion for a continuance of the cause, made at the January term, 1901. There was no error in overruling this motion for a continuance. It was based upon an affidavit setting forth that one Gregg, a surveyor and civil engineer, was a material witness and was absent from the State. The affidavit stated that Gregg had made a survey, and taken a series of levels and measurements, at the place where the crime is alleged to have been committed, a few days after the shooting took place, and that, from the survey and measurements thus made by Greg'g, he would swear that the bullet could not have struck Gravelot in the manner stated by the latter in his testimony. The affidavit does not clearly show, that the survey and measurements, which the absent witness had made, could not be re-made by another surveyor or competent man. It is not claimed that Gregg was personally present, or knew anything about the facts of the difficulty. Again, the affidavit does not show diligence in the issuance of a subpoena for the witness. The subpoena was only issued a few days before the commencement of the trial, whereas more than four months elapsed between the return of the indictment and the time of the trial. Nor does the affidavit show in what the defense of plaintiff in error consisted. But the main objection to the affidavit is its failure to show the materiality of the evidence of the absent witness. On the contrary, the affidavit shows that the evidence of the absent witness would not be material. This is an indictment for an assault with intent to commit murder. The alleged object of the testimony of the absent witness was to show that the bullet, discharged from the pistol by plaintiff in error, could not have struck the head of Gravelot. If a person fires a revolver at or towards another either with malice prepense, or with a total disregard of human life, he may be convicted of an assault with intent to kill and murder the person so attacked; and, in such case, it makes no difference whether such person was struck by the shot or not. (Conn v. People, 116 Ill. 458). If, therefore, plaintiff in error made the assault upon Gravelot with intent to commit murder, it was immaterial whether Gravelot was struck by the bullet discharged from the pistol or not.

Third—The third error assigned by the plaintiff in error is the refusal of the court to permit the prosecuting witness, Gravelot, to answer certain questions proposed to him upon his cross-examination by counsel for the plaintiff in error. Some of these questions were as follows:

“Did you hear anything said, which would indicate to you, or did indicate to you, the feelings of those people surrounding Mr. David there, towards him?"
“You knew that, some short time before that, a mob of men had taken him from his home in the night time, and had maltreated him, did you not?”
“Do you know, do you have any personal knowledge as to what transpired at the time of this white-capping affair?”
“Do you know whether Mr. W. A. Schafer was a member of that gang?”
“Do you know whether Mr. David, from anything that was said before this trouble, * '* * had any suspicion or belief as to whether Mr. Schafer, who testified here yesterday, was a member of that mob?”

Each of these questions was objected to by counsel for the State, and the objection was sustained, and exception was taken by counsel for plaintiff in error. We are inclined to think that the trial court erred in sustaining the objections to these questions.

It is apparent from this record, that there was a strong ■ feeling of animosity in the village of Chebanse against the plaintiff in error. About a year prior to this difficulty with Gravelot, certain persons had come to the farm of plaintiff in error and committed an assault upon him, spoken of by the witnesses as the “white-capping affair,” and which is referred to more at length in the statement preceding this opinion. The difficulty, which led to this previous assault upon the plaintiff in error, had relation to a separation which had taken place between himself and his wife. The account, which Grave-lot held against plaintiff in error, was made up of charges against him on account of goods purchased from Grave-lot by his wife. Disputes had taken place between Grave-lot and plaintiff in error in regard to this account several times during the course of a period, extending over more than a year prior to the difficulty of August 16, 1900.

Plaintiff in error, as is shown by the evidence, believed that some of the men, who attacked him on August 16, 1900, at the time he drew the pistol on Gravelot, were among those who had mobbed him previously in May, 1899. He swears that he recognized W. A. Schafer as one of the men, who were members of that mob in May, 1899. He also swears that Gravelot was there, and that Eyerley was there, and he declines to say whether Maas was there or not.

It is quite manifest that, among the persons who appeared upon the scene at the time of the difficulty with Gravelot on August 16,1900, there were either some who had in the year previous been engaged in mobbing plaintiff in error, or some who sympathized with the attack, which had been made upon him by that mob. In view of this fact, the first question of those above quoted was properly addressed to the prosecuting witness, Gravelot, and he should have been allowed to answer it.

The actions of the people, surrounding plaintiff in error at the time of his difficulty with Gravelot on August 16,1900, and the declarations made by them at that time, were a part of the res gestee. Whenever it becomes important to show, upon the trial of a cause, the occurrence of any fact or event, it is competent and proper also to show any accompanying act, declaration or exclamation which relates to, or is -explanatory of, such fact or event. Such acts, declarations or exclamations are known to the law as res gestae. (Lander v. People, 104 Ill. 248).

“Declarations, to be a part of the res gestee, are not required to be precisely concurrent in point of time with the principal fact if they spring otit of the principal transaction, if they tend to explain it, are voluntary and spontaneous, and are made at a time so near it, as to preclude the idea of deliberate design; then they are to be regarded as contemporaneous, and are admissible.” (People v. Vernon, 35 Cal. 49, and authorities there cited).

In Brennan v. People, 15 Ill. 511, the prosecution was permitted to ask one of the witnesses if he saw “any indication of a difference of opinion or purpose among the persons composing the crowd who rushed to the barn;” and we said in regard to this question (p. 515): “The question propounded to the witness was proper. It called for facts, and not for the opinions of the witness. It appeared from the evidence, that Story was followed by a crowd, and killed. It was important to show with what intent the crowd pursued him. This was clearly a part of the res gestee. It was competent to ascertain this intention by interrogating witnesses, who observed the operations of the crowd, whether they discovered any difference of purpose among those composing it.”

Moreover, if an answer to the question had developed the fact, that the feelings of the people surrounding the plaintiff in error were hostile, such testimony would tend to show the apprehension of harm entertained by the plaintiff in error at the time of the difficulty.

Again, the witness Gravelot was the prosecuting witness, and a trial court should not prohibit a full cross-examination of a prosecuting witness. It is competent to show, on the cross-examination of such a witness, that he entertained feelings of ill-will and hostility towards the accused. (Tracy v. People, 97 Ill. 101). On the trial for an assault with intent to commit murder, the broadest latitude should be allowed to the defendant in the cross-examination of witnesses, who are active partisans in the difficulty leading to the assault, and who are hostile in their feelings against the defendant. (Sutton v. People, 119 Ill. 250).

In reference to the questions addressed to the witness about the “white-capping affair” and the maltreatment of the defendant in the night time in May, 1899, by a mob of men, it is to be observed that the witness, Gravelot, had referred to this “white-capping affair” in his direct examination by the People. Upon his direct examination, Gravelot said that, while he and plaintiff in error were in the store and before they went out upon the street, plaintiff in error said: “He would fix those fellows that white-capped him yet; that he had not dropped that matter.” Gravelot testified that he “knew what he meant when he referred to white-caps.” In view of the fact, that Gravelot had thus referred to this “white-capping” affair in his direct examination, it was surely proper and allowable for the defense to go into the matter fully, so that the jury might see whether, from the surroundings, the plaintiff in error had reasonable ground to fear that he might be killed, or that great bodily harm might be inflicted upon him, either, by the prosecuting witness, or by any of the persons there present. .

It is true, that Gravelot says, that plaintiff in error told him, in the store upon that day, that he did not suspect him of having been present with the mob the year before. Plaintiff in error denies that he said any such thing; on the contrary, he swears that he believed that Gravelot was present on the occasion referred to in May, 1899. One of the witnesses, introduced by the People, named Grenschaw, says that, in the summer before the shooting, plaintiff in error was talking to him about the mob that “white-capped” him, and mentioned the name of Gravelot, and said: “I will fix those fellows.” A number of persons, to-wit, Daley and Schafer and Wullfe and Albert Hoenck and Brown, were in the store of Grave-lot and heard the altercation, which took place there on August 16, 1900, between Gravelot and plaintiff in error, and yet none of these persons there present, all of whom testify in the case, mention the fact that plaintiff in error made the remark which Gravelot attributes to him.

However this may be, Daley and Schafer and Wullfe were in the store when plaintiff in error was there, and before he and Gravelot went upon the street. Plaintiff in error swears, that he recognized Schafer as being one of the mob, which had attacked him the year before. As soon as Gravelot and plaintiff in error left the store and went out upon the street, Schafer and Daley and Wullfe were seen leaving the side door of the store and coming towards plaintiff in error. Maas, who had not been in the store, but was on the opposite or east side of the street, was also seen to be approaching towards plaintiff in error. All these persons were engaged in an assault on August 16, 1900, upon plaintiff in error; and that assault was made so near to the time, when Gravelot advanced against plaintiff in error, as to appear to have been made simultaneously with such advance.

The evidence tends to show that, when Gravelot and plaintiff in error first went out upon the street, they intended to have a fist fight, and that plaintiff in error took off his coat, and threw it into the buggy with the pistol in it. Some of the witnesses testify that plaintiff in error was not armed, when Gravelot first went upon the street from the sidewalk. It was after Schafer and Daley and Wullfe, and the others, who were in the store, came out and advanced towards him, and after he saw Maas and perhaps one or two others advancing toward him from the opposite side of the street, that plaintiff in error went to the buggy and took out his revolver. Gravelot says, in his testimony, that “it was less than a quarter of a minute after David started for the revolver that Maas had his arms around him.” Plaintiff in error swears as follows: “I think Maas had hold of me when the revolver went off.” Schafer says: “Mr. Gravelot was just going out of the front door when we (Daley and Schafer) went out of the east door; David was in the middle of the street; did not see the revolver in David’s hand when I first went out on the street; * * * we all three (Schafer and Daley and Gravelot) had hold of him; it was not a minute before we had him on his back; * * * I don’t think Gravelot had hold of him before we did; I think Gravelot rushed on David as soon as the shot was fired; we were there at about the same time.” Schafer says that, when he came out of the side door, he saw Maas standing towards McMahon’s office, which was on the east side of the street and in the rear of plaintiff in error. He also says that he had hold of David at the same time when Maas had hold of him, and that, when they felled him to the ground, they all had hold of him. Daley also swears that “Gravelot advanced and we advanced rapidly; we all went directly towards Mr. David; we grabbed him and Gravelot took the revolver away from him.” Daley also says: “I saw the blood on David’s head before David was upon the- ground; we had been struggling with David before I saw the blood; Gravelot struck David with the revolver before he went to the ground; we were all trying to get him to the ground; I think there were two others besides us there; they came from that vicinity.” Gravelot says: “First I saw of Mr. Maas was when he had his arms around David from behind; * * * he grabbed David about the same time I took the revolver; * * * I struck him about as hard as I could; I also struck him with my fist a great many times; I struck him in the face; we were both down on the ground when I was hitting him with my fist; after I got through beating him over the head with the revolver, I lost the revolver, and I think that Maas let loose of him.” Wullfe says that plaintiff in error had his coat off when he first saw him go to the buggy and saw him come back again; “It was a very few seconds between the time I saw him go behind the buggy and when I saw him with the revolver; * * * I went out with the intention of helping Jules" (that is, Gravelot). Brown says that Grave-lot “went as far as he could, and grabbed the revolver; don’t know whether Maas got there first or not, it was all done so quick; Gravelot, the next I saw, was hitting David over the head with the revolver, and Maas was holding him, and David was trying to get away; * * * Mr. Daley and Schafer were there.” Maas says: “David walked to the hind part of his buggy and put his coat in; saw David have the revolver; he got it from the buggy; * * í:' I grabbed David when the shot was fired; * * * I called on Mr. Gravelot to take the revolver; * * * when I saw Mr. Gravelot had the revolver I said, ‘Shoot the son of a bitch;’ * * * I was with those people who were scuffling more or less during all the trouble; * * * Gravelot had hold of him at that time; Mr. Schafer and Daley must have been there because, when I grabbed Mr. David, the revolver must have been taken by those two men; saw Gravelot hit David; saw somebody kick him; it was Dick Eyerley; he kicked him while he was down; Gravelot was on top of him; I had hold of him when he was down; Eyerley kicked him on the right side; Eyerley kicked while the struggle was going on.” Charles W. Down testifies: ‘“David was stretched out on the ground at that time face down; there were from twenty to forty people there; when he got up he was covered with mud and blood; * * * when I first saw it, there were three hold of him; then there were only two, and, when we got there, David was stretched on the ground, and Gravelot had David’s head between his legs and was pounding him wherever he could; I saw him strike him several times; David was attempting to get up when Richard Eyerley came up from behind and gave him a kick; he kicked him somewhere in the ribs or stomach on David’s right side; Mr. David said, when he got the kick, ‘My God, boys, give me fair play.’” Albert Hoenck says: “David put his coat in the buggy while Gravelot was on the sidewalk; Mr. Gravelot started off the walk towards David, and David went over to the buggy and got his revolver and told Gravelot to stand back; David wds standing straight up when the shot was fired; Gravelot rushed at David; the revolver was taken from David, and I saw Gravelot striking him on the head with it; then the crowd got so thick I couldn’t see what was going on.” Doctor Smith swore that two of the ribs of plaintiff in error on the right side were broken, and his face was skinned and bruised, and that one eye was black, and so swollen as to be shut. One Trask testified that he heard a conversation between Gravelot and David several months before the shooting, and after the divorce suit, in which David charged Gravelot with having' his (David’s) wife in the cellar, and that Gravelot said, “You say that again, and I will knock you down.”

It thus appears that the questions, addressed to Grave-lot upon the cross-examination, and which he was not allowed to answer, might have developed, if they had been answered, the connection of Gravelot, if any existed, with the previous mobbing of plaintiff in error, and would have thereby revealed more fully the relations between them. Plaintiff in error would have been entitled to follow up the answers to the questions propounded with evidence, tending to show that G-ravelot was a member of the “white-capping” mob, or had guilty knowledge of the same, or had participated in it. This evidence would have tended to show what the condition of plaintiff in error’s mind was at the time of the assault, and whether he entertained a reasonable fear at that time that he was in danger of losing his life or of receiving" great bodily harm.

Fourth—It is further claimed by plaintiff in error, that the trial court erred in giving certain instructions which were given on behalf of the People, and in refusing to give certain instructions asked by plaintiff in error.

We are inclined to think that the trial court should have given the instructions asked by the plaintiff in error, numbered 22 and 23, and set out in the statement preceding this opinion.

It is quite clear from what has already been said that the difficulty, which occurred on August 16, 1900, had two phases, or should be looked at in two aspects. First, it began as a personal difficulty between Gravelot and plaintiff in error, who went out upon the street to engage in a fist fight. Second, there is evidence tending to show that, when plaintiff in error saw these men, some of whom, he had reason to believe, had mobbed him the year before, advance upon him from all directions, he was justified in concluding that he was to be assaulted, not by Gravelot alone, but by these other men in pursuance of the old feud. When the mob had maltreated him in May, 1899, they had threatened to kill him, unless he took his wife back or gave her his property. He neither took her back, nor gave to her his property.

Counsel for defendant in error claim that there was no error in the refusal of instructions, numbered 22 and 23, asked by plaintiff in error, upon the alleged ground that the substance of the same was embodied in instructions 14 and 15 given for plaintiff in error. This view, in our opinion, is not correct. Instruction No. 15 assumes a belief on the part of plaintiff in error that all the persons advancing towards him in a threatening manner were acting- in concert with Gravelot. Instructions 22 and 23 leave out the assumption that they were acting in concert. “Concert,” as. defined by Webster, means “agreement in a design or plan; union formed by mutual communication of opinions and views.” While there may have been some concert of action between Gravelot and the persons who were in the store with him before the shot was fired, there could have been no concert or agreement between him and Maas and Eyerley and the others who advanced from the east and south. If parties were advancing against plaintiff in error in a threatening manner, and under such circumstances as led him to entertain a reasonable fear and an honest belief that his life was in danger or that he was in danger of receiving great bodily harm, it would make no difference whether they were acting in concert with Gravelot upon that particular occasion, or whether they were acting in pursuance of a purpose to carry out the previous threat made by them against plaintiff in error, that they would kill him if he did not take back his wife of give her his property.

In addition to this, plaintiff in error had possession of a revolver when he came into Chebanse on the morning of August 16, 1900. The testimony introduced by him tended to show, that his possession of the revolver at that time was merely accidental, and resulted from a visit to his attorney in reference to the suit that had been brought against him upon the account. On the contrary, it seems to have been the theory of the State that the possession of the revolver, under the circumstances already detailed, indicated previous preparation for an assault on the part of plaintiff in error, and an intention on his part to make the attack upon Gravelot. Hence, instruction No. 22 conditioned the right of the jury to find plaintiff in error not guilty upon their finding that the plaintiff in error placed the revolver in his buggy beyond his reach, in order that he might engage in the fist fight, and that he for the first time formed the intent to use the revolver when he saw other persons than Grave-lot advancing upon him. It was for the jury to determine whether his possession of the revolver was the indication of a guilty intent, or whether his possession of it was accidental, and his use of it caused by the threatening attitude of these third parties towards him. This feature of instruction Ho. 22 is not embodied in any of the other instructions which were given.

On account of the restriction imposed by the trial court upon the cross-examination of the prosecuting witness, as above indicated, and on account of the refusal of that court to give instructions numbered 22 and 23, as set forth in the statement preceding this opinion, the judgment of the circuit court of Kankakee county is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.

Beversed and remanded.