Court Opinion

ID: 6975689
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 02:10:34.693248+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:58.378693
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Hand delivered the opinion of the court: It is first contended that the indictment is insufficient because it is not shown therein, or in either count thereof, by proper averment, that the testimony which the plaintiff in error endeavored to incite or procure Charles T. Haas to - give in the disbarment proceeding was material to the issue involved in that proceeding-. It is well settled in this State that there are two methods of averring the materiality of the testimony upon which the perjury is assigned. One method is to set out the false testimony and then to aver that it was material to the issue then being tried; and the other is, to so state the issue being tried, and the matters sworn to in which it is alleged the perjury was committed, that the court, from the facts averred in the indictment, can see that the false testimony was material. (Kimmel v. People, 92 Ill. 457; Greene v. People, 182 id. 278; Kizer v. People, 211 id. 407; People v. Threewitt, 251 id. 509.) The last expression of this court upon the subject is found in the Threewitt case, on page 511, where it is said: “The indictment stated that the testimony of plaintiff in error alleged to be false was material to the issue on the trial of said cause, and it was not necessary that the allegations of the indictment should show wherein said testimony became material. In Kizer v. People, 211 Ill. 407, the court said: ‘The authorities are agreed that there are two methods of averring the materiality of the testimony upon which the perjury is assigned, in common use and recognized in practically all the courts of this country and of England, and are, first, that without setting out all the facts from which the court may see the materiality of the evidence, the particular matter or testimony is set out with the averment of the pleader that it was material; or, second, the pleader may so state the issues and the matters sworn to in which it is alleged the perjury is committed, that the court, from the averment of the facts testified about and the nature of the cause in which the testimony was given, can see that the testimony was material.’ The same doctrine is announced in Greene v. People, 182 Ill. 278; Kimmel v. People, 92 id. 457; Pollard v. People, 69 id. 148.” The first count of the indictment charged, in express terms, that the false testimony which the plaintiff in error endeavored to incite or procure Charles T. Haas to give before the master in the disbarment proceeding was material to the issue then being tried, and the false testimony was fully set out in that count of the indictment; and the second count set out the information in the disbarment proceeding and the answer of the plaintiff in error, from which it appeared what the issue was that was to be tried in that proceeding, and from which it appeared that the false testimony which the plaintiff in error endeavored to incite or procure Charles T. Haas to give before the master was material to the issue made by the pleadings in the disbarment proceeding. It is manifest that under the rule of criminal pleading in force in this State in prosecutions for perjury, each count of the indictment would have been a good indictment for the crime of perjury against the plaintiff in error had he been charged directly with the crime of perjury, and if the averments of the indictment would have been sufficient in such case, we think that the materiality of the testimony of Charles T. Haas was sufficiently shown by the indictment, as against the plaintiff in error, for having endeavored to incite and procure the witness Haas to commit perjury. Our conclusion is that each count of the indictment was sufficient. It is next contended that the facts that William H. Barton was known to Haas, that he had worked for Haas as a detective, that he had shown Haas a check for $3850 signed by Nelson, and that he had taken the check and gone to Kansas City to locate Nelson, were wholly immaterial in the disbarment proceeding, and that the plaintiff in error could not be properly convicted of endeavoring to incite and procure Haas to swear falsely to those facts in that proceeding by reason of the want of the materiality of the testimony. We cannot agree with the contention that the testimony of Haas that he had known Barton, that he had worked for Haas as a detective, that Barton had shown him a check signed by Nelson for $3850, and that Barton had gone to Kansas City with the check to locate Nelson, if true, would not have been material to the issue being tried in the disbarment proceeding. It was there contended by the People that there was no such person as Barton or Nelson; that the check for $3850 purporting to be signed by Nelson was spurious, and was drawn by plaintiff in error and placed in the American Trust and Savings Bank by him after clearance hours for the purpose of giving him a fictitious credit in said bank, against which he might draw before it was discovered that the check was worthless, and that when he got the check into his possession he fraudulently concealed it with a view to cover up his wrong; while it was claimed by the plaintiff in error that Nelson gave him said check in the due course of business, that it was deposited in the American Trust and Savings Bank in the name of Brown & Oakley in the utmost good faith, and that it was delivered by plaintiff in error to Barton after it was received by plaintiff in error from the bank. It would therefore seem to be material in that proceeding to establish that Barton, to whom it was claimed by plaintiff in error the check was delivered, was not a fictitious person; that he was known to Haas, who had employed him as a detective, and that he had the check signed by Nelson in his possession at the place of business of Haas, and that he had gone to Kansas City with the check to locate Nelson, as such testimony would have clearly corroborated the testimony of the plaintiff in error that the check was the check of Nelson, and that he had in good faith delivered the check to Barton and was unable to produce the same by reason of the absence of Barton. The question of the materiality of this testimony in the disbarment proceeding was disposed of when the opinion was filed by this court in that case. {People v. Brown, 218 Ill. 301.) In the disbarment proceeding Haas was called as a witness and fully testified to the fact that the plaintiff in error had sought to suborn him to commit perjury before the master in that proceeding, and it was sought to exclude the testimony of Haas on the ground that it was immaterial. In disposing of that question, on page 308 of the opinion, this court said: “At the hearing Mr. Haas was called upon the stand by respondent, and to respondent’s surprise stated that he never did know Barton, and later gave a full detail of the attempt and agreement on the part of respondent to suborn him and his two clerks, and in this he was corroborated by three of the clerks and other circumstances. Respondent insisted that this evidence was incompetent and asked to have it stricken and now insists that it should not be considered. In this contention respondent is in error, as it is in the nature of an admission on his part that there was no such person as William H. Barton in any manner really connected with that transaction, and that in order to make his defense it was necessary that it should falsely appear that such party did exist and was concerned in the transaction.” We are of the opinion the evidence that- the plaintiff in error sought to suborn Haas to testify falsely before the master in chancery that he knew Barton, that Barton had worked for him as a detective, that Barton had shown Haas a check for $3850 signed by Nelson, and that Barton had gone to Kansas City with the check to locate Nelson, was material in the disbannent proceeding and was properly admitted on the trial of this case. It is next urged that the court erred in improperly restricting the cross-examination of Charles T. Haas and Mabel Starek. Charles T. Haas was engaged in carrying on a detective agency in the city of Chicago and had been for some years prior to the trial in the disbarment proceeding. Mabel Starek was a stenographer in his office, and was present, with other witnesses, and heard the conversation between Haas and plaintiff in error, when the latter, for the consideration of $200, sought .to employ Haas and certain of his operatives to make proof that-they knew Barton, that he had been in the employ of Haas as a detective, that he had shown them a $3850 check signed by Nelson, and that he had gone to Kansas City to locate Nelson. Haas and Mabel Starek were sworn and testified on the trial in this case, and the plaintiff in error, who conducted his own defense, on the cross-examination of Haas as well as of Mabel Starek, sought to disgrace the witness Starek by asking each of said witnesses, on the cross-examination, questions which sought to break down and destroy her character for chastity. The cross-examination was foreign to the case and was wholly excluded by the court, and it is now urged the judgment of conviction should be reversed by reason of the refusal of the trial court to permit the said witnesses to be cross-examined upon the subject of the chastity of the witness Starek. In Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Co. v. Williams, 77 Ill. 354, Mr. Justice Scholfield, on page 359, used the following language: “Objection was taken to a number of questions put by appellee’s counsel, in cross-examination, to a witness of the appellant. These objections should have been sustained. The questions were objectionable in form, irrelevant to the issue, and only tended to bully and degrade the witness. A witness cannot be impeached in this way. A wide latitude is allowed in the cross-examination of a witness, but he is entitled to be protected by the court from unnecessary insult and abusiveness by counsel.” It is apparent from this record that the only object of the cross-examination of the said witnesses, especially of the witness Mabel Starek, was to insult and humiliate her, and such conduct on the part of counsel, or on the part of a party who is representing himself in the trial of a case, is reprehensible in the highest degree and deserves the strongest condemnation of the court, and if such misconduct is repeated after the court had ruled, as it was here, it should be punished. It is further objected that the counsel for the People abused the privilege of argument. The criticism, to some extent, is perhaps merited, but the action of counsel for the People in the particular complained of was largely due, we think, to the manner in which the plaintiff in error conducted his own defense. The plaintiff in error had been a lawyer and was familiar with court proceedings and the rules governing the conduct of a suit such as the one at bar. He should therefore have confined himself within the rules of propriety. We are of the opinion that the judgment in this case ought not to be reversed by reason of anything that occurred during the argument of the case before the jury. It is finally contended that the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict. A certified copy of the information and the answer in the disbarment proceeding were introduced in evidence, which showed the issues in the case and the materiality of the false testimony which the plaintiff in error had endeavored to induce or procure Charles T. Haas to give before the master in said proceeding. Three witnesses testified to the facts which show that the plaintiff in error endeavored to incite or procure the witness Haas to give false testimony before the master to the' effect that William H. Barton was known to him, that Barton had worked for him as a detective, that Barton had shown to him a check for $3850 signed by Nelson, and that Barton had taken the check and gone to Kansas City to locate Nelson. That testimony was uncontradicted except by the testimony of plaintiff in error, and a large number of the bar in the city of Chicago testified upon this trial that he was a man whose reputation for truth and veracity was bad and whom they would not believe under oath. We think the verdict, and the judgment of conviction based thereon, were fully justified by the evidence. Finding no reversible error in this record the judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed. Judgment affirmed.