Court Opinion

ID: 8806492
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 14:49:20.871506+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:04:07.349560
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Baker delivered the opinion of the court. We have not been favored with a brief for the People in this case. The contention that the defendant was indicted for one offense and convicted of another is without merit. To suborn means to incite, to procure, and the offense charged in the indictment was aptly called in the verdict “attempted subornation of perjury”. The contention that the false testimony which the indictment charged that the defendant endeavored to incite and procure Hass to give, was not shown to be material to the point or issue in the disbarment proceedings, cannot be sustained. The information in the disbarment proceedings alleged that the respondent, on the pretest that he wanted to have Nelson apprehended, obtained from the bank the possession of said check for $3,850 and refused to produce the same, claiming that he had given it to Barton, a detective; that Barton was a fictitious person and the use of his name a fraudulent device used by respondent to get possession of the written evidence of his fraud. The respondent in his answer averred that he delivered the check to Barton, who was known to respondent as a person who did detective work, with instructions to find Nelson ; denied that Barton was a fictitious person, etc. Whether there was such a person as Barton, and whether respondent delivered the check to him, after it came back into his possession, were questions put in issue by the pleadings in the disbarment proceedings. Again, the evidence that there was no such person as Barton, and therefore that the statement of the respondent that he delivered the check to Barton and had not been able afterwards to find Barton, regain possession of the check and return it to the bank, tended to show that the respondent had suppressed material evidence and was for that reason admissible and material. Chicago City Ry. v. McMahon, 103 Ill. 485; 1 Wigmore on Ev. sec. 278. On the trial the defendant was unable to procure the attendance of several witnesses who had testified in the disbarment proceedings and offered to prove their testimony in such proceedings. The witnesses whose testimony it was offered to prove were all living, but the preliminary evidence showed that some of such witnesses were out of the state, and that others were sick and unable to attend. The parties in the disbarment proceedings and in this case are the same. The people in that proceeding had an opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses whose testimony it was offered to prove in this case. The rule applicable to the testimony of absent witnesses given at a former trial of the same case is applicable,in this case to the testimony of absent witnesses given in the disbarment proceedings. The question is therefore presented, whether, in a criminal case, testimony of a witness at a former trial who is out of the state or so ill as to be unable to attend the trial, is admissible for the defendant. On this question the authorities are conflicting. In several of the states such testimony has been held admissible. In Bergen v. The People, 17 Ill. 425, it was held by the Supreme Court of this state that in a criminal case, evidence, for the prosecution, of .the testimony of a witness, then beyond the jurisdiction of the court, by procurement of the defendant, given at the examination of the defendant before the magistrate for the same offense, was not admissible. Among the cases cited in the opinion were, Finn v. The Commonwealth, 5 Randolph, 701, and People v. Newman, 5 Hill, 295. In Finn’s case and in People v. Newman the witnesses were out of the state, and the testimony was offered by the prosecution and held not admissible. In Brogy v. The Commonwealth, 10 Grattan, 722, the witness was out of the state and the evidence was offered by the defendant and held not admissible. To the same effect are Owens v. The State, 63 Miss. 450; Collins v. Commonwealth, 12 Bush. 271, and U. S. v. Angell 11 Fed. 34, in each of which cases the evidence was offered by the defendant; and State v. Houser, 26 Mo. 431, where the evidence was offered by the prosecution. In jurisdictions where such evidence is held admissible, it is held admissible whether offered by the defense or by the prosecution. We regard the decision in Bergen v. The People, supra, as controlling in this case, although in that ease the evidence was offered by the prosecution, and in this case by the defendant, and it follows that in our opinion the evidence was properly excluded. We find no error in the other rulings of the court on questions of evidence or in the rulings on instructions. The judgment should not, in our opinion, be reversed because of the argument of counsel for the People. On the evidence, we cannot say that the jury might not properly find the defendant guilty. The material facts tending to show his guilt were testified to by Hass, Mrs. Starek and Mullen, and their testimony was directly contradicted only by the testimony of the defendant. The defendant filed his own affidavit alone in support of his motion for a new trial, on the ground of newly discovered evidence tending to affect the credibility of Hass, Mrs. Starek and Mullen. The court did not err in denying his motion. Martinatis v. The People, 223 Ill. 117. Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the Criminal Court will be affirmed. Affirmed.