People v. Weston

Decision Date26 October 1908
PartiesPEOPLE v. WESTON et al.
CourtIllinois Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Error to Circuit Court, Franklin County; P. A. Pearce, Judge.

Harry Weston and others were convicted of rape, and they bring error. Affirmed.

C. H. Layman, W. H. Williams, and T. J. Layman, for plaintiffs in error.

W. H. Stead, Atty. Gen., and W. P. Seeber, State's Atty. (B. H. Taylor, of counsel), for the People.

FARMER, J.

The plaintiffs in error, Harry Weston, John Davis, and Louis Simpson, were found guilty in the circuit court of Franklin county upon an indictment charging them with rape upon the person of Eliza Eason, and were each sentenced to a term of 12 years in the penitentiary. Error has been assigned on the denial of their application for a change of venue and their motion for a continuance, but these errors cannot be sustained because the action of the court has not been preserved for review. A petition and certain affidavits have been copied in the transcript filed, but they are not contained in the bill of exceptions, which makes no reference either to the application for a change of venue or the motion for a continuance. Such motions are no part of the record unless made so by a bill of exceptions. McElwee v. People, 77 Ill. 493;Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. v. Goyette, 133 Ill. 21, 24 N. E. 549. These alleged errors therefore cannot be considered.

The third and fourth errors assigned may be treated together. They are that the court erred in permitting Nove Morgan to act as interpreter in the examination of Eliza Eason, the prosecuting witness, without being sworn, and in permitting the said Eliza Eason to give evidence by making signs, in the presence of the jury, without having been sworn. Eliza Eason was a deaf mute, and had never attended any school where deaf mutes were taught the sign language taught in such schools, and she was only able to communicate with other persons by signs of her own, which could be understood by people who were with her a considerable time. She was 57 years old, and, on account of her affliction and lack of educational advantages, was very ignorant. Her husband also, with whom she resided at the time the alleged crime was committed, was an ignorant man. At the trial W. H. Williams, a lawyer, who understood the deaf mute sign language fairly well, was sworn to act as interpreter. There was present also at the trial a man named Nove Morgan, who was a partially educated deaf mute, and, as Mrs. Eason could not make herself undertsood to Williams, Morgan was requested to ask Mrs. Eason questions and to interpret her answers to Williams, who then interpreted them to the court. Neither Morgan nor Mrs. Eason was sworn. A number of questions asked by counsel for the prosecution were interpreted by Williams to Morgan and by Morgan to Mrs. Eason. Her answers, so far as Morgan could understand her, would then be interpreted to Williams and by Williams to the court. The first several questions were for the purpose of ascertaining to what extent Mrs. Eason could understand questions asked her by Morgan, and to what extent she could communicate to him her answers to questions she understood in such manner as that he could understand her. This examination showed that Morgan and the witness could communicate with each other so as to be understood to some extent, but not fully, so that Morgan could communicate answers to all questions intelligently to Williams. This examination was conducted in the presence of the jury. After a number of questions had been asked, Williams was directed to request Morgan to ask the witness what any men did to her, if anything, on the evening of June 4, 1907. The record shows counsel for the plaintiffs in error ‘objected to the question.’ The court stated that as it was preliminary the question might be asked. On the question being asked the witness through Morgan, she answered ‘two men,’ and Morgan stated that the witness could not understand hem very well, but that he could understand her signs a little. He was then directed to ask her how the men treated her. On attempting it he was unable to make her understand. The question being again repeated, Morgan interpreted her answer, through Williams. She says that Simpson and Weston choked her;’ that one caught her by the arm, one caught her by the throat, and one scratched her. She also said that Davis and Simpson had intercourse with her, and that she did not know Weston. She was then asked, through interpreters, whether she knew the nature of an oath and the consequences of swearing to a falsehood, to which she answered she would go to hell if she told a lie. Counsel for the prosecution thereupon announced he would proceed no farther, and this is the substance of all that occurred during the time Mrs. Eason was being examined, and she was not again recalled. It was not intended that this examination was to be her testimony in the case.

Plaintiffs in error in their assignment of error say the court erred in permitting Morgan to act as interpreter without being sworn and in permitting Eliza Eason to give evidence in the presence of the jury without being sworn. The questions asked her and the answers given by her to them were not for the purpose of getting her testimony before the jury, but were for the purpose of ascertaining whether, by means of the interpreters, her testimony could be obtained. For that purpose it was not necessary that Mrs. Eason or Morgan should have been first sworn. But the examination should not have been conducted in the presence of the jury. It was intended for the court, and the jury should have been removed. The record, however, does not show that any objection was made to the examination taking place in the presence of the jury or on account of the witness and Morgan not having been first sworn. When the witness was asked what, if anything, the men did to her, counsel for plaintiffs in error ‘objected to the question.’ The court stated that, as it was preliminary, the question might be asked, and no other objection was made. While it was improper to have allowed this examination to be conducted in the presence of the jury, if counsel had objected to its being so done, they should have so stated in their objections to the court, and doubtless the jury would have been removed. Not having made any such objection and obtained a ruling of the court thereon and preserved an exception thereto, nothing is preserved by this assignment for our review. Graham v. People, 115 Ill. 566, 4 N. E. 790;Hughes v. People, 116 Ill. 330, 6 N. E. 55.

The evidence for the prosecution abundantly established the guilt of plaintiffs in error of the crime charged in the indictment. They went together to the house on a farm in the country in the evening of June 4th, where the prosecuting witness resided with her husband. Willis McElyea, a cousin of Mrs. Eason's husband, also lived with them. When they came to the house, the manner of plaintiffs in error frightened Eason and McElyea, who saw them approaching, and Eason went in the house, closed the doors, and attempted to keep plaintiffs in error out. McElyea went into the orchard and hid. One of plaintiffs in error wore a star, and they stated they were officers and had come to arrest Eason. One or more of them had a pistol. They forced the door open, whereupon Eason seized a gun he had in the house, but, instead of using it, ran out and across the fields for help. McElyea joined him in the race, and they gave the alarm to the neighbors, none of whom lived closer than one-fourth mile to Eason's house. When the neighbors came Mrs. Eason was out in the orchard, at the edge of the woods, where she had been dragged by the plaintiffs in error and was being detained by them or some of them, and her attempts to cry out and her moanings were heard by a number of witnesses before she was rescued. We shall not go farther into the sickening details of the evidence, but it justified the jury in finding plaintiffs in error guilty of most...

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