DocketNumber: No. 29313. Judgment affirmed.
Citation Numbers: 66 N.E.2d 419, 393 Ill. 445, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 321
Judges: Gunn
Filed Date: 3/20/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Plaintiff in error, Lionel Shaffer, was found guilty by a jury in January, 1923, of the crime of armed robbery, in the circuit court of Kane county. The indictment charged robbery, and also "that the said Lionel Shaffer then and there was armed with a certain dangerous weapon, towit with a certain revolver, and with the said revolver then and there did beat, strike and wound him, the said Robert Brannick, in the said robbery." The jury found the defendant guilty "in manner and form as charged in the indictment." The court sentenced the defendant to imprisonment in the penitentiary at Joliet for not less than ten years nor more than the term of his natural life. Under the law as it then existed this was a proper sentence. (Ill. *Page 446
Rev. Stat. 1921, chap. 38, par. 515.) The fact that later the ten-year minimum sentence was eliminated from the statute does not prevent it from being enforcible as to sentences entered before the change. People ex rel. Carlstrom, v. David,
Plaintiff in error complains that the verdict, finding him guilty of robbery "in manner and form as charged in the indictment," was defective in that it did not also find that he was "armed with a deadly weapon" at the time of its commission; and, likewise, that the judgment of the court in sentencing him to the penitentiary for robbery while armed was illegal and void. The point requires little discussion. Plaintiff in error was charged with robbery while armed. There was no other count in the indictment charging anything else. The jury found him guilty as charged, so finding him guilty as charged was finding him guilty of robbery while armed. The point has been decided against plaintiff in error in People v. Bailey,
In the present case there were no other counts to raise any doubt that the finding of robbery in manner and form as charged in the indictment was a finding of guilty of armed robbery. There is no merit in his contention. As pointed out above, the conviction took place in the year *Page 447
1923, and, had the People so elected, they could have barred the consideration of this writ of error under the twenty-year limitation period. People v. Chapman,
The judgment of the circuit court of Kane county is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.