<h2><SPAN name="chap41"></SPAN>Chapter XLI</h2>
<p>At two o’clock sharp Dennis Shannon, as district attorney, began his
opening address. He stated in a very simple, kindly way—for he had a most
engaging manner—that the indictment as here presented charged Mr. Frank
A. Cowperwood, who was sitting at the table inside the jury-rail, first with
larceny, second with embezzlement, third with larceny as bailee, and fourth
with embezzlement of a certain sum of money—a specific sum, to wit, sixty
thousand dollars—on a check given him (drawn to his order) October 9,
1871, which was intended to reimburse him for a certain number of certificates
of city loan, which he as agent or bailee of the check was supposed to have
purchased for the city sinking-fund on the order of the city treasurer (under
some form of agreement which had been in existence between them, and which had
been in force for some time)—said fund being intended to take up such
certificates as they might mature in the hands of holders and be presented for
payment—for which purpose, however, the check in question had never been
used.</p>
<p>“Now, gentlemen,” said Mr. Shannon, very quietly, “before we
go into this very simple question of whether Mr. Cowperwood did or did not on
the date in question get from the city treasurer sixty thousand dollars, for
which he made no honest return, let me explain to you just what the people mean
when they charge him first with larceny, second with embezzlement, third with
larceny as bailee, and fourth with embezzlement on a check. Now, as you see,
there are four counts here, as we lawyers term them, and the reason there are
four counts is as follows: A man may be guilty of larceny and embezzlement at
the same time, or of larceny or embezzlement separately, and without being
guilty of the other, and the district attorney representing the people might be
uncertain, not that he was not guilty of both, but that it might not be
possible to present the evidence under one count, so as to insure his adequate
punishment for a crime which in a way involved both. In such cases, gentlemen,
it is customary to indict a man under separate counts, as has been done in this
case. Now, the four counts in this case, in a way, overlap and confirm each
other, and it will be your duty, after we have explained their nature and
character and presented the evidence, to say whether the defendant is guilty on
one count or the other, or on two or three of the counts, or on all four, just
as you see fit and proper—or, to put it in a better way, as the evidence
warrants. Larceny, as you may or may not know, is the act of taking away the
goods or chattels of another without his knowledge or consent, and embezzlement
is the fraudulent appropriation to one’s own use of what is intrusted to
one’s care and management, especially money. Larceny as bailee, on the
other hand, is simply a more definite form of larceny wherein one fixes the act
of carrying away the goods of another without his knowledge or consent on the
person to whom the goods were delivered in trust that is, the agent or bailee.
Embezzlement on a check, which constitutes the fourth charge, is simply a more
definite form of fixing charge number two in an exact way and signifies
appropriating the money on a check given for a certain definite purpose. All of
these charges, as you can see, gentlemen, are in a way synonymous. They overlap
and overlay each other. The people, through their representative, the district
attorney, contend that Mr. Cowperwood, the defendant here, is guilty of all
four charges. So now, gentlemen, we will proceed to the history of this crime,
which proves to me as an individual that this defendant has one of the most
subtle and dangerous minds of the criminal financier type, and we hope by
witnesses to prove that to you, also.”</p>
<p>Shannon, because the rules of evidence and court procedure here admitted of no
interruption of the prosecution in presenting a case, then went on to describe
from his own point of view how Cowperwood had first met Stener; how he had
wormed himself into his confidence; how little financial knowledge Stener had,
and so forth; coming down finally to the day the check for sixty thousand
dollars was given Cowperwood; how Stener, as treasurer, claimed that he knew
nothing of its delivery, which constituted the base of the charge of larceny;
how Cowperwood, having it, misappropriated the certificates supposed to have
been purchased for the sinking-fund, if they were purchased at all—all of
which Shannon said constituted the crimes with which the defendant was charged,
and of which he was unquestionably guilty.</p>
<p>“We have direct and positive evidence of all that we have thus far
contended, gentlemen,” Mr. Shannon concluded violently. “This is
not a matter of hearsay or theory, but of fact. You will be shown by direct
testimony which cannot be shaken just how it was done. If, after you have heard
all this, you still think this man is innocent—that he did not commit the
crimes with which he is charged—it is your business to acquit him. On the
other hand, if you think the witnesses whom we shall put on the stand are
telling the truth, then it is your business to convict him, to find a verdict
for the people as against the defendant. I thank you for your attention.”</p>
<p>The jurors stirred comfortably and took positions of ease, in which they
thought they were to rest for the time; but their idle comfort was of short
duration for Shannon now called out the name of George W. Stener, who came
hurrying forward very pale, very flaccid, very tired-looking. His eyes, as he
took his seat in the witness-chair, laying his hand on the Bible and swearing
to tell the truth, roved in a restless, nervous manner.</p>
<p>His voice was a little weak as he started to give his testimony. He told first
how he had met Cowperwood in the early months of 1866—he could not
remember the exact day; it was during his first term as city treasurer—he
had been elected to the office in the fall of 1864. He had been troubled about
the condition of city loan, which was below par, and which could not be sold by
the city legally at anything but par. Cowperwood had been recommended to him by
some one—Mr. Strobik, he believed, though he couldn’t be sure. It
was the custom of city treasurers to employ brokers, or a broker, in a crisis
of this kind, and he was merely following what had been the custom. He went on
to describe, under steady promptings and questions from the incisive mind of
Shannon, just what the nature of this first conversation was—he
remembered it fairly well; how Mr. Cowperwood had said he thought he could do
what was wanted; how he had gone away and drawn up a plan or thought one out;
and how he had returned and laid it before Stener. Under Shannon’s
skillful guidance Stener elucidated just what this scheme was—which
wasn’t exactly so flattering to the honesty of men in general as it was a
testimonial to their subtlety and skill.</p>
<p>After much discussion of Stener’s and Cowperwood’s relations the
story finally got down to the preceding October, when by reason of
companionship, long business understanding, mutually prosperous relationship,
etc., the place had been reached where, it was explained, Cowperwood was not
only handling several millions of city loan annually, buying and selling for
the city and trading in it generally, but in the bargain had secured one five
hundred thousand dollars’ worth of city money at an exceedingly low rate
of interest, which was being invested for himself and Stener in profitable
street-car ventures of one kind and another. Stener was not anxious to be
altogether clear on this point; but Shannon, seeing that he was later to
prosecute Stener himself for this very crime of embezzlement, and that Steger
would soon follow in cross-examination, was not willing to let him be hazy.
Shannon wanted to fix Cowperwood in the minds of the jury as a clever, tricky
person, and by degrees he certainly managed to indicate a very subtle-minded
man. Occasionally, as one sharp point after another of Cowperwood’s skill
was brought out and made moderately clear, one juror or another turned to look
at Cowperwood. And he noting this and in order to impress them all as favorably
as possible merely gazed Stenerward with a steady air of intelligence and
comprehension.</p>
<p>The examination now came down to the matter of the particular check for sixty
thousand dollars which Albert Stires had handed Cowperwood on the
afternoon—late—of October 9, 1871. Shannon showed Stener the check
itself. Had he ever seen it? Yes. Where? In the office of District Attorney
Pettie on October 20th, or thereabouts last. Was that the first time he had
seen it? Yes. Had he ever heard about it before then? Yes. When? On October
10th last. Would he kindly tell the jury in his own way just how and under what
circumstances he first heard of it then? Stener twisted uncomfortably in his
chair. It was a hard thing to do. It was not a pleasant commentary on his own
character and degree of moral stamina, to say the least. However, he cleared
his throat again and began a description of that small but bitter section of
his life’s drama in which Cowperwood, finding himself in a tight place
and about to fail, had come to him at his office and demanded that he loan him
three hundred thousand dollars more in one lump sum.</p>
<p>There was considerable bickering just at this point between Steger and Shannon,
for the former was very anxious to make it appear that Stener was lying out of
the whole cloth about this. Steger got in his objection at this point, and
created a considerable diversion from the main theme, because Stener kept
saying he “thought” or he “believed.”</p>
<p>“Object!” shouted Steger, repeatedly. “I move that that be
stricken from the record as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial. The
witness is not allowed to say what he thinks, and the prosecution knows it very
well.”</p>
<p>“Your honor,” insisted Shannon, “I am doing the best I can to
have the witness tell a plain, straightforward story, and I think that it is
obvious that he is doing so.”</p>
<p>“Object!” reiterated Steger, vociferously. “Your honor, I
insist that the district attorney has no right to prejudice the minds of the
jury by flattering estimates of the sincerity of the witness. What he thinks of
the witness and his sincerity is of no importance in this case. I must ask that
your honor caution him plainly in this matter.”</p>
<p>“Objection sustained,” declared Judge Payderson, “the
prosecution will please be more explicit”; and Shannon went on with his
case.</p>
<p>Stener’s testimony, in one respect, was most important, for it made plain
what Cowperwood did not want brought out—namely, that he and Stener had
had a dispute before this; that Stener had distinctly told Cowperwood that he
would not loan him any more money; that Cowperwood had told Stener, on the day
before he secured this check, and again on that very day, that he was in a very
desperate situation financially, and that if he were not assisted to the extent
of three hundred thousand dollars he would fail, and that then both he and
Stener would be ruined. On the morning of this day, according to Stener, he had
sent Cowperwood a letter ordering him to cease purchasing city loan
certificates for the sinking-fund. It was after their conversation on the same
afternoon that Cowperwood surreptitiously secured the check for sixty thousand
dollars from Albert Stires without his (Stener’s) knowledge; and it was
subsequent to this latter again that Stener, sending Albert to demand the
return of the check, was refused, though the next day at five o’clock in
the afternoon Cowperwood made an assignment. And the certificates for which the
check had been purloined were not in the sinking-fund as they should have been.
This was dark testimony for Cowperwood.</p>
<p>If any one imagines that all this was done without many vehement objections and
exceptions made and taken by Steger, and subsequently when he was
cross-examining Stener, by Shannon, he errs greatly. At times the chamber was
coruscating with these two gentlemen’s bitter wrangles, and his honor was
compelled to hammer his desk with his gavel, and to threaten both with contempt
of court, in order to bring them to a sense of order. Indeed while Payderson
was highly incensed, the jury was amused and interested.</p>
<p>“You gentlemen will have to stop this, or I tell you now that you will
both be heavily fined. This is a court of law, not a bar-room. Mr. Steger, I
expect you to apologize to me and your colleague at once. Mr. Shannon, I must
ask that you use less aggressive methods. Your manner is offensive to me. It is
not becoming to a court of law. I will not caution either of you again.”</p>
<p>Both lawyers apologized as lawyers do on such occasions, but it really made but
little difference. Their individual attitudes and moods continued about as
before.</p>
<p>“What did he say to you,” asked Shannon of Stener, after one of
these troublesome interruptions, “on that occasion, October 9th last,
when he came to you and demanded the loan of an additional three hundred
thousand dollars? Give his words as near as you can remember—exactly, if
possible.”</p>
<p>“Object!” interposed Steger, vigorously. “His exact words are
not recorded anywhere except in Mr. Stener’s memory, and his memory of
them cannot be admitted in this case. The witness has testified to the general
facts.”</p>
<p>Judge Payderson smiled grimly. “Objection overruled,” he returned.</p>
<p>“Exception!” shouted Steger.</p>
<p>“He said, as near as I can remember,” replied Stener, drumming on
the arms of the witness-chair in a nervous way, “that if I didn’t
give him three hundred thousand dollars he was going to fail, and I would be
poor and go to the penitentiary.”</p>
<p>“Object!” shouted Stager, leaping to his feet. “Your honor, I
object to the whole manner in which this examination is being conducted by the
prosecution. The evidence which the district attorney is here trying to extract
from the uncertain memory of the witness is in defiance of all law and
precedent, and has no definite bearing on the facts of the case, and could not
disprove or substantiate whether Mr. Cowperwood thought or did not think that
he was going to fail. Mr. Stener might give one version of this conversation or
any conversation that took place at this time, and Mr. Cowperwood another. As a
matter of fact, their versions are different. I see no point in Mr.
Shannon’s line of inquiry, unless it is to prejudice the jury’s
minds towards accepting certain allegations which the prosecution is pleased to
make and which it cannot possibly substantiate. I think you ought to caution
the witness to testify only in regard to things that he recalls exactly, not to
what he thinks he remembers; and for my part I think that all that has been
testified to in the last five minutes might be well stricken out.”</p>
<p>“Objection overruled,” replied Judge Payderson, rather
indifferently; and Steger who had been talking merely to overcome the weight of
Stener’s testimony in the minds of the jury, sat down.</p>
<p>Shannon once more approached Stener.</p>
<p>“Now, as near as you can remember, Mr. Stener, I wish you would tell the
jury what else it was that Mr. Cowperwood said on that occasion. He certainly
didn’t stop with the remark that you would be ruined and go to the
penitentiary. Wasn’t there other language that was employed on that
occasion?”</p>
<p>“He said, as far as I can remember,” replied Stener, “that
there were a lot of political schemers who were trying to frighten me, that if
I didn’t give him three hundred thousand dollars we would both be ruined,
and that I might as well be tried for stealing a sheep as a lamb.”</p>
<p>“Ha!” yelled Shannon. “He said that, did he?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; he did,” said Stener.</p>
<p>“How did he say it, exactly? What were his exact words?” Shannon
demanded, emphatically, pointing a forceful forefinger at Stener in order to
key him up to a clear memory of what had transpired.</p>
<p>“Well, as near as I can remember, he said just that,” replied
Stener, vaguely. “You might as well be tried for stealing a sheep as a
lamb.”</p>
<p>“Exactly!” exclaimed Shannon, whirling around past the jury to look
at Cowperwood. “I thought so.”</p>
<p>“Pure pyrotechnics, your honor,” said Steger, rising to his feet on
the instant. “All intended to prejudice the minds of the jury. Acting. I
wish you would caution the counsel for the prosecution to confine himself to
the evidence in hand, and not act for the benefit of his case.”</p>
<p>The spectators smiled; and Judge Payderson, noting it, frowned severely.
“Do you make that as an objection, Mr. Steger?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I certainly do, your honor,” insisted Steger, resourcefully.</p>
<p>“Objection overruled. Neither counsel for the prosecution nor for the
defense is limited to a peculiar routine of expression.”</p>
<p>Steger himself was ready to smile, but he did not dare to.</p>
<p>Cowperwood fearing the force of such testimony and regretting it, still looked
at Stener, pityingly. The feebleness of the man; the weakness of the man; the
pass to which his cowardice had brought them both!</p>
<p>When Shannon was through bringing out this unsatisfactory data, Steger took
Stener in hand; but he could not make as much out of him as he hoped. In so far
as this particular situation was concerned, Stener was telling the exact truth;
and it is hard to weaken the effect of the exact truth by any subtlety of
interpretation, though it can, sometimes, be done. With painstaking care Steger
went over all the ground of Stener’s long relationship with Cowperwood,
and tried to make it appear that Cowperwood was invariably the disinterested
agent—not the ringleader in a subtle, really criminal adventure. It was
hard to do, but he made a fine impression. Still the jury listened with
skeptical minds. It might not be fair to punish Cowperwood for seizing with
avidity upon a splendid chance to get rich quick, they thought; but it
certainly was not worth while to throw a veil of innocence over such palpable
human cupidity. Finally, both lawyers were through with Stener for the time
being, anyhow, and then Albert Stires was called to the stand.</p>
<p>He was the same thin, pleasant, alert, rather agreeable soul that he had been
in the heyday of his clerkly prosperity—a little paler now, but not
otherwise changed. His small property had been saved for him by Cowperwood, who
had advised Steger to inform the Municipal Reform Association that
Stires’ bondsmen were attempting to sequestrate it for their own benefit,
when actually it should go to the city if there were any real claim against
him—which there was not. That watchful organization had issued one of its
numerous reports covering this point, and Albert had had the pleasure of seeing
Strobik and the others withdraw in haste. Naturally he was grateful to
Cowperwood, even though once he had been compelled to cry in vain in his
presence. He was anxious now to do anything he could to help the banker, but
his naturally truthful disposition prevented him from telling anything except
the plain facts, which were partly beneficial and partly not.</p>
<p>Stires testified that he recalled Cowperwood’s saying that he had
purchased the certificates, that he was entitled to the money, that Stener was
unduly frightened, and that no harm would come to him, Albert. He identified
certain memoranda in the city treasurer’s books, which were produced, as
being accurate, and others in Cowperwood’s books, which were also
produced, as being corroborative. His testimony as to Stener’s
astonishment on discovering that his chief clerk had given Cowperwood a check
was against the latter; but Cowperwood hoped to overcome the effect of this by
his own testimony later.</p>
<p>Up to now both Steger and Cowperwood felt that they were doing fairly well, and
that they need not be surprised if they won their case.</p>
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