Barnes v. State

41 Tex. 342 | Tex. | 1874

Moore, Associate Justice.

To justify a conviction upon circumstantial evidence alone, the facts relied upon must be absolutely incompatible with the innocence of the accused, and incapable of explanation upon any other reasonable hypothesis than that of guilt.

*345Whatever suspicion may be aroused against appellant by some of the facts disclosed in the record, and although her conduct may not have been entirely consistent in all respects with what we may think it should have been, if the theory of her counsel furnishes the correct explanation of the transaction, still, when all the facts as now presented are calmly and dispassionately considered, we are clearly of the opinion they are insufficient to warrant, beyond all reasonable doubt, the belief that appellant is guilty of the offense of which she has been convicted. Indeed, whatever conclusion may be justified by a more full and satisfactory development of the facts and circumstances connected with and throwing light upon the transaction, which may probably result from another trial, the evidence as set forth in the record is less capable of explanation and more incompatible with the supposition of appellant’s guilt than her innocence.

The deceased was carried home “before noon ” of the day on which he was killed (a nearer approximation of the time is unfortunately not given) in a helpless state of intoxication. He was so drunk that he could not stand up; was put in or fell into his house; and was left by the witness who assisted in carrying him home lying flat on the floor, with both doors of the house closed. There were in the house with him when left by this witness appellant and a negro, who had been seen with him several times during the morning, and who had assisted in carrying him home.

Who this negro was, where he lived, when he left the house, what became of him, or what connection or acquaintance he had with appellant or her husband, is not shown.

Two witnesses testify to hearing in the house what one of them calls a “rumpus” and the other “ sounds of strife,” which he says were loud and violent, though at the distance he was from the house at first he could not distin*346guish any words; but when he went nearer he heard some one in a woman’s voice say, “Put down that axe,” and then in a man’s voice the words, “Oh!” “Oh!” The other witness says he heard appellant cry out, “ Murder !” “ Murder! ” and at the same time a voice saying, “Oh, hush!” and shortly afterwards a heavy thud; which, from other evidence, we think, was most probably the sound produced by the striking of the axe upon the floor when the death blow was given. This “rumpus” was heard by the witness while in his sleeping-room, where he went, he says, “about twelve o’clock noon.” The time when the “ sounds of strife ” were heard by the other witness is not stated. It is therefore only a matter of inference that the testimony of these witnesses has reference to the same transaction. Unless, however, the strife heard by the one was before the other went to his sleeping-room, it would seem most probable to be the same, as another witness, we may infer from his testimony, would also have heard it, if it had occurred subsequently.

Very soon after one o’clock p. m., says the only witness who fixes the time, a number of citizens, who had heard that Barnes had been killed, went to his house; but by whom information of his death was given, or how and where these persons first heard of it, is not stated, and whether the doors were still closed when they reached the house is not told. The body of the deceased was found lying upon the floor where he was left by the witness who carried him home, the head almost entirely severed from the body, the body cold, and the blood upon the floor coagulated; but no blood? was found upon the hands of deceased or anywhere about him, except about the wound on the neck, and his clothing presented no appearance or evidence of violence. The room, however was found in a badly disordered condition, the furniture and fixtures scattered about and displaced. There was the mark of a bloody hand upon the covering of the bed. Whether of *347a man’s or woman’s hand is not stated. And the print of a bloody thumb upon the panel of the door, too large to have been made by a woman’s thumb. Whether its position indicated that it was made when opening the door or otherwise is not shown. Ho one was found in the house but appellant, and she bore marks of recent struggle and of great personal violence. Her neck was badly bruised. Her eyes were bloody and badly hurt. One of them was nearly out. She had received other injuries of such violent character that, in the opinion of the physician who attended upon her, they could only have been inflicted “by the full strength of a strong man,” and were, he said, dangerous to life, and such as might have produced insensibility.

In response to the inquiries of some of those who had gone to the house on hearing that Barnes had been killed, appellant said the negro, who had been there in the morning, “ Henry Jones ” or “John Henry,” the witness did not remember which, had attempted to rape her and then murdered her husband; but further explanation by her seems to have been checked by the ill-judged, though no doubt kindly-meant suggestion of some of those present, “Hot to say anything about the matter until she could get the advice of a lawyer.” Whatever may have been the motive which prompted this advice, it was untimely and detrimental to the ends of justice, if she was guilty of the crime with which she is charged, and still more injurious and unfortunate for her if innocent. Her statements would have been of incalculable aid in ferreting out and developing the true facts of the case, and if shown to be clearly and indisputably false in any material particular, as no doubt might have been done if she is guilty, would have raised a strong presumption of her guilt. On the other hand, if she is innocent, and her statement was consistent with itself and the intrinsic probabilities from the surrounding circumstances, it would have been as a shield of brass *348for her defense, unless its falsity in some particular could be shown.

But, looking at the case as it is presented to us, upon what theory can it be maintained that appellant is guilty of the crime of which she is convicted? Was it by her hand the terrible blow was struck which severed the head of the deceased from his body? If so, when and how was it given? The position of the body on the floor, where deceased had been left too drank to stand up, as well as the rectangular character of the wound, indicates that this blow by which it was inflicted must have been dealt while he was lying upon the floor, and this negatives the idea that he came to his death while an active participant in the “rumpus” or “strife” heard by the witnesses. Consequently, we should conclude appellant, if guilty at all, is guilty of murder, instead of manslaughter. If the deceased was killed when the blow was struck which caused the heavy thud heard by the witness, as seems most probable, it is, we think, unreasonable to suppose that appellant slew him, or that she was giving aid and assistance to the person who killed him. It was a woman’s voice which was heard saying, “Put down that axe!” It was appellant who was heard crying out, “Murder!” “Murder!” Surely it is not from one who is about to strike the fatal blow, or who is aiding and assisting others who are, that we should expect to hear this fearful and alarming cry. hTor if it was her confederate who seized the axe, can we suppose appellant would have called upon him to put it down.

There was, unquestionably, a violent struggle in the house about an hour prior to the time when these persons who had heard of Barnes’ death reached it. The disordered condition of the furniture, the print of the bloody hand upon the covering of the bed and of the bloody thumb upon the door, the outcries of appellant heard by the witnesses, and the injuries inflicted upon her, manifests the *349violent character of this struggle, and plainly shows that appellant was one of the victims of and sufferers from it. Who was the other party to this strife and violence heard by the witnesses, and shown by the marks of it left in the room and on the person of appellant? Certainly xve do not feel warranted, from the testimony before us, in saying it was her husband. If we were to infer that time enough had elapsed, after he was carried home, to have become sufficiently sober to have gotten up and to have had the physical capacity to inflict the injuries shown to have been done appellant, which her physician says required “the full strength of a strong man,” the fact that no blood was found upon his hands nor anywhere about him, except about the wound in his neck, and that his clothing presented no appearance of his having been engaged in a struggle, repels the supposition that it was with him she was engaged in this conflict. Surely, if appellant had sufficient strength to sever with an axe by a single blow the head of deceased from his body, he could not have had such a conflict with her as is shown by the disordered condition of the room and the marks of its violence left on her person, without either his person or clothing showing some trace or evidence of it.

If the injuries done appellant were not inflicted by her husband, we must infer that she received them from the negro man who came home with him, and that it was' with him that she had this conflict. He is the only person shown to have been about the house' after the witness who assisted in carrying deceased home left. He manifested the intention at that time of remaining there, we suppose, until Barnes should get sober. But if we conclude the negro was still in the house, and the injuries received by appellant were inflicted by him, if Barnes was killed by her, unless it was subsequent to their conflict and after he had left, we must infer that he was a party to, if not the principal, in the crime. But upon this hy*350pothesis there seems to us no mitigating circumstances which reduces the offense to manslaughter. And if we suppose that Barnes was killed by either of them, by the connivance and in concert with the other, there is then no reasonable motive by which we can account for the violent struggle and conflict between them. And if we suppose Barnes to have been killed by appellant prior to her conflict with the negro, or if not with him, or with whoever may have been her adversary, and that he was in no way implicated with her, he must unquestionably have been fully aware of Barnes’s death, and we must suppose, if he failed to do so before, he would, at least, after their conflict, have denounced her for his murder, instead of aiding her to conceal her guilt by his silence or flight, giving her an opportunity, if she sought to avail herself of it, of shifting suspicion from herself on to him; and if she did not do this, furnishing the strongest evidence of his complicity with her.

There is still less reason,"we think, to suppose that the deceased was killed by appellant after this conflict was over, in which she was so shockingly, and, as the physician says, dangerously injured, lío noise indicating strife was subsequently heard in the house, although during most of the time a policeman was on the watch near by. The condition of the body indicated that the deceased had been killed for about the length of time which elapsed from the struggle and heavy thud heard by the witness until examined by the parties who went to the house on hearing that he had been killed.

The fact of appellant’s remaining quietly at home without notifying any one of the first outrage attempted upon herself and brutal -murder of her husband, though able, notwithstanding her injuries, to go out as often as three times and gather chips for her fire, while the party who she charges with these horrible offenses would have the opportunity by flight to escape the penalty of his terrible *351crimes, if such is the ease, is unquestionably a circumstance of grave suspicion, and militates strongly against the theory of her defense. But still it only shows that conflicting conclusions may be deduced from the different aspects in which the case may be viewed. And that we give not undue weight to her silence during the short time which elapsed after her husband was killed until it was generally known, we must remember the dissimilarity in physical as well as mental and moral impulses of different persons under like circumstances. Due allowance should also be made for the mental as well as bodily suffering which she must have endured. Though conscious of innocence, she may have been for the time bowed down and overwhelmed by the horror of her position, with Ho one, it may be, to whom she could go for friendly aid or counsel. It is also to be observed, if she failed to denounce the party she now charges with the murder with the promptness we suppose she might or should, still she betrayed no consciousness of guilt by flight, and made no effort to conceal the crime. We may also add, that we cannot say from the record that it was not through her that the fact of Barnes’s death was made known.

Although the fact which appellant proposed to prove by the witness Sharp, unless more closely connected with the case, or made to appear more pertinent in some way than is shown by the bill of exception, it would seem to us to be entitled to but little weight, still in some degree it tends to support the consistency and probability of appellant’s statement, and it should, we think, have been permitted to go to the jury.

As was said by the court in the case of Cooper v. The State, 19 Tex., 458: “ In cases like the present, depending wholly upon circumstantial evidence, the mind seeks to explore any possible source from which any light, however feeble, may be derived; and in such a case it is peculiarly proper that the jury should have before them every fact *352and circumstance, however slight, which may aid them in coming to a satisfactory conclusion.”

The judgment is reversed and the case remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

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