On an indictment for murder appellant was convicted of manslaughter, with punishment assessed at confinement in the state penitentiary for two years.
“Attorney for the defendant has stated to you that I am asking for the liberty and life of this defendant. I. wish to say to you that it is not I that is asking for his conviction, for I am simply the representative of the law-abiding citizenship of your county.”
This appears to have been invited (see Branch’s An. P. C. § 363), and, if improper, it cannot be said to be so obviously harmful as to render it incapable of withdrawal by special charge. House v. State, 19 Tex. App. 239; Beeson v. State,
“It seems to be a fair conclusion that it is the right of a party, in arguing to a jury, to use a map or plan which is not strictly evidence in the case, for the pur-pose of illustrating his argument and explaining to the jury the position which he assumes — just as the teacher makes use of the figures on a blackboard for the purpose of illustration.” Rucker v. State, 7 Tex. App. 549.
There were no eyewitnesses to the homicide except appellant. The theory of the state was that appellant, concealing himself in the corn, shot deceased while he was plowing in his field. It was a conceded fact that after he was shot deceased walked some distance towards his residence. He fell and died at a point about 150 yards, in an easterly direction from his plow and team. Thirteen buckshot fired from a gun struck him, entering the neck and breast between the chin and collar bone. They did not go through the body, but three of them came to the surface in his back about 18 inches below the place of entry. The widow of deceased testified that she heard a gun fired and her husband holler, ran out in the field, and met him walking in the turnrow towards his house, and he said that Will Borrer shot him; “that he was not doing anything when he was shot, but plowing along.” There had been a previous difficulty, and deceased had sent word to appellant, complaining of his cattle getting in the field. Appellant claims to have gone to see deceased about the cattle, and to have been abused by him, and that when the shot was fired deceased was advancing upon him with a hammer in his hand in a position to throw it, that he, appellant, was backing away, and told deceased he wanted no trouble, and that he stumbled and partly fell, and when he raised his gun to fire deceased threw the hammer. We take the following from his testimony:
“He had the hammer up, and, as he seen I was going to shoot, he ducked over that way (illustrating) and threw the hammer.”
Whether the statement of the district attorney was accurate or not is one we will not undertake to decide. On the subject, however, see Balls v. State,
Fading to find error in the record justifying a reversal, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
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