179 S.W. 1178 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1915
Appellant was convicted of pursuing the occupation of selling intoxicating liquors in local option territory, his punishment being assessed at two years confinement in the penitentiary.
The indictment, after alleging the pursuing of the business, set out the names of two parties to whom sales were made, towit: Will Williams and J.T. Kilgore. Proof is reasonably certain as to the sale to Williams. Kilgore was not produced as a witness. Appellant made a confession to the district attorney after he had testified before the grand jury. The confession may be treated as indicating that he had sold whisky to J.T. Kilgore. It is rather indefinite. He also mentioned the names of two other parties who were not named in the indictment. This is the State's case outside of the fact that defendant is shown to have been connected with a shipment of whisky by one of the witnesses, that is, that he had, on the occasion when Will Williams bought the whisky, a paper box that would carry twelve bottles of whisky. It is not stated, however, that there were twelve bottles in it at the time that Williams bought this whisky. Williams testified that he did not see any other whisky there at the time he bought it. He says there was a box there, but he did not see any whisky. All that he saw was a pint of whisky that he bought of defendant, for which he paid 75 cents. The sheriff testified that he recovered or came in possession of some intoxicating liquors in a pasteboard box, a twelve-quart case. This was on the 31st of May, and he found this whisky or got it at the old jail wagon yard in Clarksville, and his recollection was that there were five quarts of whisky in the box, and some old whisky glasses. This witness does not connect the defendant with that pasteboard box, nor does he undertake to do so. It may or not have belonged to appellant. The confession made to Mr. Lipscomb was to the effect that appellant got a shipment of twelve quarts of whisky on the 31st of May, and disposed of all but five. That he "sold Will Williams one pint of the whisky; and let J.T. Kilgore have one pint of the whisky; and Collier Hemingway got one quart of the whisky; and Rufus Davis got one quart of the whisky, and I sold three or four other different parties one quart each of the whisky. I didn't know the parties to whom I sold." Now this confession does not aid the State particularly in its case, *44
even if it was admissible testimony. The confession of a defendant may be used where corpus delicti is shown to connect the defendant or party making the confession with that corpus delicti, and it has been held that the confession may be used to aid in making out the corpus delicti, as in the Kugadt case,
Take the confession of appellant out of the case, and there is no testimony to show that he sold whisky to anybody except Williams. The corpus delicti in this case is not shown until evidence of a sale has been shown by somebody. The same may be said as to the other parties named in the confession. They, however, are not named in the indictment, but if they had been the State could not prove the corpus delicti or crime by the confession. There must be evidence independent of the confession. Such we understand to be the unbroken line of authority in Texas. The Hill case, supra, was followed in two cases reported in 40 Texas Crim. Rep., White v. State, 366, and Sullivan v. State, 633; also in Dunlap v. State, 50 Tex.Crim. Rep.. We, therefore, are of opinion the State has not made out its case. The State must prove not only the following of the business, but must prove at least two sales, and this must be done according to the rules of evidence and law, and as a prerequisite to that it must be shown that the party was following that business, and in pursuing that business made two sales, otherwise the State has not made a case.
The facts do not justify this conviction as presented by this record, and the judgment, therefore, will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.