Brown v. State

203 S.W. 898 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1918

Appellant was convicted of the murder of George Jackson and the death penalty assessed against him.

His written confession was introduced, as follows: "I had been staying with George Jackson since last Monday. I bought some household goods from him and carried them away yesterday and sold them. George missed a smoothing iron and thought I got it and we talked about it but *452 made everything all right. The conversation occurred last night about 9 o'clock. He had told me about two or three hours before this that we were going to have some trouble about this iron, and when I left Mr. Bird's, where I work, I carried a butcher knife with me. We went to bed about 8 or 9 o'clock, and this morning about 3 or 4 o'clock I got up out of bed and George got up and I hit him with an ax, knocked him down and beat him over the head several times with the ax, and then cut his throat with the butcher knife. There was not a word spoken between George Jackson and myself before I hit him with the ax. After I had killed George Jackson I threw the ax under the house and I carried the butcher knife back to Mr. Bird's and washed the blood off."

There was corroboration. One witness said: "We found the deceased with his head mighty near cut off and his head just beaten to a jelly and face cut up some." An ax was used and found from information given by appellant and was quite bloody. Appellant immediately after the homicide went to the house of a friend about 5 o'clock in the morning and told that he had killed deceased and exhibited a knife, which was afterwards found. Appellant expressed to this witness his intention to flee, but subsequently said that in effect he would stay for fear his departure would arouse suspicion against him. At the time mentioned he had on some clothes that were bloody.

There are two questions raised. One of these reserves exception to the evidence of a witness who testified: "I would take the deceased, George Jackson, to be about 60 or 65 years old; he was just an old worn-out negro, looked like to me, and he was all bunged up with rheumatism." The objection urged was that the evidence was irrelevant, immaterial, prejudicial and opinion. The other bill complains of testimony as follows: "George Jackson was a badly crippled and old negro, that was his physical condition." To this the same objection is urged.

Neither of these bills set out any surrounding facts showing the connection in which the evidence was admitted. Neither complies with the rule which requires an exception to the admission of evidence to be sufficiently explicit to enable the court to fully understand and know all the facts on which the correctness or error of the ruling depends. See Branch's Ann. P.C., p. 132; Eldridge v. State, 12 Texas Crim. App., 208; Livar v. State, 26 Texas Crim. App., 115; Harris v. State,67 Tex. Crim. 251, 148 S.W. Rep., 1074. Many decisions in this court support the rule that the legal presumption is in favor of the correctness of the trial court's ruling and that it is incumbent upon appellant by the facts in his bill of exceptions to overcome this presumption. Moore v. State, 7 Texas Crim. App., 14; Edgar v. State, 59 Tex.Crim. Rep.; James v. State,63 Tex. Crim. 75. We, in view of the extreme penalty, have carefully read the statement of facts in connection with the bills.

It is possible that the trial judge regarded the allusion in appellant's confession to the complaints made by deceased and the anticipated trouble, in connection with the statement that deceased got out of bed *453 at 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning before the homicide took place, as affording a reason for the State to show the age and physical condition of deceased. The statement that the deceased was "all bunged up with rheumatism" is not one requiring a reversal because the witness who used it was not a medical expert. If the testimony was receivable at all it was on the ground that the deceased appeared disabled, and the specific ailment which disabled him was incidental only. Reference to the case of Clayton v. State, 201 S.W. Rep., 172, is made in which it is suggested that evidence that deceased in that case was nearly blind should not be received unless this physical defect is known to appellant. The case was one in which the accused attempted to justify the homicide on the ground of self-defense on apparent danger, offering in part upon this issue peculiar conduct of the deceased. The State, explaining this conduct, showed that the deceased's eyes were defective, and that his conduct would be attributable to that and not to any hostility towards the appellant in that case. The statement in the opinion is made in accord with the established rule that one justifying the homicide on the ground of self-defense is to be tried from his standpoint, and that matters of which he was ignorant would not be admissible against him. The physical defects of the deceased in the instant case were doubtless not unknown to appellant. Their character and the fact that the two parties lived together would indicate the contrary. Moreover, the bill of exceptions does not show that appellant was ignorant of the physical condition of deceased, nor is the issue of self-defense raised; in fact, there are no controverted issues in the case. The evidence is all one way, pointing to a homicide attended with no palliating facts or mitigating circumstances, and if that complained of was shown inadmissible it would not justify reversal. Miller v. State,31 Tex. Crim. 609.

The complaints of the admission of the testimony stated in the imperfect bills mentioned have been looked to solely because of the assessment of the extreme penalty to the end that the judgment might not be executed if the record indicated that injustice was done, even though the complaint of it was made in incomplete bills of exception.

Finding no such injustice and no reversible error, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.

Affirmed.