142 S.W. 4 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1911
Appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Eastland county charging that he did unlawfully, in the presence and hearing of Callie Winston and Annie Winston, curse and abuse them and used' violently abusive language to and concerning them under circumstances calculated to provoke a breach of the peace. The appellant was tried under that charge, found guilty, and his punishment fixed at a fine of
There is not a single bill of exceptions in the record. The appellant asked three special charges which were refused.
In appellant’s amended motion for new trial he complains of this portion of the court’s charge: “You are instructed that if any person shall, in the presence and hear,ing of another, curse or abuse such person, or use violently abusive language to such person, concerning him or any of his female relatives, under circumstances reasonably calculated to provoke a breach of the peace, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.” Because the indictment did not charge that the appellant used violently abusive language concerning any of the female relatives of said Oallie and Annie Winston, and the charge was not confined to the allegations contained in the indictment, was unauthorized and highly prejudicial, because said prosecuting witnesses testified to facts which may have been construed to refer to their female relatives. This complaint was first made in appellant’s amended motion for a new trial. No objection seems to have been made to it at the time of the trial, and no special charge was requested by appellant to in any way cure the defect therein, if it was a defect. As stated above, the prosecuting witnesses were the appellant’s stepdaughters. Each of them testified that the appellant cursed them, calling them “liars,” “sons of bitches,” and “negro whores”; that on the same occasion he again cursed them and called them all kinds of ugly names and called them “whores” and “bitches”; that he then undertook to take a strop to them and whip them; that they ran from him, and he ordered them off of the place, and they left and had never returned. AVe are not prepared to say, under the circumstances, that the t$rm in the charge complained of that the abusive language was concerning their “female relatives” was error. In our opinion it could not have misled the jury.
The judgment will be affirmed.