100 S.W. 381 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1907
Appellant was convicted of manslaughter, and his punishment assessed at two years in the penitentiary, and prosecutes this appeal.
The homicide occurred as the result of a difficulty between two negroes in the town of Bonham, Texas; deceased was a drayman and appellant was the driver of a delivery wagon. It appears that deceased made some remark about appellant procuring a certain colored woman in town for some white man. About noon appellant accosted deceased in regard to said remark, and cursed and abused him about it. Deceased threatened to get a gun and kill appellant. After that both parties appear to have gone to Locksboro, a suburb of Bonham, to deliver goods. Deceased preceded appellant and appellant came meeting him. When they met, according to the State's theory, deceased was driving his wagon and passed appellant, when the latter told him to stop, he wanted to talk to him. Appellant, after they had passed *22 one another, did stop and get out of his wagon, deceased telling him that he did not have time to talk to him; at this juncture appellant jumped out of his wagon and run up following deceased's team; as he got up opposite the wagon he told deceased he would make him stop and threw a bottle at him, which he picked up off the ground, telling him "God damn him, he would make him take time to stop." Deceased then stopped his team and appellant jerked his pistol out and shot deceased, and deceased then jumped off the wagon on the opposite side from appellant and run on out from the wagon westward some thirty or forty feet and fell, appellant in the meantime following him around and running after him. Appellant's narrative of the facts attending the homicide show that at the time of the altercation between the deceased and himself in town when deceased left him he said he was going to get a gun and kill him, and he saw him immediately go into a hardware store and believed he had gotten a gun. Appellant phoned to his home for a party to bring him his gun, that he had a call to go out to Locksboro to carry some goods that evening, and he placed a pistol in it box in the delivery wagon; that he had two children on the seat with him and as he went out to Locksboro he met deceased, and as he approached him, deceased drove his wagon across rather in front of him as if to stop him and just as appellant approached him, deceased said something; that when he got up to where he was appellant jumped out of his wagon on the east side; he jumped out because deceased had driven in front of him, and he heard him say something and he run his hand in his pocket and was getting something out of his pocket, and appellant picked up a bottle and threw at him; that he thought deceased was trying to get a gun or something out of his pocket to shoot him with; that deceased jumped off of his wagon and as he threw the bottle at him he saw him duck down, and he came around the team and they met at the head of the mules, and when he met him he saw he had an open knife in his hand; that he (appellant) pulled his pistol and shot, and when he shot deceased he run and directly he fell and appellant went on home.
The court charged on provoking a difficulty, and this is excepted to because there was nothing in the case to authorize the court to give a charge on this subject, and because the charges as given were incorrect. Of course, a charge on provoking a difficulty should never be given unless self-defense is set up in the case, for a charge on provoking a difficulty is a limitation on the right of self-defense, and a charge on provoking a difficulty should never be given unless there are facts in evidence which show that deceased made the first assault on appellant, and that appellant with the intention of provoking a difficulty for the purpose of killing, did some act calculated to bring on a difficulty. See McCandless v. State,
Reversed and remanded.