ALBERT BYRD v. THE STATE
No. 1799
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
November 2, 1898
39 Tex. Crim. 609
1898.] BYRD V. THE STATE. 609
Where the residence of the proposed absent witness in an application for continuance is stated to be unknown, and it does not appear that he was ever known in the county, and his whereabouts are unknown; that process issued to several counties for him has been returned “not found,” after search to secure his attendance, and that defendant‘s counsel is the only person professing to be acquainted with him; Held, the application was properly refused.
2. Same.
An application for continuance is properly refused where it is shown that at least twenty days before the trial defendant knew that the witness was rеsiding with her parents in Arkansas and no effort whatever has been made to secure her deposition.
3. Same-When Sought for a State‘s Witness.
Where a defendant proposes to use a State‘s witness, he should make the fact known and join in the process issued by the State for said witness. He should certainly make his intention to use the witness known prior to his application for a continuance, so as to avoid any question as to his good faith in the premises.
4. Improper Argument of Counsel-Practice on Appeal.
A case will not ordinarily be revised on appeal because of denunciatory remarks of counsel for the prosecution, unless a charge on the subject was asked and refused by the court. But district judges should adopt stringent measures to prevent such practice, too often resorted to in the courts.
5. Murder-Manslaughter-Charge.
On a trial for murder, where there was evidence to the effect that shortly before the homicide the wife of deceased made an assault upon defendant and struck him repeatedly with a whip, and that her husband, deceased, was present at the time aiding her by acts and encouraging her by gestures, a charge upon manslaughter was insufficient which wholly failed to instruct the jury that the assault made by the wife, in which deceased aided and encouraged her, would be an assault by him, and might be adequate cause to reduce the offense tо manslaughter; and it was error to refuse a requested instruction asked to that effect.
APPEAL from the District Court of Milam. Tried below before Hon. W. G. TALIAFERRO.
Appeal from a conviction for murder in the second degree; penalty, twenty-five years imprisonment in the penitentiary.
The indictment charged appellant with the murder of L. C. Alexander, on the 12th day of July, 1897.
The case is sufficiently stated in the opinion.
R. Lyles, A. P. Taylor, and J. E. Yantis, for appellant.
Mann Trice, Assistant Attorney-General, for the State.
DAVIDSON, JUDGE.-Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of twenty-five years; hence this appeal.
The court overruled appellant‘s motion for a continuance, to which he
On the trial of the case appellant reserved a bill of exceptions to certain remarks of J. C. Scott, the district attorney, denunciatory of the defendant. Among other things, he applied to him the epithets “assassin,” “murderer,” “vulture,” and also went out of the record to state “that it
Appellant complains of the action of the court in refusing to give the special instruction requested by him on the subject of manslaughter. In order to present this issue fairly, we will quote substantially so much of the evidence and charge of the court as bears on this subject. The homicide appears to have been occasioned by an altercation that occurred between defendant, deceased, and his wife, at the residence of the deceased, between fifteen and twenty minutes preceding the killing. Deceased and his wife lived on Belton Street, about two blocks west of the Aransas Pass depot, in the city of Cameron. With them lived their daughter, Miss Florence Maddox, a young lady about 15 years of age; and at the time Miss Eveline Wilder, a young lady about 17 years old, whose home was in Arkansas, was visiting them. Appellant and his brother, Cleburne Byrd, lived with their parents, just across the street from the deceased. Defendant at the time was running an ice cream parlor about four or five blocks from his residence, east from the Aransas depot. The killing occurred immediately in front of and south of the Aransas depot on Belton street, between 12 and 1 o‘clock at night. It appears that about 8 o‘clock on the night of the homicide appellant and one Will English met the two young ladies, and were taking a walk. The proposition was made to go to a camp meeting, about six miles in the country. Miss Maddox objected, because she said her mothеr would not permit her to go. They agreed, however, to go and see Mrs. Alexander to gain her consent for the young ladies to go to the camp meeting. They went to the residence of the latter, and met deceased and his wife there, about 9 o‘clock. They refused to permit the young ladies to go to the camp meeting, stating that their daughter was too young to go out with young men, and it was too late, and the camp meeting was too far out. On further importunity Mrs. Alexander consented that the young men might take the girls to a meeting that was going on in the city of Cameron, but to bring them immediately back home. The parties-defendant with Miss Wilder and English with Miss Maddox-immediately left the residence of the deceased, and went to the ice cream parlor of appellant; the young ladies in the meantime having consented to go to the camp meeting.
On this state of case, the court gave a charge on murder in the first and second degrees, manslaughter, and self-defense. The charge on manslaughter, so far as applicable to the question here raised, is as follows: “Manslaughter is voluntary homicide, committed under the immediate influence of sudden passion, arising from an adequate cause, but neither justified nor excused by law. (1) The act must be directly caused by the passion arising out of the provocаtion. (2) The passion intended is either of the emotions of the mind known as anger, rage, sudden resentment, or terror, rendering it incapable of cool reflection. (3) By the expression
The charge requested by appellant, which was refused by the court, is as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that Florence B. Alexander was the wife of Lawson C. Alexander, and that the said Florence B. Alexander committed an assault and battery upon the defendant with a whip, in the street near the residence of said Lawson C. Alexander, on the night of July 12, 1897, and that the said Lawson C. Alexander was present at the time and place and where the assault and battery was committed upon the defendant by Florence B. Alexander, and the said Lawson C. Alexander knew of the unlawful intent of the said Florence B. Alexander, and that he aided her by acts or encouraged her by gestures to commit said assault upon the defendant, then the said Florence B. Alexander and Lawson C. Alexander were principals in said assault,
Now, the question arises whether or not the charge of the court on the subject of manslaughter, as applicable to the facts proven, was full enough; in other words, was there a phase of the case not covered by the court‘s charge, and which the requested charge did cover? It is urged that the court‘s charge to the effect that any condition or circumstance capable of creating, and which does create, sudden passion, such as anger, etc., rendering the mind incapable of cool reflection, etc., is sufficiently comprehensive to cover all the points at issue, and to authorize the jury to find the defendant guilty only of manslaughter, if they believe that the assault was committed by Mrs. Alexander, and not by him. And it is further insisted that the jury would know, without an instruction to that effect, that an assault committed by Mrs. Alexander, when he was present, aiding and encouraging her in such assault, would be an assault by him as a principal, and that the charge as given was sufficient without charging specifically on the doctrine of principals in connection with an assault committed by Mrs. Alexander. The first contention might be correct if the court‘s charge had been general. For instance, if the court had charged, if they believed appellant had been assaulted at the house of Alexander by them, which caused his mind to be excited, аnd sufficient cooling time had not elapsed, and he subsequently killed deceased, he would only be guilty of manslaughter. But such was not the charge of the court. The charge, as given, confined the adequate cause to an assault and battery by the deceased, causing pain; and then predicated throughout the charge on manslaughter an assault made by deceased, L. C. Alexander. The jury would naturally conclude from this that they could only consider, with reference to adequate cause, an assault made on appellant by L. C. Alexander, and not by his wife. If there was no controversy in the record as to an assault being made by L. C. Alеxander at his house on appellant, then, of course, the charge given would not be misleading. Appellant, in his testimony, claims that both L. C. Alexander and his wife assaulted him, deceased participating actively in such assault; indeed, that he began it. If the State‘s testimony concurred with this, there could be no possible error. But, as we understand it, the State‘s evidence controverts this proposition. Mrs. Alexander and her daughter both testify that she alone made the assault on appellant with the buggy whip, that deceased did not participate in said assault, and that she alone committed the assault. For aught that we know, the jury may have believed this version of the affair. The charge, however, circumscribed and limited them to an assault made by the deceased, and we are nowhere told that the assault made by the wife of the deceased, which he aided and encouraged, would be an assault by him, and might be adequate cause to reduce the offense to manslaughter. We believe the charge as given eliminated adequate cause superinduced by an assault made on appellant by the wife of the deceased, in which he joined by acts or words, and re-
Reversed and remanded.
HURT, Presiding Judge, absent.
ADDITIONAL OPINION.
November 18, 1898.
HENDERSON, JUDGE.-In the opinion delivered in this case at a former day of this term, in connection with the witness Nevils, for whom a continuance was sought, this language is found: “In connection with this witness, it does not appear that he was known in Milam County. So far as the record discloses, R. Lyles, one of the attorneys in the case, is the only person about Cameron or in that vicinity who professed to be acquainted with this man Nevils. His whereabouts in the application is stated to be unknown; and the whole country, including the surrounding counties, have been searched to secure his attendance.” It will be noticed that in this opinion the statement is made that “R. Lyles, one of the attorneys in the case, is the only person about Cameron or in that vicinity who professed to be acquainted with this man Nevils.” Since the rendition of this opinion, it has been called to our attention that this is not a correct and full statement of the record in this connection; and, after a careful examination of the record, we find that this portion of the opinion incorrectly states the record on this point. The witness Thomas Ford testified on the trial as follows: “I live in Cameron, Texas. Have lived there many years. I knew John Nevils. I saw him in Cameron about the time of the killing of L. C. Alexander. I saw him several times. He was an Irish laborer. I do not know where he is now. I think he was a sort of a tramp.” It may be further stated in this connection that the reсord also discloses that Terry saw Lyles talking to some one; and, in a conversation with Lyles in regard to that person, Lyles stated to Terry that it was Nevils to whom he was talking. For two reasons we desire to file this additional statement, to be considered along with the opinion in this case. First, to correct the opinion in regard to the statement that Lyles was the only witness who professed to be acquainted with Nevils; and, second, to correct any wrong impression that may be gathered from the opinion itself in regard to the witness Lyles. We make this correction in order to conform the opinion in the case to the record, and in order that no injustice may be done to the parties mentioned.
