231 S.W. 105 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1921
Appellant was convicted for selling intoxicating liquor to one S.L. Holley, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for one year.
Holley, in company with Sam Jenkins, went to appellant's house, and found he was away from home, at Mr. Haynie's. They went to Haynie's and found appellant; and Holley inquired of him if he knew where he could get a quart of whisky. Appellant told him there was a cotton picker at his, appellant's house, by the name of Slim, and told him to go call Clyde Chandler, appellant's son, and that he, Clyde, would get Slim to sell him the whisky. The witness Jenkins heard none of the conversation between appellant and Holley. They left appellant and went back to his house, and Holley communicated to Clyde Chandler what his father, this appellant, had told him. Clyde, Slim and Holley then went in the house and Holley got a quart of whisky, throwing ten dollars down on the floor as he left. The witness Jenkins does not seem to have heard either the conversation with appellant at Mr. Haynie's or the conversation with Clyde Chandler and Slim after they had returned to appellant's house. He saw the three parties go to the well, and saw them go into the house, and knows that after they left the house Holley had some corn whisky; disclaims *301 having anything to do with the purchase of the whisky, and did not know what Holley was going for at the time he went to Chandler. The first he knew of Holley having any whisky was after they had started away from appellant's house in the buggy; and claims he does not know where Holley got the whisky. The statement of facts is very brief, and the foregoing is a condensed statement of all the evidence in the case.
Appellant requested a charge on accomplice testimony, and also a charge directing the jury to return a verdict of "not guilty," because of the insufficiency of the evidence. Both of these charges were refused by the court. There is no question but that Holley was an accomplice, and without his testimony the State would have had no semblance of a case; Jenkins disclaims knowing anything about the selling or purchase of the whisky. The case must be reversed for the failure of the court to charge on accomplice testimony, under the authority of the cases: Robert v. State, 88 Tex.Crim. Rep., 228 S.W. Rep., 230; Franklin v. State, 88 Tex.Crim. Rep., 227 S.W. Rep., 486, and many cases following them.
We have serious doubts as to whether a case would have been made out against the appellant, John Chandler, even had there been sufficient corroborating testimony. He was charged as a principal with the sale of the whisky to Holley. He was not present at the time the sale was made. A party may be a principal under certain circumstances, although not present at the time of the commission of the offense, but we doubt if the facts in this case bring appellant within any of the rules where a party, in his absence from the place of the commission of the crime, may be a principal. In Middleton v. State, 86 Tex.Crim. Rep., 217 S.W. Rep., 1046, this court undertook to clear up the confusion which had existed with reference to principals, and laid down six ways in which a party might occupy that relation to a crime. These will be found referred to in Kolb v. State,
For the error suggested, the judgment of the trial court must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.