142 S.W. 1179 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1912
This conviction was for manslaughter, the penalty being two years’ confinement in the penitentiary.
Several objections are urged to the court’s charge with reference to manslaughter, some of which might perhaps give some trouble, but for the fact that appellant’s punishment for manslaughter was the minimum. Had the jury assessed more than two years as the punishment, some of the questions would have been serious.
The facts bearing immediately upon this •question may be briefly stated this way: Deceased had been a paramour of appellant’s wife years ago, but had deserted her under circumstances that were rather urgent. He had seduced a girl under promise of marriage, and to save himself from the penitentiary he married the girl and deserted his paramour, who subsequently became the wife of appellant. Appellant, however, was ignorant of all these facts until a few days before the homicide. Deceased and appellant’s wife had not lived together for eight or nine years. When appellant discovered the condition of things, and that deceased was trying to alienate his wife from him and resume his former relations with her, he became excited and harassed, and finally called deceased to his room, and had him to write a statement in which the deceased acknowledged all of his former relations with appellant’s wife and his late acts in trying to seduce her from appellant. After this document was written and signed, which is shown in the record, but deemed unnecessary to be produced here, appellant remarked to him, “get out of here, you dirty cur,” or similar language, and turned away from deceased. This was all in appellant’s room at Mrs. Gant’s. He says, and the state puts this statement in evidence, that as he turned away he heard a commotion and looked around and deceased was advancing on him with a large spring-back knife open, whereupon he began shooting and continued to shoot until four shots were fired, resulting in the death of deceased. There were no eyewitnesses except appellant. There were other inmates in the house, but they were in other rooms. He immediately left the room and made a statement to Mrs. Gant that deceased had ruined his home and had undertaken to kill him with a knife, and that he had shot him in self-defense. We are of opinion there is no such serious objection to the charge of the court on self-defense urged by appellant as requires a reversal of the ease.
As the record is presented to us and under the decisions of the court, we are of opinion there is no such error found in. the record as requires a reversal.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.