8 Tex. Ct. App. 321 | Tex. App. | 1880
This is an appeal from a second convic
We notice in the . first place, and briefly, the errors assigned upon the refusal of the court to grant a change of venue. In the motion and affidavit of the defendant various grounds are set out, going to show that a trial should not be had in the county of Johnson where the prosecution had been commenced ; but in the supporting affidavits, oath is made to the single legal ground that there exists in Johnson County, where the cause had been commenced and was then pending, so great a prejudice against the defendant that he could not obtain a fair and impartial trial. On hearing the motion, testimony was heard before the court on the question of prejudice against the defendant. A full statement of the evidence taken before the court, as pre
It is shown by a bill of exceptions that when Bowden, the accomplice, was testifying, he was asked by counsel for the defendant whether he had not on a former occasion testified differently from what he had sworn to on the trial, and, declining to answer the question, the court was asked to place him in confinement on bread and water in order to compel him to answer. It seems the witness was confined in the county jail at the time of the trial, and had been brought from the jail to testify. The court refused to compel the witness to answer by a resort to the means suggested by counsel, and they took a bill of exceptions to the ruling of the court. Whether the question put to the witness was one the witness had a right to decline answering or not, on the ground that the answer would tend to bring him into disgrace or subject him to a criminal prose
The defendant was not entitled to the benefit of Sam Myers’s testimony. The question was settled in the habeas corpus case.
On the trial it seems that the State was permitted to prove, over objections of defendant, certain statements of Sam Myers in the absence of the defendant, and which did not relate directly to him. This testimony was admissible as tending, in connection with other testimony, to show whether the two were actuated by a common design and intent at the time"of the murder. The court admitted the testimony, but charged the jury that they would not regard any statements made by Sam Myers as tending to fix guilt upon the defendant, Thomas J. Myers, except such as were made in his, Thomas J. Myers’s, presence and assented to by him. In this action of the court no material error is seen, owing to the peculiarities of the case. Still, the remarks made by Sam in the absence- of Thomas, and before there was- any evidence of the two having acted together, could only have.been legitimate upon being connected "with other testimony going to show a common intent to take the life of Mrs. Hester.
Several bills of exception relate to the charge of the court, and to charges refused which the defendant’s counsel had asked to be given to the jury. On a careful comparison of
It is shown by the record that after the trial before the jury had ended, so far as the evidence and the charge of the court is concerned, and after the jury had retired in charge of the case to consider of théir verdict, and had been so in charge of the case from the 23d to the 25th of the month of July, 1879, a bill of exceptions recites that the judge, of his own motion, had the jury called into court and asked if they had agreed on a verdict; to which the foreman replied, no, they had not; whereupon the court asked if there was any probability of their agreeing upon a verdict; to which two of the jurors replied that they thought there was no probability of their agreeing ; whereupon, at the request of counsel for the State, the court, over objection by defendant’s counsel, gave the jury the following additional instruction : —
“You are further instructed in this case that if you find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, under the facts and the law as before given you in charge, then you will say by your verdict, we, the jury, find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, and you will assess his punishment at death by hanging, or at confinement in the penitentiary for life, in your discretion. If you find him not guilty, you will simply say so by your verdict.”
By the law in force when the trial commenced, the punishment prescribed by law for murder in the first degree was death, and the court had so charged the jury. One of the provisos of the Revised Code is that “ the punishment of murder in the first degree shall be death, or confinement in the penitentiary for life.”
The law in force when the trial commenced was the law of the case until it ended. Walker v. The State, 6 Texas Ct. App. 245; Simms v. The State, ante, p. 230. The subject is controlled by art. 6 of the final title of the Revised Statutes, p. 718.
Because of error of the court in calling the jury in and giving them the additional instructions, they not having requested it, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.