138 S.W. 601 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1911
In this case appellant was indicted, charged with the offense of arson. Upon a trial he was convicted in the district court of Polk county, Tex., and his punishment assessed at five years confinement in the penitentiary.
1. It appears from the record in this case that Tom Pinckard turned what is termed “state’s evidence,” and testified, in effect, that he and defendant burned the house in question. The wife of Tom Pinckard was used as a witness by the state, and the defendant complains, first, that the court refused to give a special charge requested instructing them that Mrs. Pinckard was an accomplice, and her testimony should not be considered as corroborative of that of Tom Pinckard, the admitted accomplice; second, it was complained that defendant offered to prove, and could have proved, by said witness, that her husband, Tom Pinckard, had brought home a pitcher and some other articles alleged to have been stolen by her husband.
5. The only other question in the case which is raised in a number of assignments is, Did the evidence show the house burned to be the property of the party alleged? Tom Pinckard and wife, W. M. Moye, Willie Dickens, and A. J. Franklin all speak of it as the property of G. W. Nickles, and in the evidence there was no issue raised as to this being the property of any person other than Nickles, and under all the testimony, especially if we take into consideration the confession of defendant, there can be no question that the house burned was thq house of C. W. Nickles.
The judgment is affirmed. '