18 S.W.2d 649 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1929
Conviction for rape; punishment, five years in the penitentiary.
Appellant was charged with rape upon his young daughter about ten years old. He testified denying his guilt and asserting that because of his strictness with this girl and her sisters, the case was fabricated against him. Defense witnesses gave testimony in support *168 of the proposition that the daughters of appellant were guilty of conduct indicating their intimacy with boys and young men, and that they rebelled against appellant's strictness with them.
While appellant was on the witness stand testifying in his own behalf, it was developed that he was under indictment in two other cases for rape. The State's attorney was permitted, over objection, to elicit from appellant the fact that the parties upon whom he was charged in said two other indictments with rape, were his two other minor daughters. We are of opinion that in permitting the State to prove the names and relationships of the parties involved in the other two indictments, there was error committed which was capable of much harm to the cause of the accused. Thompson v. State,
There is a bill of exceptions complaining of the fact that while a witness appellant was compelled to answer that he had been convicted in Hunt county of some misdemeanor which did not involve moral turpitude, but the exact nature of which he did not remember. He testified that he had been found guilty and was sent to the county farm. In the absence of some showing that the offense for which he was convicted was a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, we think the evidence should not have been admitted.
For the errors mentioned, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded. *169