51 S.W.2d 356 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1932
Lead Opinion
The offense, murder; the punishment, ninety-nine years in the penitentiary.
This is the second appeal in this case; the former appeal is reported in 117 Tex.Crim. Rep.,
Bill of exception No. 2 complains of the refusal to permit the appellant to offer in evidence a certified copy of the judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas wherein Etta Bentley, a witness for the state, had been convicted on a plea of guilty of a violation of the federal liquor law. Said bill is qualified as follows: That there was no issue between the state and defendant as to the fact that the witness had been convicted and had fully served her time; the *455 district attorney having agreed to the fact before the jury and the witness having orally testified to the fact. As so qualified, no harm is shown to the appellant, and no error is presented by said bill.
Bill of exception No. 3 shows that after the witness for the appellant, Ben Musick, had testified on cross-examination by the state that he had known the defendant for about two years, that he was a good friend of the defendant and had been closely associated with him, and that he and the defendant had been engaged in a small business together, that the district attorney then asked said witness what that small business was, and on the objection of the appellant the court sustained said objection, and thereupon, after the court sustained said objection, the district attorney immediately again asked said witness in the presence and hearing of the jury what said small business was, and the court sustained said objection, and no answer was permitted to said question, but exception was reserved to said proceedings by appellant.
Bill of exception No. 4 complains of the action of the district attorney, while the appellant was on the witness stand being cross-examined, in asking the appellant if he did not know that the witness Ben Musick had testified on a former trial of this case that he, the defendant, and the said witness, Ben Musick, had been engaged in the beer business. The bill further shows that, on objection of the appellant, the court sustained appellant's objection and said question was not answered.
It was not proper for the district attorney to persist in asking the questions complained of notwithstanding the ruling of the court, and the courts should have promptly enforced its ruling, but, if the questions were not proper, they were not answered, and both questions of the district attorney were promptly withdrawn from the jury. As presented, the bills show no such injuries to the appellant as would require a reversal.
Bill of exception No. 5 complains of the action of the district attorney in asking the defendant, in the presence and hearing of the jury, if he had not been convicted in 1925 and served a term in the state reformatory. The bill further shows that objection was made to said question, and the court sustained the same; whereupon, the district attorney replied to the ruling of the court in the presence and hearing of the jury, "I expect to show that defendant had been convicted in 1925 and served a sentence in the State Reformatory." Appellant's attorney again objected to said statement, and the court then and there promptly instructed the jury to disregard the same.
Article 1092, C. C. P., provides that the disposition of any delinquent child under this law or any evidence given in such case shall not, in any civil, criminal, or other cause or proceeding whatever, in any court, be lawful or proper evidence against any child for any purpose whatever, except in subsequent cases against the same child under this law. The fact sought to be introduced in evidence was not admissible under this *456
article, and the asking of the question complained of and the statement of the district attorney in reply to the ruling of the court, sustaining said objection, were improper and should not have been asked, and the district attorney should not have stated what he expected to prove. In order to warrant a reversal of a case, the transgression against the statute must be such that it could have affected the fairness of the trial. The trial court promptly sustained the objection to the question asked and also the statement of the district attorney as to what he expected to prove, and also instructed the jury to disregard said remarks. Under the circumstances, we do not believe that it calls for reversal of this case. The jury was in possession of facts which showed that the appellant had been indicted for shooting at deceased before the alleged homicide, that he had been indicted in Fort Worth in a couple of burglary cases which had been dismissed, and that he had been convicted for three misdemeanor thefts and his punishment had been fixed at sixty days in jail. In view of this record, showing as it does the criminal career of the appellant, we are unable to conclude that the alleged reference to appellant having been convicted as being a delinquent child and having served a term in the state reformatory, although improper, was such as might have prejudiced appellant's case in the eyes of the jury to such an extent that a reversal of the judgment is called for. See Wells v. State, 111 Tex.Crim. Rep.,
By bill of exception No. 1, appellant complains of the refusal of the trial court to give in charge to the jury appellant's special requested charge No. 1, which was a peremptory charge to return a verdict of not guilty, because of the insufficiency of the evidence to show an unlawful homicide. The position taken by the appellant, as we understand it, is that the only testimony of the corpus delicti is the statement of the defendant, and it is made in connection with the exculpatory statements that it was an accident, and the burden of proof is on the state to establish the falsity of the exculpatory statement; and, in failing in that, the evidence is not sufficient to warrant a verdict of conviction. Appellant further contends in his brief that the only testimony introduced by the state to establish the fact that appellant killed the deceased was the admission of the appellant to the state's witness Stella Anderson and the policeman, J. R. Sealy. The only statement made by the appellant when he came to the hospital with the body of the deceased was that he accidentally shot the deceased. As we understand the rule of law, even though the state may put in evidence the declarations of the appellant as to how a killing occurred, it is not bound thereby when it directly or indirectly disproves said statement. Banks v. State, 56 Tex.Crim. Rep.,
No error appearing that would call for a reversal, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
The foregoing opinion of the Commission of Appeals has been examined by the Judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals and approved by the Court.
Addendum
A re-examination of the record in the light of the appellant's motion for rehearing leaves the members of this court of the opinion that upon the original hearing the proper disposition of the appeal was made.
The motion is overruled.
Overruled.