106 S.W. 182 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1907
Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree, and his punishment assessed at a life time imprisonment in the penitentiary.
This is a companion case to that of Smith v. State,
Appellant's 8th assignment of error complains that the court erred in failing to give special charges Nos. 6, 11 and 13, applying the law of principal offenders to the facts of the case, and erred in refusing to give special charge No. 7 instructing the jury as to the distinction *29 between principal and accomplice. These charges seem all to have been framed and presented on the theory that the mere fact that appellant was not in the house at the time of the homicide, but was fifteen or twenty feet away from the gallery of the house, that he would not be a principal. The facts in this case are almost identical with the facts collated in the above cited decisions, which are companion cases to this. To render one a principal to a murder, his presence need not be strictly actual immediate presence, such as would make him an eye or ear witness of what passes, but may be a constructive presence, and where it appears, as it does in this case, that appellant, at the time of the homicide, was within a few feet of the house, his juxtaposition clearly brought him in legal contemplation as a principal to the homicide if the facts showed him acting with actual participants. For a discussion of this question see Grimsinger v. State, 44 Tex.Crim. Rep..
Appellant asked the court to give the following charge: "If you believe from the evidence that Addison Smith shot and killed deceased, but you further believe or if you have a reasonable doubt that such shooting was upon an independent impulse of his own, not in pursuance of an agreement with T.E. Smith (appellant), then you will acquit the defendant and so say by your verdict." This phase of the law was not presented in the charge of the court. If Addison Smith shot deceased upon an independent impulse disconnected from and disassociated with the motive and animus of appellant, appellant would not be guilty of any criminality in the act of Addison Smith. If Addison Smith was agitated and actuated by sudden impulse aroused by adequate cause, by the conduct of deceased towards his mother, and other circumstances surrounding the homicide, and under this intent alone acted, he might be guilty of no higher offense than manslaughter. Appellant can only be bound by his own intent and criminal purposes, and the evidence in this case, while it may be insisted it is meager, it does suggest the issue that Addison Smith may have been agitated by the environments to such an extent as rendered his mind incapable of cool reflection, and if so agitated, and the cause was not adequate, he might have been guilty of murder in the second degree, or if the cause was adequate, he might have been guilty of manslaughter independent of and disassociated from the appellant in this case, and if acting, as stated, upon an independent impulse, appellant would not be guilty of any participation in the felonious intent and purpose of Addison Smith. See Ripley v. State, 100 S.W. Rep., 943.
Appellant objects to the following charge of the court: "You are further charged that when a person is dispossessed of land by virtue of a writ of possession issued by a court of competent jurisdiction, such person has no right to again enter said premises and retake possession. Such an act would be illegal and such possession would give such person no property rights whatever by virtue thereof." This charge, when read in the light of the main charge, properly defines appellant's liabilities. *30 The record in this case, and companion cases cited, shows that appellant had been dispossessed of the property where the homicide occurred under a legal writ; he returned immediately that night and attempted by force to retain possession of the property in the face of a writ, and resisted the efforts of the officers to execute the writ. We held in previous opinions of this court that the writ was not functus officio but the officers had a right to return again to the premises and to dispossess appellant of same. The officers acting by legal authority of said writ had a right to so act, as stated, and any re-entry on the part of appellant would necessarily be illegal, and would necessarily follow as illegal from the validity of the writ.
The 10th assignment of error complains of the action of the court in excluding the testimony of the witness A.J. Harris, touching the claim of the defendant to the premises where the killing occurred, and the information concerning same given by witness to defendant showing the motive which actuated defendant in re-entering the said premises after he was evicted from same under the writ of possession. This question was decided by this court in the companion cases above against appellant's contention. We there held that appellant could not justify his acts by erroneous advice given by his counsel either in civil or criminal case. Nor did the court err in excluding the testimony of the witness as to what Pendleton, Hall and the Brewsters had done to defendant to cause him to use the bitter expressions proved by the State, since neither of said parties were parties to the writ, and the evidence in nowise connects them with this homicide. To go into such matters would merely encumber this record with irrelevant testimony.
The 14th assignment of error complains that the court erred in permitting the State, over appellant's objection, to introduce and read in evidence to the jury a stenographic report of the testimony of Addison Smith given in his own behalf on the habeas corpus trial. Appended to the bill presenting this matter is the following qualification: "During the introduction of the testimony of the defendant T.E. Smith, appellant offered the testimony of his codefendant Addison Smith given by him in the trial of his own case in this court on the 27th day of October, 1904, which testimony was admitted over the objection of the State and under the authority claimed and cited by the defendant of Harrison v. State, reported in 47 Tex.Crim. Rep., 83 S.W. Rep., 700, which testimony of said Addison Smith undertook to detail what took place in the room at the time the deceased was shot, and the part which he, Addison Smith, took in the homicide. Thereafter the State in rebuttal offered the testimony of the same witness Addison Smith, given by him on a habeas corpus proceeding before the District Court in Bell County, on the 28th day of August, 1903, at which time said Addison Smith, Catherine Smith and this defendant, T.E. Smith, were jointly applying for bail, and at which time each of said defendants were present in the court and represented by their counsel, and John B. Durrett, *31 Esq., was counsel for all of said parties at the habeas corpus trial; was also counsel for Addison Smith upon his final trial, and counsel for Mrs. Catherine Smith upon her final trial, and was also counsel for and present and participating at the trial of this defendant, T.E. Smith." The case of Harrison v. State, cited by the court in his explanation to the bill, did not justify or authorize the introduction of this testimony. All that we held in said case was that on a prosecution for homicide, it being the theory of the defense that the crime was committed by a witness for the State who testified that he was present when defendant committed the crime, evidence of statements made by the witness out of court conflicting with his testimony was admissible as original evidence in behalf of the defense. This is, as we understand, a salutary principle of law, because in this case the witness whose testimony was sought to be impeached had previously testified against appellant, and his testimony against appellant showed that appellant was guilty and not he; then, clearly it was admissible to show that he had made statements out of court contradictory of those he was making on the trial of appellant, even if they did go to the extent of proving his own criminality, because to whatever extent they should go along this line, would to that extent have a strong tendency to disturb the verity of his testimony against appellant, but here we have in this bill of exceptions a very different statement of facts. T.E. Smith, and his wife Catherine Smith, and his son Addison Smith, were indicted for the murder of one I.B. Grubbs; all three had an examining trial in Bell County; subsequently the cases were transferred to McLennan County, and there Addison Smith was tried and convicted, and appealed to this court, and his case affirmed; there Catherine Smith's case was tried, but this court has no official information as to the disposition of her case; then appellant was tried. Now then, appellant offered to introduce what Addison Smith swore in his trial in this case, which was done, as the court states, over the objection of the State, but nevertheless done; then, after this was done, the State over objection of appellant introduced a long statement of Addison Smith in the shape of a stenographic report of his testimony in the habeas corpus trial in Bell County two or more years before. Certainly, this testimony was not admissible. We wish to say that none of the testimony that was introduced was admissible; that is to say, the defense had no right to introduce Addison Smith's testimony on his trial in chief; parties to that litigation were the State of Texas and Addison Smith; this appellant was not a party, and the mere fact that the State held a joint habeas corpus trial of all three, sometime before, wherein Addison Smith gave his testimony during said trial, would not authorize the State, whatever the defense had previously done, to introduce Addison Smith's testimony in that examining trial. If appellant had been tried and Addison Smith had been a witness for him, and had moved out of the State, or died, then a predicate would have been laid for the introduction of Addison Smith's testimony in the first instance, by the *32 defense, but there is no rule of law permitting it to be introduced, that we know of, either for the State or the defense, and it was clearly prejudicial error to do so; that is to say, that part that was introduced by the State of the examining trial testimony. Of course, we would not reverse the case where appellant introduced illegal testimony, as was done when appellant introduced the testimony of Addison Smith upon his trial in chief, but this would not render harmless the error of the State in introducing Addison Smith's testimony upon a habeas corpus trial. It is unnecessary to rehearse the testimony, but suffice it to say, it was highly prejudicial to the rights of appellant, and none of it was admissible under any known rule of law.
Appellant's 16th assignment of error complains that the court erred in admitting the testimony of Sam Sparks that on the evening before the killing, in Belton, Texas, the witness told Capt. Harris that the officers were going the next day to execute the writ of possession the second time. Appended to the bill presenting this matter is a long explanation of the court, as follows: "That the defendant T.E. Smith and the defendant's witness Capt. Harris, had both testified concerning the conversation they had over the telephone on the evening in question at about 5 o'clock, the substance of which testimony was by the defendant that he asked Capt. Harris if it was true that the officers were coming the next day to dispossess him under that writ, and that Capt. Harris responded to him that he did not know, but he would go to the sheriff's office and see the sheriff and report to him, Smith; that he did get in communication with the sheriff's office, but, not getting the information at that time, informed the defendant, Smith, that the sheriff was not in at that time and he could not give him a positive answer, that they appointed 6:30 o'clock, at which time Mr. Smith was to again call Capt. Harris up, at which time Capt. Harris was to report to him whether or not the officers were coming out the next morning; that at that hour Mr. Smith called Capt. Harris over the telephone, and Capt. Harris informed him that the sheriff had not yet returned, whereupon Mr. Smith asked Capt. Harris, in the event they did come, how close he must let him get to the house; that Capt. Harris responded to that, that he could not afford to resist the officers at all. Whereupon the defendant Smith requested Capt. Harris to come out to his place the next morning, and Capt. Harris informed him that he had other engagements and could not do so, but that he would see the sheriff as soon as he came in, and would get Mr. Saunders to come out to his place the next morning; and the evidence showed that Capt. Harris did talk with Sam Sparks immediately upon his return to the office on this same evening, and that he did send Mr. Saunders to the Smith place early the next morning, and Saunders was at the Smith home at the time the deceased and his brother officer appeared." With the explanation above copied, we believe the testimony was admissible, but upon another trial of the case the court should charge the jury that they should not consider the testimony of Sam Sparks *33 unless they believed beyond a reasonable doubt that his statement to Capt. Harris was communicated to appellant, therefore, the court should limit the testimony as suggested.
The 19th complaint is that the court erred in permitting counsel for the State to examine defendant touching the defense which had been interposed for him in the case heretofore. We see no error in this, since the court limited the inquiry as to what appellant knew about it; if he had heretofore claimed a defense, not relied upon in this trial, it would be legitimate testimony.
All of the other questions discussed by appellant in his brief and relied upon in this record for reversal, were passed upon by this court in the companion cases above cited. We do not see fit to again review them, but for the errors discussed, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Henderson, Judge, absent.