171 S.W.2d 353 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1943
The appeal is from a fifteen-year sentence in the penitentiary on a charge of murder.
Just before dark on July 24, 1942, a number of members of the Colored Race, male and female it seems, were gathered around a crap game on Seventh Street, North Waco, just around the corner from another street intersecting it. The scene was in front of a beer joint. The equipment for shooting craps apparently did not accommodate the entire crowd. While some were rolling the dice others “faded the game,” which, it is explained, means that they were betting on the success of actual
In view of the fact that the weapon used is not a deadly weapon per se, his evidence raises an issue of an intention to kill and it became the duty of the court to submit to the jury this issue in his charge. Miller v. State, 13 S. W. (2d) 865; Shannon v. State, 36 S. W. (2d) 521; Briscoe v. State, 56 S. W. (2d) 458.
Appellant excepts to the court’s charge on the ground that it failed to instruct the jury that they could not convict appellant for murder unless they found as a fact that he intended at the time of the conflict to kill the deceased. Exception No. 4 directed at Paragraph 9 of the court’s charge is relied upon. Paragraph 9 reads as follows:
*82 “Now if you believe from the evidence in this case beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant Elmo Sullivan, in the County of McLennan and State of Texas, on or about the 24th day of July, A. D. 1942, did unlawfully and voluntarily and with malice aforethought, cut with a knife and thereby kill the said Ollie McKenzie, as charged in the indictment and not in his own necessary self defense as hereinafter defined you will find him guilty of murder and assess his punishment at death, or by confinement in the penitentiary for life, or for any term of years not less than two.”
It will be observed that the foregoing charge is subject to the exceptions leveled against it and the case must be reversed unless there is found within the charge other language sufficiently specific to so instruct the jury definitely and clearly and which may be held to correct this error. We find Section 18 of the court’s charge reading as follows:
“If from the evidence you believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant Elmo Sullivan, about the time alleged in the indictment, did cut with a knife and thereby kill the said Ollie McKenzie, and not in his own necessary self defense as herein explained, and you further believe from the evidence that at the time of cutting the deceased the defendant did not have the specific intent to kill the deceased, you will acquit him of murder and next consider whether he is- guilty of an aggravated assault.”
It will be noted that in instructing the jury on the question of intent to kill the deceased in the foregoing (Section 18) the court failed to give appellant the benefit of reasonable doubt, thus placing upon him a greater burden than the law provides. Unquestionably, Section 9 should have contained an instruction on the issue of intention, either within it or so closely related to it that the jury could not misunderstand. The novel question here presented is whether or not an improperly worded charge, shifting the burden of proof, will suffice to correct an error clearly discoverable in Section 9. It is our conclusion that a proper consideration of the authorities holding that the entire charge may be looked to in determining whether or not an issue had been properly submitted will not support the State’s contention that the issue was sufficiently submitted to the jury. Had it been properly submitted in Section 18, placing the burden of proof on the State, the question might have impressed us differently.
The numerous exceptions to the charge which we do not discuss are not of sufficient importance to support reversal
We recognize early cases did not fully accord with this view and so far as they may appear to be in conflict we think they have been overruled.
Many other complaints are found in the appeal which should not appear again. The charge needs revision but so do the exceptions taken to it.
For the error discussed, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
The State in its motion for a rehearing admits that the quoted paragraph nine of the court’s charge was in error in that same failed to incorporate therein the fact that before appellant could be found guilty of murder he must have had the specific intent to kill the deceased at the time he assaulted McKenzie with a knife, same not being a deadly weapon per se. This omission is also found in paragraph twelve, which is the charge on murder without malice. We find that both paragraphs, nine and twelve of such charge, were objected to because, among other things, they failed to charge relative to the intent to kill.
It is also called to our attention by the State that in paragraph eighteen of such charge, as quoted in the original opinion, there did appear .an instruction relative to the specific intent to kill upon appellant’s part, such paragraph relating to the possibility of an aggravated assault being presented by the facts. It is also to be noted, however, that such paragraph eighteen, in its above italicized portion, places a greater burden upon appellant than that authorized by law, in that he must first show the absence of a specific intent to kill rather than the State
In the condition in which we find this charge, the jury could hardly be expected to fully understand the different conflicting elements thereof as presented therein, and we are convinced that the original opinion reversing this cause is correct.
The motion for a rehearing will therefore be overruled.