WILLIAM SUTTON V. STATE.
No. 25678
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
January 30, 1952
Rehearing Denied March 26, 1952. Appellant‘s Second Motion for Rehearing Denied April 23, 1952.
216 S.W.2d 556
Our answer to this is that it is wholly immaterial whether he was there or not. The discussion in the оriginal opinion overruling this contention is just as forceful as if he were there. The case of Mounts v. State, 148 Tex. Cr. R. 177, 185 S.W. 2d 731, relied upon by appellant will not sustain his contention. The extraneous matter inquired about in the Mounts case could have nothing to do with the murder for which he was being charged. In the instant case it is different. Appellant and his wife had separated. Soon thereafter she was living with deceased. His falling out with his wife clearly indicates his feeling towards the deceased at all times. His own testimony, as stated in the original opinion, brought the matter before the court and it was just as much a circumstance surrounding the murder as it would have been if it had occurred a day or two previous to it, though the proximity to the time of the shooting might have been more forceful in the minds of the jury.
The same reasoning will dispose of all other questions raised by the motion.
The original opinion sufficiently expresses the sentiment of the court on the issue as it is found in the record now before us. It is our conclusion thаt appellant‘s motion for rehearing should be overruled.
Rocky Harkey, Sinton, for appellant.
George P. Blackburn, State‘s Attorney, Austin, for the state.
BEAUCHAMP, Judge.
Appellant was convicted of the offense of possessing a narcotic drug and sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary.
The state‘s evidence is to the effect that appellant was driving an automobile and at three o‘clock in the morning he failed to stop at a stop sign on a farm to market road at the entrance to the main highway and thеreby collided with an automobile driven by a boy named George James. The state‘s evidence by James was that he saw a flash of lights coming toward him, the collision immediately followed and the next he remembered
Soon thereafter an officer arrived. He examined appellant who was in a great stupor and was beliеved by the officer to be under the influence of a narcotic. For running the stop sign appellant was arrested. An ambulance was called and appellant was delivered by the officer to the driver of the ambulance with instructions tо take him to the hospital and keep him for the officer. The officer then examined the car and found, in the bag which the witness had seen, a quantity of marihuana. This was brought into court and definitely identified as the bag which the officer took from thе seat of the car and it is shown that it contained marihuana.
We find in the statement of facts and in the transcript ten bills of exception. Each of these is based on the complaint that appellant was unlawfully arrested and that the officer illegally searched the car. It is contended that all evidence as to the marihuana was inadmissible.
There can be no claim that appellant was illegally arrested. The evidence is without dispute that the search was madе after the arrest. It is a settled rule that a search warrant is not necessary in order to search the person of one under lawful arrest.
The second contention in appellant‘s brief is that the sheriff was permitted, over objection, to testify as to the quantity of the marihuana, that is that it would make about a hundred cigarettes. This evidence, it is contended, is immatеrial to the state‘s case. Appellant did not testify and offered no evidence in his behalf and we are unable to understand why the contention is made that it was harmful to his defense. It may be immaterial to the prosecution but it would likewise be immаterial to the defense. His guilt does not depend upon quantity. We
ON APPELLANT‘S MOTION FOR REHEARING.
BEAUCHAMP, Judge.
Appellant‘s motion for rehearing emphasized the fact that the аrresting officer was not present when the accident described in the opinion occurred. This we recognized. The question of the admissibility of the marijuana in evidence turns upon whether or not the arresting officer had authority under the statutе to make the arrest. Our attention is called to the fact that the witness did not smell the marijuana until after the search had been made. In this our original opinion was in error. It is not the turning question in the case, however.
The officer W. A. Kline, Jr. gave other evidence which, in our opinion, warranted his act in making the search. He testified that he had reason to believe that there was marijuana in the car. He stated, as shown by the bill:
“* * * Defendant, William Sutton, seemed to be pretty badly hurt and I would say that he was semi-conscious. I was told that his name was William Sutton and that he was supposed tо live in Refugio. I would not have taken the road he was on
at all if I were going to Refugio, because I would not have any business on that road if that‘s where I was going. I would say his, defendant‘s, conduct in running the stop-sign and being on the wrong road would indicate to me that something was wrong with him; I would say because the wreck occurred at about three o‘clock in the morning and because the defendant was on the wrong road and because he had run a stop-sign without making any attempt to stop, judging frоm the distance his car travelled after the collision, and, because the defendant was not moaning or groaning as an injured person ordinarily would be after an accident of this kind, that there was something wrong with him. I didn‘t smell anything on his breath, but I tried to and that did not indicate to me that he was intoxicated on liquor; then the next thing that I thought was wrong with the defendant was; well, I thought that he was smoking or had marihuana. Yes, sir, I thought that he was smoking marihuana; Yes, Sir, I did see a package. that is, a paper bag or sаck lying on the front seat of the defendant‘s car. * * * I could see this paper bag from the outside of the car because the car door was open; yes. I could see the paper bag lying on the front seat from the outside of thе car. I sure did have reason to believe that there might be marihuana in that bag. * * *” “* * * From the action of the defendant and the fact that he was not groaning or moaning or seemed to suffer any more than he was, at the time I picked up this pаper bag, I certainly did have reason to believe that there was marihuana somewhere in the defendant‘s car. * * *”
“* * * Liquor is one of the first things that we look for in investigating these wrecks and we have a form to report to make out showing whethеr or not we find any intoxicating liquor. Judge Gayle, you ask me was there anything about his condition that would lead me to believe that he was probably under the influence of some opiate, Yes, Sir. It has always been my experience that, unless the sense of feeling is deadened with drugs, a person who has been severely injured will usually be found moaning or groaning or exhibiting some evidence of pain, where he was not unconscious. Its always been my experience that where a pеrson has been injured like this defendant was, and he is not moaning or groaning or taking on, that would indicate that he could have been smoking marihuana. That‘s always been my experience. The fact that the defendant was out there at that hour оf the morning, that he was traveling on the wrong road, that he had run a stop-sign, the fact that he was badly
injured, and the fact that he wasn‘t moaning or groaning, those things, well, naturally, they indicated that the defendant could have been smoking marihuana. That‘s the rеason that I looked in the car for it; I searched the car and found it. * * *”
We are unable to agree that the trial court erred in admitting the testimony complained of.
Taking into consideration all the evidence given which was made known tо the officer at the time, and taking into consideration the circumstances as he viewed them, we think the arrest was legal and the search was authorized.
The motion for rehearing is overruled.
ON APPELLANT‘S SECOND MOTION FOR REHEARING.
MORRISON, Judge.
In view of the importance of the question raised and with the thought that we may not, in our twо prior opinions herein, have placed sufficient emphasis upon the Uniform Narcotic Drug Act, we have concluded it wise to write again on this matter.
The facts have been sufficiently stated.
The “Uniform Narcotic Drug Act,” adopted originally by the legislature of this state in 1937, appears as
By such act, all narcotics possessed contrary to the terms of the act are held to be contraband.
By Section 15 thereof, all peace officers are given the power, without warrant, “to enter and exаmine any buildings, vessels, cars, conveyances, vehicles, or other structures or places, when they have reason to believe and do believe that any or either of same contain narcotic drugs * * *.”
Also, by said section, such officеrs are given the authority, without warrant, to open and examine any box, parcel, etc., in the possession of any person, which they have reason to believe and do believe contains narcotic drugs.
It must be remembered that the officer saw the first bag of
After careful re-examination of the facts, we remain convinced that the quoted portion of the officer‘s testimony set forth in our opinion on rehearing constituted sufficient evidence that he had reason to believe, and did believe, that the automobile contained a narcotic drug such as to show no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court in admitting the evidence of what he found therein.
We are indebted to appellant‘s able counsel for his excellent briefs.
Remaining convinced that we properly disposed of this cause originally, appellant‘s second motion for rehearing is overruled.
