This is а second appeal of this case, the opinion on the first appeal being published in
T. T. Brown testified that he was captain of the Home Guards and a member of the' Council of Defense; that it was the duty of the captain to “look out for anything that pertained to the war, against the war, or slackers, or deserters, or anything against our war work in general; it was to aid in the prosecution of the war, to keep down dissension, and those things;” that on May 17, 1918, he had been on his farm, and when he returned to Luling he found the population gathered in different groups, much excited over a difficulty that had occurred between appellee and R. Jacobs and W. B. Walker, and they demanded that action be taken as to appellee, and talked of hanging or killing him in some other way. Brown stated that, seeing the crowd so excited, he felt that he needed some one. to help him “hold that crowd down” and keep appellee from being killed, and he felt that W. P. Walker was the man to assist him. He sent fоr W. P. Walker, who was at his farm, and while awaiting his arrival he summoned some of the men to go to a certain clubroom. Brown ordered the tar and feathers, without the knowledge of W. P. Walker. The men, some 30 or 35 of them, met in the clubroom. Brown made known the object of the meeting, and called on Jacobs for a statement of what had happened that day, and Brown then appointed a committee to apply the tar and feathers. After that W. P. Walker arrived, and was appointed by Brown to preside over the meeting, as he was a cool-headed, determined man. Brown asked W. P. Walker to preside, and told him what he wanted told appellee when he brought him to the clubroom. After the message was delivered, Brown ordered his committee to proceed to tar and feather appellee. W. P. Walker prevented them from putting any tar on ap-pellee’s flesh.
W. P. Walker testified that he lived in San Antonio, and had been in Robertson county on his farm for two months; that the night before the tarring and feathering took place he had arrived in Luling, and had gone to his farm near that place. He swore that he knew nothing of any trouble with Kellar, and did not hear about it until in response to a message from Brown, he went to the clubroom. He stated:
“Up to the time that I got there I didn’t know anything in the world about it; it was all just like thunder out of a clear sky to me., because I had never heard anything of it. 1 didn’t have anything to do with the appointment of the committee. I was not there when it was appointed.”
He testified that he gave no orders or directions in regard to the matter to any one, but said that his only intention or desire was to protect appellee from bodily harm, and that was his only reason for being present in obedience to the request of T. T. Brown. He did not touch appellee or apply any of the tar or feathers to him. He swore that his passions were not aroused in the least, but that he felt nervous over the crowd that had assembled. He disclaimed all knowledge that tar and feathers were to be applied until the application began, and had no unfriendly feeling towards appellee. His sole desire was to prevent bodily injury to appellee.
These facts raised an issue as to whether W. P. Walker was present at the time of the alleged assault as one desirous to protеct the person of appellee, and whether he had entered any conspiracy to tar and feather him. The question of the intent of W. P. Walker in being present was not a matter of law to be determined by the court, but was a question of fact to be determined by the jury.
If appellant was a party to the conspiracy, if there was one, to injure appellee, it was not as an original participant, because all of the testimony clearly, proved that he knew nothing about the matter until it was under full headway, and would have known nothing about it had he not been summoned by Brown , to assist in protecting appellee from bodily injury. W.,P. Walker undoubtedly entered the meeting for a lawful purpose, and, if any guilt or liability attached to him, it must have been on account of unlawful acts committed by him after entering the meeting. He must have learned that tar and feathers were to be *798 applied to appellee, and must hаve given aid, by word or act, to a furtherance of the common design. 5 R. .0. U. § 43. On the former appeal this court fouiid that W. P. Walker knew that tar and feathers were to be applied before he delivered Brown’s message to appellee, but on this trial it was shown without contradiction that W. P. Walker, when he delivered the message oí Brown to appellee, did not know that tar and feathers were to be applied. W. P. Walker swore:
“No, sir; I wasn’t there for the purрose ot seeing what the committee had done was carried out, and I did not so state to Reliar, i told Reliar what Mr. Brown had told me. 1 didn’t know at that time they were going to tar and feather him. Mr. Brown didn’t tell me that they were going to tar and featner him.”
If, as the testimony tends to show, W. P. Walker was present to prevent death or bodily hurt to appellee, and felt that object would be better attained by not protesting or resisting the milder attack of a coat of tar and feаthers on his clothing, of which he knew nothing until it was being administered, the facts raised a question as to his culpable participation in the attack on appellee, and that question was one for the determination of a jury. According to the evidence offered by appellants, W. P. Walker, being present, not knowing the unlawful intention of the assembly, did not aid by acts, or encourage by words or gesture, those actually engaged in the commission of the unlawful act, аnd used no means of any kind to assist in the commission of the offense, and did not advise or agree to the commission of the offense/ The question of his guilty participation in the offense was raised by the evidence,, and, whether the court believed that evidence or not, it was a matter to be decided by the jury, and not by the court. W. P. Walker must be judged by his own intention, and, if that was not criminal or unlawful, he should be exonerated, and should, at least, be permitted to have a jury pass upon his acts and conduct as evidencing his intention.
“If the defendants, or either of them, were actuated by malice in making the charges against Thompson, or in procuring the same to be made and prosecuting the same before the order, thereby procuring his expulsion, then the plaintiff may, in the discretion of the jury, recover exemplary damages against either or all of the said defendants, in such sum as the jury may believe should be assessed against the said defendants or either of them. It is not necessary, as in case of actual damages recovered, that all of the defendants should be subjected to the same ■ verdict, because some of the defendants may have acted without malice, but in combination with others, and as to such defendants there would be no right to recover exemplary damages.”
Testimony tending to show there was no malice or wanton acts upon the part of W. P. Walker, the question of exemplary damages as to him should have gone to the jury. The second and third assignments are therefore sustained.
“that no such provocation, if any, arising out of such conduct, if any, of plaintiff, continuous, and culminating on May 17, 1918, can be considered by you in mitigation of damages if thereafter sufficient cooling time has intervened.”
While this charge, standing alone, might not form a sufficient basis for a reversal, it may be said, in view of another trial, that a jury might infer from the language of the charge that the question of “cooling time” referred to all or аny one of the acts of provocation. Under the facts we fail to see any applicability in the charge, for there was nothing' to indicate that, time for reflectioii and cool action had intervened between the last provocation and the acts committed by appellants, so as to raise an issue in connection therewith. If, however, the facts demanded such a charge, it should have, been made clearly to appear that time for cooling should be computed from the last act of provocation. The charge might have been construed by the jury as meaning that time had destroyed the effect of former provocations on the minds of appellants.
Complaints of excess in the verdict need not be discussed in view of another trial, and the fifteenth assignment of error is for that reason not considered by the court. The sixteenth assignment has been disposed of by our action on the first, second, аnd third assignments.
“If Ryan incited, procured, or encouraged the other men to beat Quinn, he is responsible; but he is not responsible because in his heart he may have approved it. * * * He is only responsible when he incites or procures.it, or aids in its commission.”
See, also, 2 Ruling Case Law, p. 526, § 4, and authorities cited.
Numerous cases by the Court of Criminal Aрpeals of this state are to the same effect. That court has construed article 78 (Pen. Code) Crim. Stats., which provides that “any -person who advises or agrees to the commis- • sion of an offense, and who is present when the same is committed, is a principal thereto, whether he aids or not in the illegal act,” not to mean that mere presence and secret acquiescence would constitute a party a guilty participant in the offеnse. We do not hold that W. P. Walker is not liable, but do hold that an issue as to his liability- is raised by the evidence, and should be determined by a jury, and not by a court.
“In its name, as in that of Liberty, what crimes have been committed! In every age it, too, furnishes its heresy hunters and its witch burners, and it, too, is a favorite mask for hypocrisy, assuming a virtue which it havoth not. So the mobs mentioned were generally the chosen and last resort of the slacker, military and civil, the profiteer, and the enemy sympathizer, masquerading as superpatriots to divert attention from their real character.”
There was no testimony tending to show that either of the appellants was a. slacker, a profiteer, or an enemy sympathizer, and yet counsel told the jury:
“How well does that definition fit the defendants in this case! Thеse men, superpa-triots; these men who want to force somebody else 'to square with their opinion of how to act."
Other and equally objectionable portions of the passionate opinion were read by counsel. The court should not have permitted the reading of the'opinion. It could have produced no good result, it may have caused harm. Railway Co. v. Wesch,
The record fails to indicate any fraud upon the part of appellee in making G. C. Walker and W. P. Walker, residents of Bexar county, parties in order to give the district court of that county jurisdiction, and the nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-first, and twenty-second , assignments of error are overruled.
The twenty-third and twenty-fourth assignments of error are overruled, and the twenty-fifth and twenty sixth assignments, which complain of excess in the verdict, need not be considered, in view of another trial.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER. in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
