68 Tex. Crim. 589 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1912
Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, his punishment being assessed at twenty years confinement in the penitentiary.
The serious question in the case is raised on the charge of manslaughter. The court charged upon communicated insults and. all the environments of the case in a general way as shedding light on the condition of the mind of appellant at the time he shot and killed the deceased. Without going into a detailed statement of the evidence, we deem it sufficient to state that appellant and deceased were brothers-in-law, and had been on amicable terms. Appellant came home on the day before the homicide and informed his wife that he .felt happy; that he had finished gathering his crop, and that he was going the next day to a near-by town, and wanted herself and children to go over and assist the brother-in-law, deceased, in gathering his cotton. This was late in the evening and about twenty-four hours before the alleged insulting conduct on the part of deceased towards appellant’s wife. She declined to go, and finally told her husband the reason, and it was this: Deceased had been to the home of appellant and his wife the day before late in the evening, and after talking with her a littlq while, invited her in an adjoining room with the request substantially that she have sexual intercourse with him. This she declined, and told deceased that she purposed informing her husband. After receiving this information appellant went to his trunk, got his Masonic apron, and at the same time took from the trunk a pistol and put it
Appellant contends under these circumstances that the court’s charge on manslaughter was too restricted in that he only submitted the issue of manslaughter from the standpoint of communicated insults, contending further that inasmuch as the deceased had repeated to appellant when he tallied with him about the matter, “Yes, God damn you, what are you going to do about it, I will cut your guts out,” that that was an admission to him at the time of the insult, and, therefore, a renewal of the insult. This being true, the contention is that the court should have submitted that insult as an adequate cause, as it was a reaffirmance of it, and that the court’s charge was too resti’ictive in limiting to communicated insults, when in fact deceased at the time of the homicide had repeated the insults, and deceased challenged the defendant to accept the situation or to do what he
In regard to the application for a continuance, we dispose of it by saying, in the first place, a bill of exceptions was not reserved to the ruling of the court, and, in the second place, upon another trial they may obtain the absent witnesses.
Error is assigned on the refusal of the court to give special instructions requested by appellant on the issue of self-defense. We do not believe there was any error in.this action of the court, for the reason that the court gave the same charge in practically the same language, or sufficiently and fully presented that issue to the jury in the general charge.
Because of the error in the court’s charge of manslaught, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.