Ables v. State

177 S.W. 1161, 77 Tex. Crim. 302, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 1915
DocketNo. 3579.
StatusPublished

This text of 177 S.W. 1161 (Ables v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ables v. State, 177 S.W. 1161, 77 Tex. Crim. 302, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 70 (Tex. 1915).

Opinions

Appellant was convicted of the theft of $740 from J.B. Cutts, alleged to have been committed January 9, 1914, and his punishment assessed at the lowest prescribed by law.

Appellant earnestly insists that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. This is the most serious, and practically the only question in the case. We have carefully read, and several times considered, all of the evidence.

Appellant himself did not testify. He introduced his sister, Mrs. Alsup, and Mrs. Sneed. If the jury had believed their testimony they perhaps would have acquitted him. Evidently they did not believe their testimony. This, under the law, was exclusively for the jury. The statute expressly says, in effect, they are the exclusive judges of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony. Therefore, we think it unnecessary to here state, even the substance of their testimony. The question, then, for this court to determine is whether or not the incriminating testimony and the inferences to be drawn therefrom, was, as a question of law, sufficient to sustain the verdict. In our opinion it was. The jury heard the witnesses testify, saw them when they did so, saw their manner of testifying, and from all of this were better able to determine the truth than this court can be from merely reading in cold type what the statement of facts shows.

We do not propose to quote at length the testimony. We will give, however, the substance of the material and salient portions thereof.

J.B. Cutts lived in the southern portion of Hopkins County, and *Page 303 had lived there for many years. Mr. S.A. Ables, the father of appellant, had lived in the same community only a few years. Appellant was a young man then twenty-three years of age, but had not lived with his father in that community, — was a stranger therein. For a few years before then he had lived in different locations in Oklahoma, though he had visited his father on occasions a year or two before this time. He arrived at his father's on a visit on January 8. On January 9, a widow in the same community died. Cutts and his wife and other neighbors went to the deceased's house on the morning of the 9th. Cutts remained there practically all day, from about 10 o'clock in the morning until about sundown in the evening. Appellant and his father together went to the house of the deceased in the morning, but remained only a short time. They together returned there late in the evening and then remained only a short time.

Mr. Cutts testified that when he went to the house of this deceased lady that morning he had $740 currency in his left hand hip pocket in a draw-string leather pouch; that practically during the whole time he was there he stayed out in the yard, sitting on a wash bench or spring seat, alternating and shifting his position from one to the other all day; that he had carried this money thus in his pocket for several months prior to this; that it was in three different rolls, — twenty $20 bills in one roll; in another $10 bills, and in the other mostly $20 bills, with a few tens among them, and probably some fives. Two hundred dollars of the $20 bills was new money, looked like it had never been used at all. The other bills showed to have been used a good deal. Twenty dollars was the largest denomination of any of this money. The prevailing denomination of the bills of the $240 was $20 bills; that from time to time during the whole day he was there he felt for his money to see whether it was there or not, and at no time while he was there did he miss it; that the last time before leaving that he felt for it was a while before sundown and he had the money at that time; that Mr. Ables (appellant's father) and appellant were out in the yard where he was at this last time that he felt and found that he had the money in his pocket; that there was nobody else out there at that time, except those two persons and himself; that just about sundown he left to go home; his home was west and Mr. Ables' home east from the house of the deceased lady; that there was nobody else out there at the time he left except Mr. Ables and appellant. Mr. Ables testified that when he and appellant left there wasn't anyone outside. "We was the last ones." Mr. Cutts further testified that he got about 250 yards from the deceased lady's house on his way home when as he went to go through a wire fence he felt for his money and discovered that it was gone. He immediately retraced his steps, hunting for the money, over the road he had just gone, thinking then that he might have lost it on the road; he did not find it; he got back to the yard of the deceased lady and hunted for it and could not find it; that there was nothing along the road that he had traveled after he left and started home that would conceal the money if he had dropped it; that it was a plain open road, *Page 304 plumb clean, traveled a good deal; that there wasn't anything to keep him from finding the pocketbook if he had lost it after he started home; that he was in the road all the time; that no one else went along that road from the time he started home, discovered his loss and went back to the house of the deceased; that when he could not find his money he started after Mr. Ables and appellant and overtook them; that when he got in about 100 yards of them he hailed them and they stopped; that he went up to where they were and asked if they had found his pocketbook where he had been sitting, and described it; that Mr. Ables said he didn't; that he had seen his (Cutts') pocketbook sticking out of his pocket; that Cutts then said to appellant, "I am sure one of you picked it up," and said, "I lost it right there where you was at," and defendant said he did not; that he (Cutts) stood and looked at them about a minute and turned and walked off; that he later inquired of all who were at the house of the deceased at the time and none of them had found his money.

Mr. Joe M. Clower testified that he was cashier of the First State Bank at Klondike, in Delta County, in 1914; Klondike was shown to be twenty-five or thirty miles west of north of Sulphur Springs, and where Mr. Cutts lived was ten or fifteen miles west of south of Sulphur Springs. Mr. Clower further testified that on February 13, 1914, appellant deposited $600 in his bank at Klondike; that it was mostly $20 bills, some tens and possibly some fives, mostly twenties; that at the time appellant made this deposit appellant kept some money, he saw it, but couldn't tell how much it was; that there were several bills in the roll; that the money he deposited had been carried in a roll some time and the bills were crimped, very badly crimped, — some of them looked like they had been crowded down some time; that some of the bills then deposited by appellant were new and some were old; that none of it was of a higher denomination than $20; that Mr. Lilly, one of the customers of the bank, was present at the time and he asked appellant where he was from; that appellant said Caney, Oklahoma; that when asked if he knew a certain banker there he said no; that he and Mr. Lilly asked him where he got the money and he said he had sold out in Oklahoma; that he had sold a pair of mules for $400 of the money.

Mr. Joe Lilly testified substantially the same thing as did Mr. Clower. In addition, that he congratulated appellant at the time for depositing his money and told him it was a good idea; that when he saw that he did not deposit all of his money but put some back in his pocket, he said to him, "Son, I would leave all that money here; I would not carry all that money in my pocket." Appellant seems to have made no reply to this but put the other money back in his pocket, depositing only the $600.

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 1161, 77 Tex. Crim. 302, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ables-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.