Almazan v. State

145 S.W.2d 576, 140 Tex. Crim. 432, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 661
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1940
DocketNo. 21180.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 576 (Almazan 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
Almazan v. State, 145 S.W.2d 576, 140 Tex. Crim. 432, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 661 (Tex. 1940).

Opinions

KRUEGER, Judge.

The offense for which appellant was convicted was as an accomplice to burglary. The punishment assessed is confinement in the state penitentiary for a term of four years.

Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to corroborate Louis Loncario, the self-confessed burglar, to justify and sustain the conviction.

Loncario testified that he met appellant for the first time at a domino parlor on the corner of Medina and Commerce Streets in the City of San Antonio, Texas, about one and one-half years prior to the commission of the alleged offense; that appellant asked him at that time if he desired to make some “easy money,” to which he replied that he did not; that a few days later he met appellant at about the same place, who again asked him if he desired to make some “easy money”; that he (Loncario) then inquired of him how they could make this “easy money,” whereupon appellant told him that there was a trap door in the floor of the Alamo Pecan Shelling Company building, through which he could get into the building, steal pecans and sell them; that thereafter he did enter the building many times at night through the trap door, steal pecans, sell them and give appellant one-half of the proceeds of the sale. Loncario testified that the trap door was not always at the same place; that sometimes it would be in the toilet, sometimes in the middle of the floor and sometimes at another place. He said that on two *434 occasions when he was in the building at night committing theft other parties would come into the building through the trap door and also commit theft; that during the times when such other parties were in the building he would hide until they left and then he would leave with his loot. He claimed that at no time was the appellant present or did he in any way aid him in the burglary except to make the trap door and advise him as to where it was. He said that he was in the building on Sunday a short time before he was caught.

While this testimony would show appellant °to be an accomplice to the offense of burglary, yet, under Article 718, C. C. P., this is not sufficient to justify his conviction unless there is some testimony from other sources which corroborates Loncario upon some material and criminative fact tending to connect appellant with the commission of the offense charged.

Now, let us take the testimony of the witness, Jack Horkheimer, the owner of the Alamo Pecan Shelling Company, and see if it corroborates the testimony of Loncario upon some material part. We quote from his testimony as follows:

“I know James Almazan. * * * He was employed by me a little over three years to take care of the cracking machine and to make whatever minor repairs were necessary to the building and the general equipment. He was a sort of a foreman of that department. * * * I did not have a regular night watchman, but on occasions I would leave a man there, but when I did so none of my employees knew I was leaving a night man. Almazan knew a night man was being left there. The door was not padlocked on the outside, but was bolted on the inside. * * * James Almazan had done a little repair work around there. He looked after the carpenter work on the floor. No one did any work on the floors except Almazan. I have seen him in the men’s toilet, and there was some work done in front of one of the toilets some two or three months before this man was caught.”

“I made an examination of the premises on the occasion this man was caught in there, and I had occasion to look at the men’s toilet. This man took us there, and he showed us how he got. in. When he took us to this wash room I found practically a normal floor, and he took a screw driver or something * * * and took this board up. * * * You will notice the nails have been clipped. This board set on two sills and had wing nuts on it. You could not notice it was loose from the inside of the toilet. *■ * * Loncario had the wing nuts in his pocket.”

*435 On cross-examination the witness testified: “He (Almazan) repaired the floor portion of the toilet, he having said that there was a weak board in there that should be replaced and I told him to go ahead and replace it. I did not at any time inspect it either before or after he repaired it. I spend the majority of my time in the building. There were other people in the toilet. As to whether or not one of the other employees might have put that board in there, I will say I know only by the fact it would not seem logical to me that some one who was employed to do one job would gratuitously do another. * * * That is my opinion.”

Horkheimer further testified that he knew appellant well; that he loaned him money when he would get behind in the payments on his automobile, and he would pay him back out of his wages. “This was during the time I was losing the pecans. I never saw anything which led me to believe that he had any other source of income than what I paid him.”

Amando Flores testified that he had worked for Mr. Horkheimer about five years and was still working for him; that he saw Almazan fixing the floors some two or three different times; that he never saw anyone else work on the floors; that whenever Almazan was fixing the floors there were a lot of people working and everybody could see him around there.

Jack Hart, who was employed by Horkheimer to watch the building and who was in the building on the night in question, testified, among other things, as follows : “I saw the trap door in the rest room when he (meaning Loncario) showed it to me.. I could not see it before he showed it to me. This board you exhibit here is what he showed me. It was in the floor.”

Oscar Velber testified, among other things, as follows: “These boards were in the men’s toilet. * * * They were part of the floor and it would hold a person’s weight. When they were in place you could not notice that there was such a board in the floor. * * * One end of this rested on the joist, and you could step on it and it would not give. This board was in the middle of the floor in the men’s toilet. There are plenty of boards like that all over the building. That building has a patched-up floor. He (Horkheimer) employed about three hundred people and part of them were men.”

Mr. Lankford, a city detective, testified that he was summoned to the Alamo Pecan Shelling Company building on the night in question; that he asked Louis Loncario how he got into the building. He said that he got in through the floor. From the testimony of the witness we quote: “He (meaning Loncario) *436 took us to the men’s toilet, and We found there a board about eighteen inches long. * * * It appeared to be a regular floor board. This man reached down with his finger and pulled the board out. I searched the man and found on him a car key, or set of car keys, and two nuts that fit that bolt.”

Mr. Hardcastle, another city detective, testified, among other things, as follows: “Loncario gave his name as Albert Unis. I had a conversation with him and asked him how he got in and he said he was locked in; and he took us to the men’s toilet and showéd us where he came through. * * * I saw this trap * * * and it had a thumb bolt * * * and you could screw this down.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 576, 140 Tex. Crim. 432, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/almazan-v-state-texcrimapp-1940.