Arensman v. State

187 S.W. 471, 79 Tex. Crim. 546, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 198
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1916
DocketNo. 4084.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 471 (Arensman 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
Arensman v. State, 187 S.W. 471, 79 Tex. Crim. 546, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 198 (Tex. 1916).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of arson and assessed the lowest punishment.

The State’s theory and contention was, which was denied by appellant, that he himself, or with his wife as a principal, committed the offense, and before the offense was committed they had agreed and conspired to commit it. The evidence was largely circumstantial. Some testimony was introduced which tended to show, if it did not positively do so-, that appellant made admissions sufficient to show his guilt. There was no conflict in the testimony on any material point. Neither appellant nor his wife testified,-and he introduced no testimony other than two witnesses who testified to-his good reputation in another county where he lived some year and a half or two years before he was charged with this offense.

The State proved, and the jury were clearly authorized to find and believe, that in August, 1914, appellant’s wife and another lady bought out a millinery stock and fixtures in Decatur, paying therefor $50 cash and executing three notes for $50 each for the balance. This partnership was dissolved in January following, Mrs. Arensman taking all the stock and fixtures and assuming all indebtedness. She then took out a policy for $300 insurance on the stock. She later made purchases on credit and also made sales on credit. She was unable to collect for sales she had made on credit. Appellant signed some of the notes with her which she gave for the purchase of some of the stock.

About, or shortly prior to, January 1, 1915, Mrs. Arensman rented from Mrs. Beard the second story of a storehouse in the center of a solid block of storehouses, north of the square in Decatur, which fronted south — the courthouse being in the center of the square. This second story was cut up into four rooms. She conducted her millinery business in the two front rooms and rented the rear two to Mr. Inman, who occupied these two rooms with his family until the latter part of May, ■when they removed to Oklahoma. Inman’s stepfather and mother part of the time occupied these two rooms with his family. When he removed his family he and his stepfather both left part of' their household goods stored in these two rooms. There was an entrance to this second story by stairs from both the front and rear, the rear on an alley. The fastening- of the back door from the rear stair was by an inside bar across the door underneath the door knob or latch. Inman first went to Oklahoma, where he got work, the last of February, leaving his family in said rooms in Decatur. He got sick the last of March and returned to his rooms with his family, where he was sick in bed for two weeks. This would put him there sick from the last of March to about the middle of April. While Inman was there sick Mrs. Arensman was in to see him. They got to discussing the frequent fires in Decatur, and in the conversation Mrs. Arensman told him she could not collect money for what she had sold and had some notes coming due which she was going to have to pay; that if times got dull she would burn up- and *549 get the insurance before she would “go broke.” Just at this time appellant himself applied to the insurance agents for a policy of insurance in addition to the $300 policy his wife then had on the millinery business and procured the issuance of a policy for an additional $200, which was issued to her on the millinery stock. The two policies at that time additional one, $200. Shortly prior to the fire, Mrs. Arensman tried and continuously until the fire aggregated $500, one, $300, and said to sell her business to other milliners, who inspected her stock at the time with the view of purchasing. She then asked $300 therefor. The prospective purchasers would not have been willing to have given her more than $150 or $175 therefor.

There can be no question but that said millinery stock and the store m which it was located were purposely set on fire and wilfully burned on the night of June 7, 1915, some time between 9 and 11 o’clock, most of the testimony showing that it was near 11 o’clock. The appellant, his wife and family lived together in a residence in the south part of Decatur. On the day preceding the fire that night, appellant several times passed up and down before an adjoining store to said building which was burned that night. Appellant and his wife, just after dark on the night of the fire, which must have been near 9 o’clock, were seen to come down the back stairway into the alley from said second-story where said millinery business was conducted, which was much later than they ordinarily left said millinery store. Again that night, about twenty-five or thirty minutes before the fire, they were seen together to come out of said alley back of said store building, cross the street running north from the northwest corner of the square and start as if they were going north. Instead of doing so, they immediately turned and went south on the sidewalk on the west of said street until they got near the corner, then crossed that street diagonally, got on the sidewalk on the front of the block of buildings north of the courthouse and continued directly to the front stair where said millinery stock was. They disappeared up this stair but were not seen when they came out. The next time they were seen was'from one to three minutes before the fire was discovered, when they were met on the sidewalk on the west side of the square about the middle of the block going south towards their residence. Two parties there met them. These two parties went north on this same sidewalk to near the northwest corner of the square, cut across the square to the sidewalk on the north, in front of said building and millinery business. Just as they passed the millinery store they heard some noise which attracted their attention and remarks. They, however, proceeded east to near the corner of the square, when they again started diagonally across the street to the store on the northeast corner, when they stopped, and upon looking back, discovered that said millinery store was on fire. They immediately ran back to this building, upstairs and broke in one of the doors of said millinery store, when they discovered that a whole lot of paper and millinery goods were heaped in a pile against, or near, the partition wall between the two millinery rooms, and on fire. The smoke was then dense and the *550 heat considerable. They fled and gave the alarm of fire, when a large crowd at once gathered, the fire company appeared and succeeded in later extinguishing the fire before it consumed the entire building, though it consumed the roof, partition wall, considerable of the floor of the second story and most, if not all, of the millinery stock.

The next day, the city marshal, C. C. Lewis, and appellant were in said second story of said building. The city marshal asked him if he had any enemies, or something like that, that would burn him out. He said he didn’t know that he had a single one. The city marshal then asked him if he was not in the building the night before, immediately preceding the fire. He at first said he was not. The city marshal said to him: “We are both Odd Fellows. Don’t lie to me. I know you was in this building.” Appellant replied; “I will admit that I did lie. I was in the building.” That he had come up to get something, — a paper or record

Mr. Beard, the husband of Ella Beard, who- owned said store building, the next day after the fire went from Fort Worth to Decatur to- see. about it. That evening he met appellant and asked him if he had any insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 471, 79 Tex. Crim. 546, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arensman-v-state-texcrimapp-1916.