Atkinson v. State

20 Tex. 522
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 20 Tex. 522 (Atkinson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkinson v. State, 20 Tex. 522 (Tex. 1857).

Opinion

Roberts, J.

The material facts of this case may be comprised in a narrow compass. The prisoner and the deceased were both at the town of Bellville, in the county of Austin, on the 22d day of December, A. D. 1855. They had a violent quarrel during the space of about a quarter of an hour, with but little intermission, which grew out of the prisoner’s picking up and walking off with a dollar that was staked between deceased and John C. Cloud, who were playing cards for it. Twice in the time before the killing they had their weapons drawn on each other, the prisoner a pistol and the deceased a hatchet; but both parties, [526]*526seeming willing not to carry the matter to an extremity, forbore to use them. The deceased was standing on a gallery, leaning against the post on one side of a door, and resting the hatchet against the other post of the door of the gallery, with his arm extending in a horizontal direction, and the hatchet held downward. The prisoner was standing out a few steps in front of the gallery, and being requested by one of his friends, (a witness,) standing near him, to go off to the blacksmith-shop, where witness’ father was, was in the act of starting off, and had gone five or six steps, when the deceased said, “ If there are no braver boys on Caney than you are, go home and stay there.” The prisoner stepped back, and asked the deceased if he called him a coward, and the deceased answered that he did. The prisoner immediately shot the deceased in the upper part of the face, with the pistol, which killed him; and the prisoner fled.

The deceased had not changed his position in the mean time, until he fell from the shot.

The evidence as to most of the other facts of the case is conflicting, and tending to different conclusions; that of the State tending to show that the killing was deliberate and premeditated, and that in defence tending to show that it was a hasty act, done in a transport of sudden passion.

The State proved by Resom, a witness, that an hour before the difficulty, prisoner, on loading his pistol, and after, with some difficulty, getting down the ball, said “ it was good enough to shoot a damned rascal with.”

Prisoner proved by two witnesses, who had been attorneys in the case, that Resom was examined twice before in the case, and had made no such statement, and showed that it was not in his written statement.

The State proved, as to the commencement of the difficulty, that, after abusing each other in Ritch’s store, prisoner drew his pistol, and said, “If you say that again, I will shoot you,” and pointed the pistol at Harrison, the deceased; and that the deceased was taken to the back door by Ritch, and by him advised to leave, and that he there got the hatchet, and returned; and the quarrel recommencing, they were all put out of the house by Ritch.

Prisoner proved, as to the commencement, that deceased followed prisoner into Ritch’s store after the money, and when he got to the door he pulled out his knife, opened it, and returned it to his pocket open, and went in and demanded his dollar. At this time [527]*527Jack Cloud and Ritch were quarrelling about a breastpin, and deceased took up the quarrel for Ritch, and flourished his knife. Jack Cloud drew his pistol. Deceased went to the back door and picked up a hatchet, and returned with it; in the mean time John C. Cloud was holding Jack Cloud, and the prisoner told deceased, “If you hit him, I will shoot you.” One of the witnesses said that at this time the deceased was flourishing a hatchet in one hand and a knife in the other, and that the prisoner said, “ If you make your lick, I will shoot you.” One of the witnesses said that during this excitement in Ritch’s store he heard the deceased say, “Shoot me, if you want to;” and the prisoner said, “ I don’t want to.” One of the witnesses thinks that as they all came out of Ritch’s house, the prisoner and the deceased both had their weapons drawn on each other, but did not use them.

A momentary cessation of the difficulty ensued at this point.

The State proved that the deceased started off towards Rosenthall’s store, which was twenty-five or thirty steps distant, and stopped at a pile of timber between the two stores, and the prisoner followed him to the timber; the quarrel recommenced, and each party drew their weapons upon the other, but again did not use them.

The prisoner, on the other hand, proved that he left Ritch’s store, having put up his pistol, and was walking off towards Rosenthall’s; that the deceased started after him, and chopped a round out of a chair in Ritch’s gallery as he started, and called to the prisoner, “Stop till I come; I’ll show you how it is.” Prisoner stopped at the timber near the end of Rosenthall’s gallery, and the deceased came up, and the quarrel recommenced; both parties had their weapons drawn. The deceased then had his knife drawn, and his hatchet over the prisoner’s head; and deceased said to the prisoner, “ God damn you, if you move, I’ll stave it into you.” Prisoner had his pistol presented. In this position they quarrelled for some time. One of the State’s witnesses said that about this time deceased went into Rosenthall’s store, and prisoner started and said, “Tom, hav’n’t I shown you that I don’t want to hurt you?” and cursed very bitterly, and seemed to be very much excited, and stepped to the gallery where Jack Cloud was. Here there was a cessation of a short time, and deceased, being in Rosenthall’s store, was whistling and dancing. He came out; the quarrel recommenced; he called prisoner a coward; prisoner said, “If you think I am a coward, [528]*528let us shoot at each other five steps, and test the matter; I have done enough to show you that I don’t want to hurt you.” The deceased said he would do it; (that is, he accepted the challenge.) Rosenthall went up to deceased, took him by the arm, and told him not to do it. (Whereupon Jack Cloud, with a pistol in his hand,pushed Rosenthall back into the house, saying, “Damn you, what is that your business ?” Rosenthall “went and got a double-barrel shot-gun, brought it to the door, did not see Jack Cloud, and set it down at the door.”) Just then Jack Cloud and the prisoner started off towards the blacksmith-shop, and the deceased spoke the insulting words which caused the prisoner to step back and shoot him, as before stated.

The version of this evidence, favorable to the State, is, that the prisoner having some secret malignity, prepared himself, brought on the quarrel, drew his pistol, and failed to use it only by the bold promptness with which the assault was met; that he followed up the deceased, drew his pistol, and was again deterred from consummating his deadly purpose by the proximity of the deadly weapon in the ready hand of his antagonist; that he still hung round the deceased, and when the provoking language was uttered, which, according to his standard of morals, he thought would give him an excuse, and then being out of danger for the first time when such opportunity had occurred, having by his protestations and seeming forbearance, lulled his victim into fancied security from his violence, based on the idea of his cowardice, he slew his unresisting enemy.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Tex. 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-state-tex-1857.