Atkinson v. State

138 S.W. 125, 62 Tex. Crim. 419, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 297
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1911
DocketNo. 1209.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 138 S.W. 125 (Atkinson 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
Atkinson v. State, 138 S.W. 125, 62 Tex. Crim. 419, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 297 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of simple assault under an information charging him with aggravated assault.

*420 The assault is alleged to have been committed upon Miss Elma Warren. The prosecutrix and another lady passed along the street at night near where appellant was standing, and were accosted by him. The ladies had been to a moving picture show and were en route home; when near the northwest corner of the square someone said wait a minute. Prosecutrix turned her head slightly; the party came close to her, and she recognized appellant. He remarked when he got right close to them, “O, I beg pardon; excuse me,” or something like that. She replied to him, “You are not excusable,” and continued her journey. After he had used the expression, “O, I beg pardon; excuse me,” he turned around as if to go away. The ladies pursued their journey, and just as they reached the bridge and had proceeded quite a way across it she looked and saw appellant coming in their direction, and he seemed to be walking rapidly. The ladies ran into the residence and shut the door. Just as they did this appellant came on the gallery and knocked against the door. The witness opened it slightly and asked, who is it? Appellant said nothing intelligible, but murmured or muttered something. Witness shut the door. Appellant then threw his weight against it and the door came open. The door in opening struck the lady on the arm. Appellant immediately went away. The other lady, Mrs. Warren, testified that as they passed appellant he said, “Wait a minute, kids.” She looked around and saw appellant near the sidewalk, the ladies being in the middle of the street; that appellant approached them until rather in front of them and said, “Excuse me, I beg your pardon.” Her testimony is practically the same as the former witness with reference to them rapidly approaching their home and entering it; and also with reference to appellant cdming to the door and opening it by throwing his weight against it or kicking it and forcing it open. She was not positive it was appellant, but she said she thought it was he. She said that she did not understand what he said, but murmured something like a drunk man. She also said there was considerable travel along the street in front of their home.

Appellant testified that on the night in question he saw two girls passing up the street and thought they were his sisters,' whom he had left at his father’s home, and was going up the street to his married sister’s residence. When he observed them they were traveling along the square "with their backs .to him. “I said, ‘Hold on there; where are you kids going?’ They did not stop, but checked up some and looked over their shoulder. I walked up a little closer and decided that it was not my sisters and turned back to the drug store. I heard one say something to the other, and the voice was like that of my sister Alice. They also commenced going faster as if they wanted to get away from me, and I concluded again that maybe it was my sisters. I thought that they were trying to get away from me, as I told them not to come on the street that night, as the streets would be crowded with a rough crowd. They come to town sometimes when *421 girls ought not to be out alone, and I try to keep them from it. I am the only brother at home and my father is deaf.” He says he thought they were trying to play a Christmas trick on him and get away from him, and he took after them, intending to make them return home. They ran across the bridge and into the residence of Hr. Warren. He ran after them as quick as he could and pushed upon the door with his shoulders and foot and forced it open. That after the door came open he saw that he was mistaken and said, “Excuse me, I am mistaken in the parties.” The ladies began screaming and he went away. That the ladies he saw on the street were about the same size of his sisters, and the voice of one of them sounded like that of one of his sisters. He said he had no idea of hurting Elma Warren that night; did not know she was on the opposite side of the door when he pushed it in; that he did not put his hands on her. On cross-examination he testified when he remarked to the ladies, “Hold on, where are you kids going?” he went closer to them, and concluding that it was not his sisters, said to the ladies, “O, I beg pardon.” That he again concluded it was his sisters when they began to run. He also stated when he went on the porch he still thought ' that it was his sisters trying to play a Christmas trick on him. Miss Warren, the alleged assaulted party, also testified that he did not lay his hand upon her, nor touch her, and that she was standing on the inside and that the door was pushed back against her when thrown open by appellant; that this did not cause her any pain, and that there was no insult offered her, but that she was frightened, or, as she says, scared of the appellant. This is a brief summary of the facts.

Appellant was convicted of simple assault and fined $10. After giving the ordinary and usual stereotyped definitions the jury was informed by the charge that if they believed he was guilty of an assault but had a reasonable doubt whether it was a simple or aggravated assault they would acquit of the aggravated assault and convict of the simple assault. He further charged the jury that an assault or an assault and battery may be committed by the use of any part of the body of the person committing the offense, as of the hand, foot, head or by the use of. any inanimate object, as a stick, knife, or anything else capable of inflicting the slightest injury or by the use of any animate object as by throwing one person against another or driving a horse or other animal against the person.

Appellant raises various objections to the court’s charge, and the refusal to give the special instructions. If there was an assault under the facts it was by reason of the fact that appellant forced the door open, which was thereby pushed against the arm of Miss Warren. That he did not know she was behind the door, we think, is fairly concluded, if not evident, from the facts. She had shut the door when he broke it open, but it is evident that he did not use the door intentionally to strike her, and it may be fairly concluded that he broke the door open as a means of entering the house, The fact that *422 the door was forced against Miss Warren was incidental and accidental. There is no evidence that appellant used any stick or knife or any inanimate substance of any sort except as stated. He testified that he did not intend to injure the ladies; that he thought they were his sisters he was pursuing, and the testimony of the ladies show that the fact that the door struck one of them on the arm when he broke it open was an accident, or at least incidental to the fact that he broke the door open.

The court charged the jury that the intent to injure would he presumed.

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Related

Sargent v. State
518 S.W.2d 807 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1975)
Irlbeck v. State
40 S.W.2d 124 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1931)
Espinoza v. State
165 S.W. 208 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 125, 62 Tex. Crim. 419, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-state-texcrimapp-1911.