Ballard v. State

138 S.W. 120, 62 Tex. Crim. 435, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 305
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1911
DocketNo. 1139.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 S.W. 120 (Ballard 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
Ballard v. State, 138 S.W. 120, 62 Tex. Crim. 435, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 305 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was indicted, charged with murder, and upon a trial he was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to two years in the penitentiary, from which judgment he has appealed to this court.

The undisputed evidence shows that appellant had spent the day away from home, and going by a neighbor’s after his wife, he met her, and she told him she had started home, the road leading through the woods, and had seen a negro on a mule, and by his acts and conduct the negro had frightened her, and she had run back. She was excited, and from his wife’s statement appellant became excited, and said he would go and see what the negro meant, and if he could give an explanation of his conduct. He requested his neighbor, John Thrasher, to go with him. The negro was staying at a railroad camp, and on his way to the camp he stopped at Ches Humphrey’s and got a shotgun to take along with him. There were but two eyewitnesses to the killing, John Thrasher, a witness for the State, and appellant. They both testify that in the morning they were at the camp and had seen deceased in possession of, oiling and cleaning a pistol. Thrasher says that appellant got the gun and he remarked to him, “ ‘Don’t get too hasty; I would not get into no trouble,’ to which appellant replied, ‘I do not think I will have any trouble; he will have some kind of excuse, and if it looks reasonable it will be all right, and if not it will be different.’ That they went to the railroad camp, and appellant says, ‘Howdy, boys,’ and asked for a cigarette, and deceased walked over behind a negro near a tree, when appellant asked, ‘Is that you, Mon?’ (meaning deceased), and upon receiving an affirmative reply, asked if he got back with his milk all right, to which the negro replied he did. Appellant then said, ‘Come out here, I want to see you.’ The State’s witness, appellant and the negro walked perhaps one hundred and fifty yards, when appellant remarked: ‘Well, Mon, you scared my wife mighty bad this evening; I want to know what you meant by passing my wife like you did, speaking to her, and then coming in the road and stopping, and when she came out you was coming towards her, and then crossing the road like you was going to head her off. I want to know your business if you didn’t mean any harm;’ and Mon says, ‘I didn’t do that;’ and Jim says, ‘I know you did; you passed her this evening where that old vacant house is, the way we come, and the way we met you; you know where it is;’ and he says, “Yes, sir;” and he says, ‘You passed her and she went in and got a drink of water and plucked some flowers, and stayed long enough to give you time to get to the railroad, and she came out and found you stopped there, and you went towards her—went quartering, like you were going to head her;’ and Mon says, T didn’t do that; I never saw a woman from the time I left until I got back except in houses; I never stopped;’ and Jim says, ‘Don’t you insinuate my wife told a lie;’ and he says, ‘Ho, sir; *437 if she told you that’—and he sorter hesitated and says: ‘I am bound to say she made it-’ and the gun fired. When the gun fired the negro fell and Jim just observed to me, ‘Let’s go,’ and we just turned and walked off, and when we got down to the railroad where there was a wire across the railroad to keep them from running up and down the railroad, we had to hold the wire up to get through, and as we were getting through the wire Jim observed to me—that was the first word he had spoken, ‘God damn him, he just as good as said my wife told a lie, didn’t lie?’ and we walked on a piece further and I asked him, ‘Jim, why did you take him off down the railroad, that if you was going to ask him about it and going to kill him-’ And I asked him why he taken him off down the road if he was going to ask him, or was going to kill him—why didn’t he ask him up at the camp, where all those negroes could have heard it and all be witnesses; ■ and he says, ‘That is what I intended to do after I got up there,’ but he says, ‘You remember one day last week some of these negroes at this same camp gathered up in front of Ches Humphrey’s gate and shot eight or ten shots at one another, and Ches halloaed at them, and it didn’t have any effect, and he had to go with his gun, and, I thought if he made fight and tried to kill me, and I had him to kill, some of those other negroes would kill us both and our family would never know who done it.’ ”

The witness further testified, on cross-examination, that at the time appellant shot deceased, from the acts and conduct of deceased at the time, “it impressed him that perhaps the negro was trying to get ready to shoot appellant.”

Appellant testifies, in substance, the same as the State’s witness, except that he says just before he fired the shot when he remarked, “Don’t be insinuating as though my wife told a lie,” the negro replied, “Well, I don’t say she told a lie, but I say if she said that she made and told it,” and “when he said that he made a demonstration with his right hand and a forward movement. He had his right hand across his breast in his jumper.. I had seen him with a pistol that morning, and I shot him because I thought he was going to shoot me.”

But one shot was fired, and deceased was shot in the right hand and in the breast. There is no question but what defendant was informed by his wife of the conduct of deceased, and that she was frightened and ran. All the testimony shows this.

Of the errors complained of in the record on murder in the first and second degree we will not discuss, inasmuch as the appellant was convicted only of manslaughter. McGrath v. State, 35 Texas Crim. Rep., 414; Griffin v. State, 53 S. W. Rep., 848; Hopkins v. State, 53 S. W. Rep., 619; Williams v. State, 25 Texas Crim. App., 76.

The defendant complains of the charge of the court on self-defense, and says that the concluding part of the charge on self-defense has no basis in the evidence. That while it states the law abstractly, yet in its application in this case it was misleading, and improperly limited the *438 right of defendant to'act on the appearance of danger as it reasonably appeared to him. The court said: “But self-defense is a defensive and not án offensive act, and must not exceed the bounds of mere defense and prevention. To justify a killing of another there must be at least apparent necessity to ward off by force some unlawful and violent attack. It is not enough that the defendant believed himself in danger, unless the facts and circumstances, as viewed from his standpoint, were such as that the jury can say he had reasonable grounds for such belief.”

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Related

Lyons v. State
159 S.W. 1070 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 120, 62 Tex. Crim. 435, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-state-texcrimapp-1911.