Benavidez v. State

154 S.W.2d 260, 143 Tex. Crim. 481, 1941 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 597
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 1941
DocketNo. 21542.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 154 S.W.2d 260 (Benavidez 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
Benavidez v. State, 154 S.W.2d 260, 143 Tex. Crim. 481, 1941 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 597 (Tex. 1941).

Opinions

Appellant was assessed the death penalty for the alleged murder of Henry Calcote, and he appeals.

From the evidence it is gathered that appellant had been working for the deceased on a ranch in Schleicher County. That on a day or two prior to the homicide the deceased had transferred appellant to the ranch home of Jeff Enochs, about six miles from deceased's home where appellant had previously been employed as a day laborer. Mr. Enochs was in process of moving his family into the town of Eldorado, and appellant was left out on the ranch to look after the stock and attend to the chores around the house. Mr. Enochs had two rifles, one an old model and one a comparatively new 30-30 rifle, which latter gun was left in a scabbard, and which the appellant had used and was familiar with, and knew where such gun was kept. On Thursday before Saturday, on the fifth of September, 1940, the deceased had brought appellant back to Mr. Enochs' and appellant started to work for Enochs. The appellant then went to the Enochs' place and was not seen by Mr. Enochs for a few days; however Mrs. Enochs and her daughter did see him at their ranch home on Thursday afternoon. On the next morning Mr. Enochs saw the deceased's pickup truck abandoned upon the highway between the ranch home and Eldorado. On the following Saturday the body of Henry Calcote was found in the Calcote home with a bullet wound in the back of the head; there was also found the body of Mrs. Calcote, the mother of Henry Calcote, and she also had a bullet wound in the back or side of her head. There were also evidences that one shot had been fired into the house from the outside through a screened window, and one 30-30 riffle exploded shell was found some five or six feet outside the house near the screened window with a hole in it. These two deceased persons were fully dressed, and the beds of the house, except a baby *Page 484 bed, showed not to have been slept in. A pistol known to have been owned by the deceased was not found on the premises. The pickup truck of the deceased, found out on the highway, had the steering mechanism badly bent, and the front axle was also bent out of line. Earl Cathey, a neighbor of the Calcotes, visited them about 6 o'clock Thursday afternoon, September 5, 1940, and talked with the family; on Friday following he again had occasion to go to the Calcote home; he found the gates open, which should have been closed, and waited for some one to come out of the house for a few minutes, but no one came and he finally drove off. On Saturday he was again at this place, looking out for stock straying through these open gates into the pasture of Cathey. He then noticed the tracks of an automobile leading through one of these open gates into witnesses' pasture, and he followed these unusual tracks through a dim road to a point near a windmill and on out of witness' pasture through another opened gate. There were peculiar tire marks here on the ground where the tracks had suddenly stopped and then backed up and had finally gone out of the pasture. Later on that afternoon near this last spot witness, in company with others, found the dead body of Mrs. Dardinella Calcote and her baby, both being shot through the head, they being clothed in the same garments that they had on when Cathey had last seen them on the Thursday preceding this Saturday, such bodies evidencing advanced decomposition. At this point there were two discharged 30-30 rifle shells found. Mother and child were lying near each other with bullet holes in their heads, and a baby's milk bottle near them.

Sheriff O. E. Conner testified that he saw appellant at Sanderson, Texas, on September 20, 1940, and carried him to the jail in Mertzon, Irion County, and there appellant made to him a voluntary confession as follows:

"The State of Texas, County of Irion.

"I Emiliano Benevidez, being in custody of John Boyd, Sheriff of Irion County, Texas, having been first warned by O. E. Conner, the person to whom the hereinafter set out statement is by me made, that I do not have to make any statement at all, and any statement made by me may be used in evidence against me on my trial for the offense concerning which this statement is made, do here make the following voluntary statement in writing to the said O. E. Conner:

" 'My name is Emiliano Benevidez, and I was born in Old *Page 485 Mexico, and I think I am maybe 35 years old. Two weeks ago day before yesterday, Mr. Henry Calcote took me from his place after dinner to Mr. Jeff Enochs' place. Before we got to Mr. Enochs' place we met Mr. Enochs and a white boy in Mr. Enochs' pick-up. I got out and got in Mr. Enochs' pick-up and put my bedding in there and took my suit case. Mr. Henry Calcote then went back toward his place and I went with Mr. Enochs and the white boy to Eldorado. I asked Mr. Enochs for $2.00 to get my laundry with, and he let me have it, and the white boy he took me to Gregario's place in Eldorado and I gave her one dollar for doing my laundry. I went with the white boy and we went back to Mr. Enochs' place. When we got there I took my bed roll in and put it on the porch and told the white boy I felt sick and that I can't work that day. I told him I was sick so he would go away and would not be there, but I was not sick; I felt all right. So then while I was there I milked the cows and I fed the hogs and I washed up the dishes, and then I saw Mr. Ed Finnegan down there and he was getting the rake, and I went to where he was and I talked to him, and I opened the gate so the cows could go through. Then Mr. Ed left and I went back to the house, and pretty soon Mrs. Enochs and her girl came out there and got some things in the house, and I helped them load them things and they leave. After they leave, in about 25 minutes I leave Mr. Enochs.' Before I leave I got his 30-30 gun out of the scabbard and then I put the old gun in the scabbard. Maybe about one week before that when I was working for Mr. Enochs, I took his 30-30 gun to my place where I sleep one night, and I looked in the gun then and I saw there were 9 shells in it. So, I took the 30-30 on Thursday after Mrs. Enochs left and I walked to where Mr. Henry Calcote lived. I walked along by the railroad down there. When I got to where Mr. Henry lived, I went around and climbed over the rock fence and went up close to the kitchen window and I saw Mr. Henry Calcote come to the kitchen and when I saw him there I saw him get some water to drink. Then I looked through the window and I shot him through the screen wire and I shot him in the back of the head.

"After I shot Mr. Henry Calcote, after I took good aim at him through the window, I run around the house quick and go into the front part of the house and I run through the house and then I saw Mrs. Calcote and Mrs. Dardinella go into the kitchen, and I run to the kitchen door and I take aim at Mrs. Calcote and shoot her in the head one time. Then I tell Mrs. Dardinella I want to talk with her and for her to go with me. *Page 486 Before I got out of the house I got a pistol from the dresser; I knew where they kept the pistol because I saw Mr. Henry put it there before.

"When I got the pistol out of the drawer in Mr. Henry and Mrs. Dardinella's bed room, I then go outside. Mrs. Dardinella, who is Mr. Henry Calcote's wife, she then took the baby out of the bed, and then I went to the garage and I tried to open the door where the roadster car was and I could not get the door loose so it would open, so I took the pick-up car out of there and then I leave with me the 30-30 gun and the pistol. And I drove off with Mrs. Dardinella and the baby. And when we got over close to the gate that goes to Mr. Earl Cathey's, Mrs. Dardinella she say for me to go on by Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.W.2d 260, 143 Tex. Crim. 481, 1941 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benavidez-v-state-texcrimapp-1941.