Bennett v. State

252 S.W. 790, 95 Tex. Crim. 70, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 515
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1923
DocketNo. 7208.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 252 S.W. 790 (Bennett 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
Bennett v. State, 252 S.W. 790, 95 Tex. Crim. 70, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 515 (Tex. 1923).

Opinions

MORROW, Presiding Judge.

— The conviction is for murder; punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of-twenty-five years. Appellant shot and killed the deceased Mulrein.

Prom the testimony of the appellant, it appears that there had been ill-will between himself and the deceased of long standing; that the deceased had accused him of various criminal offense and had frequently used abusive language towards him; that according to the information possessed by him, the deceased had on more than one occasion threatened to kill the appellant. Many witnesses for both the State and appellant testified to their unfriendly relations. Immediately before the homicide, he had a conversation with his wife, and taking a gun with him, he went at night to the court house, where the deceased stayed, for .the purpose of demanding that deceased refrain from’further hostile conduct. What occurred is thus described by the appellant:

I went in at that door into Mulrein’s oSee. As I entered that door, I spoke to Mulrein, I called his name, I called him ‘Mul,’ when I spoke to him, that was what I always called him. I always said *72 it just as I spoke to Mm then. When I entered the room and said ‘Mul, ’ he was sitting about like Judge Bevers is there and he looked back towards me. I guess he saw me. I did not hear anything but ‘son-of-a-biteh’ and he kind of dropped his paper from him with his hand and reached back beside the table. I thought he reached under the table. When he reached under the table, I shot him one time.”

In his cross-examination, appellant stated that he knew that Mulrein had been working at the courthouse for' quite a while and that he would be found there; that he had sent friends to see Mulrein for the purpose of inducing him to refrain from further abuse and had received reports that unless he wanted to kill or be killed by Mulrein, he had better stay away from him.

There were prosecutions for felonies pending against the appellant and he had been informed that Mulrein had declared that he intended to assist in the prosecution.

Appellant had been in town all day and after dark had a conversation with his wife in which she told him she had gotten some money from the deceased and would get money from him again unless the appellant would give it to her; that deceased told her that she ought to get a divorce as the appellant was not good enough for her; He did not have the least suspicion and did not claim that there was any improper intimacy between the deceased and the wife of the appellant, but that the information received made him angry. He borrowed a shotgun which he said he first got for the purpose or hunting. After he drove to town he decided to go and see Mulrein. Appellant said further:

“When I saw him in there by the.table I concluded to go and see him. My gun was not loaded then, but I loaded it as I walked to the door. When I got in there he was sitting by the table reading a newspaper. I got inside the door; but not on the inside of the office. * * * I don’t know just what my position was whether nearer the center of the door or not. I guess I had my gun down by my side. I don’t know how I was carrying the gun. * * * I guess I was six or eight’feet from him. All that I heard him say was ‘son-of-a-bitch, ’ and dropped his right hand. I did not see anything on the table. I did not see any pistol around there. I thought he put his hand under the table by the side. I had the shotgun in my right hand. I think I had the gun in both hands when I shot. He dropped his hand before I raised the gun. When I stepped in the door, he had a newspaper in a position as though he was reading it and I think he had it with both hands when I appeared there with the shotgun. I did not take aim at him when I fired. I did not shoot at the back of his head, I just shot, I threw up the gun and fired. When he dropped his hand, I thought he was after a gun. I shot Mulrein because I thought he was going to kill me. * * * I did not wait to see whether there were any drawers under the table or *73 not. * * * If he had not dropped his hand, I would not have shot him. *' # * I did not appear there pleasantly, * * * but I spoke to him pleasantly. I was not in a good humor. I did not think my appearance there with a gun would cause him to make any demonstration, I just carried that gun for my own protection. I did not know that he would expect trouble if I went there with that double-barrel shotgun. I had been warned to stay away from Mulrein if I did not want to kill him or be killed. Mulrein was sitting down at the time I shot. I don’t think his feet wfere on the table. * * * His feet nor legs were not upon the table. I guess he had that paper in his left hand when I shot, but I don’t know. I figured that he had it in his left hand. As quick as I fired, I turned and walked out.
I am thirty-nine years old and weigh two hundred and forty pounds. I am strong and stout. I did not want to kill him. I had no thought of killing him. I just shot when he reached down. I shot at .him. I did not shoot at the back of his head. I don’t know whether he was reading that paper when I went in there or not. « * # I just went off and left him there that way without telling anybody. ’ ’

The sheriff reached the deceased a few moments after he was shot, and found him living but unconscious. The witness described Avhat he saw. There was a large wound about four inches long and two or three inches wide. It entered under the right ear and extended down under the chin and removed a little of the chin bone on the right side. The wound was made with shots from a shotgun. There was a pool of blood near the table in the room, and a stream of blood on the floor between the table and the place where the deceased was leaning against a partition wall about thirtjr feet distant. There was also blood where the deceased was found. There was one shot found in the left leg of the deceased apparently ranging downward. In the partition wall, about twelve feet south of the chair there were six or seven shots. The chair was sitting in a line between these shots and the door. The shots extended down to the baseboard; some of them about two feet above it. Fragments of paper were found in the wall, as well as small pieces of paper between the chair and the wall. A newspaper with a number of shot-holes through it and blood upon it was also found about six feet from the back of the chair. The physical condition detailed by the sheriff were properly received. They tended to throw light upon the transaction and to reveal its nature. Cyc. of Law & Proc., Vol. 21, p. 938; Rocha v. State, 43 Texas Grim. Rep. 169; Thompson v. State, 33 Texas Crim. Rep. 217. The witness testified:

‘ That from the location of the chair in which the deceased was sitting at the time he was shot and from the location of the shot in a partition wall in which there was found blood, flesh and pieces of *74 paper, that the party who inflicted the wound was bound to have been behind the deceased and near the east side of the door that was directly behind the deceased at the time of the shooting.”

This was an unauthorized opinion and the objection which was urged against it should have been sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
252 S.W. 790, 95 Tex. Crim. 70, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-state-texcrimapp-1923.