Blocker v. State

114 S.W. 814, 55 Tex. Crim. 30, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 465
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1908
DocketNo. 4127.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 814 (Blocker 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
Blocker v. State, 114 S.W. 814, 55 Tex. Crim. 30, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 465 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, his punishment being assessed at twenty years confinement in the penitentiary.

The evidence shows that appellant and deceased were somewhat in rivalry for the affection and favors of a negro woman, whose chastity, under the evidence, was not above suspicion. On the night of and previous to the homicide these two negroes met at the house where the woman, whose name is Delia Nobles, resided. The evidence further discloses that deceased, a married man, had perhaps outstripped his rival, appellant, in the race for the affections of Delia Nobles. On taking his departure from the house of Delia Nobles, on the night of the homicide, appellant left the deceased with her. Within half an hour the deceased left, and a few moments later the report of a gun was heard. Early the following morning the body of deceased was found lying by the road side, shot in the head over the left eye. The State relied upon some threats of a qualified nature on the part of appellant against deceased, and the *32 ill-will and ill-feeling existing or that had prior thereto existed, together with the fact that a gun was found at the residence of appellant, one barrel of which had been recently discharged. It seems that no foot tracks were found in close proximity to the body. Some distance away hare-foot tracks were found, showing that the party who made the. tracks was moving rather rapidly, the tracks being something like five feet apart. They did not go in the direction of appellant’s residence. There is some evidence showing at another point some distance away from the body a shoe track was found, one of them indicating that it was made by a run-down shoe, and there is some, evidence indicating that appellant owned a run-down shoe. The evidence further discloses that deceased had a double-barrel shotgun, which was found lying under his body, both barrels of which had been snapped as indicated by the indentation on the cartridges contained in the barrels. This gun belonged to Aaron Massey. Aaron Massey was unable to account for how deceased obtained possession of his gun. He stated that he had loaned the gun the day before to a friend who, it is shown, had returned it. Aaron Massey had married the divorced wife of the deceased, the deceased having married another woman subsequent to the divorce from the then wife of Aaron Massey. Aaron Massey and his wife had separated, and the deceased had become more or less attentive to his former wife, which may have been the cause of the separation between she and Aaron Massey. It is further shown that Aaron Massey was riding about the country on the night of the tragedy, and it was a theory under the testimony and urged by appellant that Massey did the killing. On account of the evidence of tracks and other matters there may have been other parties interested in the killing of the deceased. The case is one purely of circumstantial evidence.

On the trial Boyd was offered as a witness. The bill recites the following facts would have been proved by this witness had he been permitted to testify: “L. B. Boyd would have testified that he knew Aaron Massey, and that two nights after the killing of Henry Demons he was in Thompson & Schonherg’s saloon; that Aaron Massey came in, and was drinking and talking to other negroes, and that he, Boyd, was called to the rear, and while in the rear of the saloon, he saw the negroes pushing and pulling Aaron Massey out of the hack door of the saloon; that Aaron Massey was cursing and said, ‘I killed the God damned, black son-of-a-bitch,’ when the other negroes said, Tlush, you had better stop talking, if you do not they will get you,’ and Massey replied, ‘They can send me to the penitentiary or to hell if they want to, I killed him, God damn him.’ ” On objection by the State this testimony was excluded. It has been jhe rule in Texas since the rendition of the case of Dubose v. State, 10 Texas Crim. App., 230, especially in cases of circumstantial evidence, that where an accused is being tried for a homicide, it is *33 legitimate and proper to introduce evidence that another party or other parties were in position to have committed the homicide; and motive and other matters of that character are also admissible to show a reason why the others and not the accused party committed the homicide. We deem it unnecessary here to collate these authorities. There is, however, an unbroken line of decisions in the reports of this court so holding. We are of opinion this testimony was admissible under the circumstances stated. The motive was as strong on the part of Aaron Massey as it was on the part of appellant. It would be a self-evident proposition if Aaron Massey killed deceased, appellant not being present or aiding in any manner in the homicide, that appellant would not be guilty, and, as we understand the record, there is nothing in it indicating that appellant and Aaron Massey were acting together in the homicide, if either of them killed deceased.

While appellant ivas on the stand, the State was permitted to ask him the following question: “If he had not told Delia Nobles prior to the killing that lie, defendant, was a nephew of Merrick Trammell, that he was a bad negro, and if she did not stop Henry Demons from coming to see her, he would kill Henry Demons, and then he would kill her.” Objection was urged to this, and the question was not answered. There was some evidence introduced on motion for new trial in regard to this matter, and it would seem from this that Merrick Trammell had been years ago a negro of a very unsavory reputation in that county, and mention of his name to a jury had a tendency to inflame their minds against parties who were related to him. It was stated that Merrick Trammell and those with whom he acted, were held responsible for the killing of Clendennon and Applewhite, and that he was always believed to have been implicated in the death of John Love. That a feeling against Merrick Trammell and those with whom he is said to have acted in killing the parties above named offended the white people to such an extent that they went to the Navasota bottom and hung negroes as they came to them, and that this feeling of bitterness has been carried and is still carried against the relatives and descendants of Merrick Trammell. The district attorney testifies that he asked the question thinking that he could prove by Delia Nobles that the threat was made prior to the killing and not subsequent, but upon investigating the matter, after the objection was raised, he discovered that he could not do this, and whatever conversation occurred between appellant and Delia Nobles was subsequent to the killing. Therefore, the objection was admitted to be Avell taken, and the question was not answered. This will not occur upon another trial under the facts as stated. It is not intended to say that the threat as stated would not be admissible if made before the homicide. We are of opinion under such circumstances it would be admissible.

Objection was urged to the following clause of the court’s charge:

*34 “If from the evidence you believe that the defendant killed said Henry Demons, but further believe that at the time of so.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 814, 55 Tex. Crim. 30, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blocker-v-state-texcrimapp-1908.