Boozer v. State

198 S.W. 295, 82 Tex. Crim. 72, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 279
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1917
DocketNo. 4598.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 295 (Boozer 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
Boozer v. State, 198 S.W. 295, 82 Tex. Crim. 72, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 279 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

*73 DAVIDSON, Pbesiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder, her punishment being assessed at six years confinement in the penitentiary.

This is a ease purely of circumstantial evidence. . Briefly stated, the facts disclose that deceased and appellant, his wife, lived in their home with two children, a boy and girl about grown. Within about three hundred yards of them lived a family named Forsythe. There was a play at a little church or schoolhouse in the neighborhood a mile or two away on the night of the death of deceased, and the two children of deceased and appellant were attending that play. This would leave deceased and appellant together at home. Somewhere about 10 o’clock screaming was heard at the home of deceased. Young Buford Forsythe and his mother went to the home of appellant, found her at the barn with a rope around her neck tied to a plank above her head, presenting an appearance of hanging. An explanation of conditions was given by her to these parties, who testified on the trial. The statement, substantially, is that while she and her husband were in a room in their residence some man entered, placed a pistol in front of her, and took her away down to the barn and hung her; that she lost consciousness between the time she left the house and the time she began screaming. She apparently did not know that her husband was killed. These witnesses carried appellant to the Forsythe residence and placed her on a bed. Different neighbors were called and officers from the town of Nacogdoches, four miles away, and Mr. Forsythe and another witness took a lamp, went to the residence of deceased and found him on a pallet on the floor dead and very bloody about the head. It seems they made no' examination, but later other parties came and upon examination found he had been struck a very heavy blow on the side of the head, crushing the skull. This wound. was described to be about an inch and a half or two inches long, and something like an inch or an inch and a quarter in width. The cutting into the flesh presented a smooth cut wound. The evidence showed that this blow killed him, and being delivered with great force, death resulted practically instantaneously. There was an ax found near the wood pile in a stump which belonged to the family. This old stump seemed to be the usual receptacle for this ax when not in use. When young Buford Forsythe and his mother were passing the house where this tragedy occurred en route to the barn, young Forsythe caught his mother by the arm and jerked her to one side and into the road, remaridng that he heard someone in the house. This he testifies, as does his mother, and he further testifies he did hear a noise in the house as if someone was walking or turning over a chair. These people had lived there something like fifteen or twenty years; there was nothing noticeable about their conduct one way or the other; they were ordinarily good people, and if there were any differences between husband and wife they were evidently trivial. There was no motive *74 shown on the part of the wife to kill her husband, and the only motive the writer gathers from this record for anyone to kill him was the fact that it was understood he kept money about the premises. Appellant was a small woman, and had been sick a great deal, and weighed probably less than one hundred pounds. About six years prior to the homicide there had been one or more operations performed on her, one for appendicitis and the other to remove her ovaries. About six years prior to the homicide one of her children, a son, had died, and the appellant showed after that she was a changed woman in many respects, and suffered often with what the witnesses called “spells.” The doctor who attended her says they would last from two days to two weeks. The symptoms were all described, but it is unnecessary to repeat them. She was under treatment of the doctor almost continually for six years prior to this homicide, he testifying that he saw her practically every week. Without going into any further details about the matter, this is a sufficient statement.

A bill of exceptions recites that Dr. Barham was a regular graduated physician of fifteen years experience, and that he was called for that purpose and did examine the wounds upon deceased, that he made a thorough and extensive examination, and found only one wound upon the body, which was on the left side of the head in the left temple; that the wound was made with a blunt instrument, breaking the skull in such way that he could determine the size of the instrument, and that the skull was cut smooth around the edges of the indenture showing that the edges of the instrument inflicting the wound were smooth. He further testified that he saw and carefully examined on the next morning after the homicide in the justice of the peace office at Nacogdoches an ax which was found at the wood pile at the home of deceased on the night of the homicide, which ax was introduced in evidence as the supposed instrument with which the homicide was committed, and offered” testimony also that there was blood on the ax. Dr. Barham further testified that he examined the ax on the morning after the homicide, and some few hours after he had examined the wounds on deceased’s body, for the purpose of determining whether said ax was the instrument used to inflict the wound. He also testified that the ax which was handed to him while he was on the stand, offered in evidence by the State, was the same ax that he examined on the morning after the homicide in the justice of the peace office; and further, that by reason of his examination of the wound and of the ax he was in position to state whether or not said ax inflicted the wound on deceased’s head, and further testified that as a physician he ha>d a great deal of experience in the examination of wounds of various kinds and characters and of instruments with which they were inflicted; and after the witness had testified as above set out, appellant then proposed to prove as follows: “That the ax which was handed to him while on the witness stand (and which was the ax offered in evidence by the *75 State upon the trial as the instrument with which the murder was committed, and upon which the State offered evidence to show that there was Mood, and being the same ax found at the wood pile of the home of deceased and defendant and examined by said witness Barham in the justice of the peace office on the morning after the homicide) could not have inflicted the wound which he, said witness, examined upon the head of deceased (and being the only wound found by said witness on deceased’s body), for the reason that the poll of said ax was too broad and too long to haye made the indenture which was above seven-eighths of an inch in depth in the skull of deceased, and that the poll of the ax was rough around the edges, and for that reason could not have inflicted the wound found by him on deceased’s head, and for the reason that the edges of said wound were perfectly smooth and could not have been left in said condition by anything other than a smooth instrument around the edges; that from his examination of said wound and his examination of said ax immediately after the hCmieide and also while on the stand as a witness in this- trial, all of which examinations were careful and thorough, and that said ax (which the State offered in evidence as the instrument which inflicted the wound on deceased), could not have inflicted the wound, and that said wound could not have been inflicted by said ax under any circumstances.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilson v. State
86 S.W.2d 220 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1935)
Harrell v. State
42 S.W.2d 438 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1931)
Purcell v. State
283 S.W. 1072 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Kelly v. State
252 S.W. 1068 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1923)
Rabe v. State
222 S.W. 1106 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 295, 82 Tex. Crim. 72, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boozer-v-state-texcrimapp-1917.