Burks v. State

260 S.W. 181, 97 Tex. Crim. 113, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 890
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1923
DocketNo. 7729.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 181 (Burks 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
Burks v. State, 260 S.W. 181, 97 Tex. Crim. 113, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 890 (Tex. 1923).

Opinions

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Smith County of murder, and his punishment fixed at fifteen years in the penitentiary.

On the night of the alleged homicide deceased Heffler was in his store at work upon his books. His wife was present in the room. A *115 masked man wearing an overcoat with gloves on his hands appeared and presented a pistol at Mrs. Heffler. She testified that when he did this she looked immediately at her husband and that her assailant turned also and gave three jumps toward deceased and shot him with a pistol. She further stated that her husband was trying to open his desk and had gotten his hand in the drawer of the desk when shot! She also said that the man who shot her husband then ran down the store and out. The State introduced a witness who testified that on the night in question at the request of appellant he drove the latter in a Ford car out to the mouth of an alley at the other end of which, a block distant from the place where witness and appellant stopped the car, was situated the store of Mr. Heffler. Witness said that appellant told him not to stop the engine, that he would be back in a minute or two; that he had asked appellant repeatedly while going out there where he wanted to go and what he was going to do and he said that appellant told him he was going after some stuff. He said that appellant had on an overcoat and a pair of light blue pants. This witness also testified that in a few minutes after appellant went down the alley toward where the Heffler store was, he came back quite rapidly and had a pistol in his hand and a mask on his face; that he came up to the car, it then being in the night-time, and asked witness who he was. Witness replied and asked appellant who he was and appellant said it was Bunk, the nickname of appellant apparently being Bunk Burks. This witness testified that appellant told him to drive away from there and drive like hell, and when he asked him as they were driving away what the trouble was, - appellant said that he had to shoot Heffler. The witness said he then told appellant that he must get out of the car as quickly as he could and that he stopped the car presently and that appellant got out. When arrested the officers took from appellant a pair of shoes on the bottom of one of which was a dark stain which upon investigation by the State chemist was certified to by him as being made by blood. Mrs. Heffler testified that the party who shot her husband stepped in the blood shed by her husband. Subsequent to the arrest of appellant and at a time when he seems not to have been at home, officers went to his house and searching found a pair of light blue pants which were exhibited before the jury and identified by Mrs. Heffler as being the pants worn by her husband’s slayer, or similar to them.

Appellant’s first two bills of exception complain of the refusal of a motion made by him prior to the calling of the ease for trial, to have returned to him the pants in question; and to the action of the learned trial judge in permitting the pants to be used in evidence, exhibited to Mrs. Heffler in the presence of the jury, and to have her testify that they were the same or similar pants to those worn by her husband’s assailant. Without going into the details of the objections made the basis of said bills.of exception, they present the same *116 objections and are based on the same reason that were disposed of adversely to the accused in the case of Welchek v. State, 93 Texas Crim. Rep., 271. The first eighteen pages of the able brief of appellant is devoted to a review of the Welchek opinion and the cases discussed therein, in an effort to show that said opinion is unsound and that it should not be followed by his court longer. In addition to the cases discussed and analyzed in the Welchek case appellant also cites us to the cases of Laughter v. United States, 259 Federal, 94; Bush v. United States, 269 Federal, 455, and Slusser v. United States, 270 Federal, 818, each being opinions rendered by Federal district or circuit courts. We discuss the Laughter case no further than to say that it turns upon the same proposition in Weeks v. United States, discussed at length in the opinion in Welchek, supra, the point involved being the refusal of a motion to require the return to the accused of private papers taken from his pocket by the United States Marshal at the timé of his arrest, the court rendering the opinion concluding that under the Weeks’ case, supra, the motion should have been granted. We declined in rendering the opinion in the Welchek case to discuss rulings of this kind because uncalled for and unnecessary to a decisión of the matters before us. In Slusser v. U. S., supra, the Federal court held that officers having searched and seized an automobile of the accused and having found therein quantities of intoxicating liquor, that upon motion made before the call of the case for trial the automobile should have been returned to the accused. Such a holding is so completely at variance with our conclusion in the Welchek case as to call for no further discussion or statement than that we do not agree with it if on similar facts under the laws of this State. Bush v. U. S., supra, appears to be a ease in which an indictment for receiving stolen property was quashed 'because the property referred to in the indictment was found by the officers in the possession of the accused while said officers were searching the house of the accused under an invalid search warrant looking for intoxicating liquor. While so engaged the officers found a case of stolen goods and the accused was indicted for receiving said case of goods under such circumstances and conditions as to render her guilty of receiving stolen property. As we view the matter such a holding as this is so manifestly uncalled for in an effort to uphold the provisions of the Federal Constitution preventing unreasonable searches and seizures, and so patently operates to prevent the prosecution and conviction of persons accused of. crime, the fruits of whose crimes are found upon their premises or in their houses by officers or others who might be there without warrant of law, or who mi¿ht be there under process of law searching for other things, as that we do not care to discuss the principle involved any further than to refer to the Welchek case, supra. A holding that would lead to the inevitable conclusion that officers who went into the house of one suspected of crime, armed with *117 a valid search warrant accurately describing the things they were privileged to search for, who in the course of their search found property undeniably stolen or weapons admittedly used in the commission of homicides or other crimes, could not produce the articles thus found in an attempt to prosecute the possessor of the premises or of the property, for theft or receiving stolen property, or murder or burglary as the case might be; and thus deprive the government of its right to prosecute offenders in cases of theft, murder, etc., because forsooth the searching officers did not go to the premises armed with a warrant describing the particular property, is a view that we trust will never be entertained by this court. The Bush case seems to rest on the proposition that to use against the accused the finding of the case of stolen goods, would in some way be compelling the accused to give testimony against herself.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 181, 97 Tex. Crim. 113, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burks-v-state-texcrimapp-1923.