Burow, Jr. v. State

210 S.W. 805, 85 Tex. Crim. 133, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 553
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 1919
DocketNo. 4487.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 805 (Burow, Jr. 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
Burow, Jr. v. State, 210 S.W. 805, 85 Tex. Crim. 133, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 553 (Tex. 1919).

Opinions

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of , cattle theft, and his punishment assessed at the lowest prescribed by law.

*134 Appellant, Tomas Nunez and Manuel Garcia were jointly indicted for the theft of two head of cattle on February 14, 1916. The indictment was in three counts; the first charged the theft from the real owner; the second from a son who was in possession, control, etc., for her; and the third for receiving the cattle knowing they had been stolen. The second only was submitted to the jury; the others excluded.

Upon the motion of the defendants and in accordance with their agreement, a severance was had. Garcia was to be tried first; Nunez second, and appellant third, and the trials were so had. It seems Nunez and Garcia were both convicted before appellant was tried.

Appellant was a butcher in Alice, and dealt in and fed cattle for his butcher business, and also, it seems, bought and sold cattle. Nunez and Garcia, and also Pablino Martinez were employed by appellant, and had been for several months, continuously working for him as ordinary hands and feeding his cattle. For the purpose of hauling feed appellant had a team of mules and a wagon with very high sideboards and ends on it and a large sheet or cover. Nunez handled the team and wagon and did most of the hauling of the feed. Nunez and Martinez both testified for the State against appellant.

Antonio Perez, the alleged owner, who was in charge of the cattle and ranch for his mother, had them and a large number of other cattle in a large pasture a few miles from Alice.

The contention and theory of the State, and the testimony was amply sufficient to sustain it, was, that appellant entered into a conspiracy with his said three employes, Nunez, Garcia and Martinez, to steal from time to time, at night, cattle out of said ranch. That Garcia and Martinez were to go horseback to said ranch, rope and tie the cattle. Nunez was to follow them with the wagon and team. The three to put them in the wagon, haul them back to appellant’s slaughter pen, and there deliver them to him or for him, and he was to pay them therefor. That the conspiracy and agreement between them embraced all of this before the transactions were complete, and embraced the several acts by the several parties in order to complete the whole transaction. The State proved by Nunez and Martinez in substance and effect that this system of stealing the Perez cattle had been carried out fully on three previous occassions to the time this theft was charged, beginning in the latter part of December and winding up with the fourth time on February 14, 1916, at which time they were caught. That all these thefts from the Perez ranch of cattle were in the night, and that the delivery thereof was made at appellant’s butcher pen at night, and that his said three employes were paid by him for the cattle or for their services after their respective deliveries. That on each of the three previous occasions they had obtained and delivered, as stated, several head of cattle—as many as five or six *135 head at a time, and on the occasion when they were caught they had three head—two only of Perez. Sometimes the cattle thus stolen and delivered were to be, and were, slaughtered at once when they were fit for slaughter and appellant needed them for that purpose at the time. When they were not in condition to be slaughtered, or he did not need so many at the time, he would then place them in his pasture with his other cattle and have them fed. That this same arrangement would have been carried out in this instance if they had not been prevented by being caught.

The State proved that all of said Perez cattle stolen in this way had the Perez mark and brand on them, the brand in every instance was an old brand, that is, not at all fresh. That those of the cattle appellant did not at once slaugher but sent out to be fed, he had his brand put on them over the Perez brand,' and had the whole ears cut off so that the Perez mark could not be seen. In addition, that even after he had slaughtered some of these cattle, before he put his brand on them and had taken the hides off, that he then had changed the Perez brand—burned over into his brand, and that numerous of these hides which he had had inspected and sold were obtained and showed this.

That on the night of February 14, 1916, in carring out said system and scheme and conspiracy, appellant procured his said three employes to go out to the Perez ranch, as they had been doing, and get cattle for him. That they all went out after night for that purpose, Garcia and Martinez going ahead on horseback, and Nunez following with appellant’s wagon and team. That he furnished his wagon and team and sheet to them for the purpose, and arivied Nunez with a six-shooter. That Garcia and Martinez reached the ranch, roped and tied three head of cattle,—two of Perez’s and one of another owner and when Nunez reached them with the wagon the three put the cattle in the wagon, put the sheet over them so they could not be seen, and started back to appellant’s butcher pen to deliver the cattle to him therein, as instructed and agreed in advance, by appellant. The owner and the officers had in some way got wind of the matter and secreted themselves under a bridge near the gate where these parties would necessarily come out of the pasture going to Alice to deliver the cattle. About 11 or 12 o’clock at night these three parties were returning with the cattle, and about the time they passed out of the gate the officers and posse made their appearance and undertook to arrest the three men. Garcia and Martinez fled and succeeded in escaping for a time, but the officers then caught Nunez with the wagon and took him and the cattle and put him in jail. They got the other two later. The cattle thus stolen on this occasion, as well as most or all of the others stolen on the three previous occasions, were thoroughly identified as the Perez cattle and stolen from him. The above is, perhaps, a sufficient general statement of the State’s case.

*136 Appellant testified denying the conspiracy, and any and all connection by him with the theft of the cattle on the night of February 14, or any of the three previous thefts. That he was not present at the time these cattle were roped and tied, put in the wagon and started back with to Alice, was shown without question. He testified in substance that he had no agreement or understanding and no conspiracy with his said three employes as testified to by them. That all and everything they did with reference to stealing any of said Perez cattle on the said four occasions was without his knowledge or participation in any way. He denied changing the brand on any of those cattle, or branding the hides after the cattle were killed, and denied cutting off their ears. In fact, he denied the State’s case in every particular.

The credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony was solely for the jury. Clearly the jury believed the State’s testimony, and disbelieved appellant’s.

Appellant’s main contention is, that the evidence showed that he was not a principal in the theft; that if it showed any guilty connection by him with the theft, it was that of an accomplice and not a principal. He properly raised and saved the point in various ways.

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 805, 85 Tex. Crim. 133, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burow-jr-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.