Caples v. State

155 S.W. 267, 69 Tex. Crim. 394, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 1913
DocketNo. 2160.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 267 (Caples 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
Caples v. State, 155 S.W. 267, 69 Tex. Crim. 394, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 119 (Tex. 1913).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

This is a companion ease to that of Curtis Craig and others now pending before this court in which they are all charged with making an aggravated assault on Joe Horton.

Horton testified: “I lived on July 30, 1911, on the Thornhill place three or four miles southeast from the home of John McGown, at that time. John McGown, who was a very old man, is my brother-' in-law. He married my sister. I went to John McGown’s house about dark on the 30th of July, 1911, to carry some buttermilk for him to drink. He was sick at that time and had been for two or three weeks, and I had been sitting up with him about every other night. When I reached the house that night John Travis and Jim Bailey were sitting on the gallery. Dr. Mann McGown, a son of John McGown, was in the house. Bud Smith came in a little later and stayed a while and left. Tom Jack was also there for a while. Henders.on McGown was also there that night. There were two or three women also there. I sat down by the bed and was fanning old man McGown just after dark when Joe Click, John Russell, Charlie *396 Capíes, Hardy Thornton and Curtis Craig came. Bud Smith came in and asked how Mr. MeGown was and said he would go home. He left and I heard him singing on his way home. About 8:30 Hardy Thornton came to the door and invited me out and I went out with him into the yard. He got over the yard fence (there was no gate) and I followed him over the fence. Just as I got oyer the fence Charley Capíes, and John Russell and Joe Click jumped up from behind the fence and grabbed me. Some one asked me if I had any money. Capíes and Thornton held me by the arms and Click held me by the neck and choked me. They carried me about two hundred yards down the road and searched me. The only thing I had was a pocket knife and they took that. They then took a drink and Click asked me if I wanted a drink and I told him no, and Click said to me, ‘You God damned son of a bitch, we’ve got something else besides whisky for you.’ They threatened to háng me and said they would shoot me if I even grunted. They then took me immediately about a quarter of a mile, and took me up to a tree near the road and held my arms around the tree while they beat me with switches. Click was the first one to strike me. They all took turns at whipping me, and kept it up until I promised not to tell about it. They must have whipped me an hour and a half or two hours. They took my pants down and raised my shirt and whipped me on my naked skin. Curtis Craig was the one that took my pants down. Russell and Capíes were the ones that held me up to the tree. There were five of them. Curtis Craig, Hardy Thornton, John Russell, Joe Click and Charlie Capíes. They talked about killing me. Capíes said let’s kill him. ‘Dead cocks don’t crow.’ While they were whipping me John Russell struck a match and looked at his watch 'and said it was 11 o’clock. I think myself it was about that time. They kept me for about a half or three quarters of an hour longer and turned me loose. I went in direction of my home. I was pretty badly beaten up in the small of my back and on my thighs. I was laid up the next day. They used a beech limb and ironwood switches. The last lick I received was by Curtis Craig, who struck me with a dogwood limb or pole about three and one-half inches in diameter. It was a dead pole and broke when he struck me with it. The place where I was whipped was about one-quarter of a mile from John McGown’s house. They whipped me in the woods near the road. The timber was not so very thick. It was about the same distance to the next nearest house. I did not see or hear any one on my way home. I went back to the place of the whipping on Tuesday morning after the whipping on Sunday night and found some switches there. (Identifies switches.) I carried them to John McGown’s and showed them to Jeff MeGown and George MeGown, and I then brought them to Hemphill and showed them to Deputy Sheriff R. H. Minton and the Justice, Mr. Barker. I brought them here on Wednesday, after I was whipped. I was whipped in Sabine County, Texas.”

*397 Appellant testified that he and others went to Mr. McGown’s to wait on the sick, and that Joe Click carried a bottle of whisky along to give to the sick, but was informed that McGown did not need it, and then testified: “Joe Click then said, well, we might as well drink it up.” We walked out in the yard, crossed the fence in front of the house and walked down the road some thirty or forty yards and sat down. Joe Horton, John Russell, Hardy Thornton, and Curtis Craig were along. When we sat down Joe Click passed the bottle around and we all took a drink. We sat there and talked a little bit and all took another drink. When the whisky, about half a quart of it, was gone, Joe Horton remarked that he had been sitting up and was about played out and believed he would turn in. He started off towards home in the direction of Alex Dickersons. This was the same road taken by Bud Smith when he started home. I have been living at Bronson for about ten years, and have known Joe Horton for about that length of time. I have never had any trouble with or hard feelings toward Joe Horton. Never had anything against him. I did not assault or assist in doing so. None of the other defendants molested him in any way there that night. When he left us sitting by the road side that night about forty yards from McGown’s house, we sat there for a while and talked, then went to the house. Some of the boys went home shortly afterward but Click and I stayed until about 11 or 12 o’clock waiting on McGown. When we left we went straight home to Bronson and went to bed. I have no idea who it was that whipped Joe Horton that night, if he was whipped. He was not whipped by any of the people at McGown’s so far as I know. I am sure he was not while I was there. The last I saw of him was when he started towards home about forty yards from the house. He said he was going home. ’ ’

The first bill of exceptions complains that the court erred in overruling his application for a continuance on account of the absence of Steve Connor, whom he desired as a witness. In the first place, we do not think the application shows proper diligence, and in the second place, the testimony of the witness would only have a tendency to impeach the State’s witness, Joe Horton, and it is the rule that a continuance will not be granted to secure impeaching testimony. (Butts v. State, 35 Texas Crim. Rep., 364.)

The appellant offered to prove by Frank Ellison that when the prosecuting witness was drunk he became crazy and did not know anything until he became sober. There is no testimony that the witness Horton was drunk on the night he received the whipping, consequently the court did not err in excluding the testimony.

The State proved by the witness Jeff McGown: “I examined the body of Joe Horton on Tuesday, August 1st, 1911. There were some bruises on his- back and hips. The skin was broken on his left hip and thigh and back. There were some blue marks on him, too. I went with Joe Horton down back of the field near an old road and *398 examined the place where Joe Horton said he was whipped. I saw tracks and some switches there. Witness identifies switches in court as the same he saw on the ground where Horton was alleged to have been whipped and where he saw the tree and tracks. Joe took the switches away with him. I saw where a bunch limb had been cut from a tree Joe Horton told me that the defendants had whipped him.

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Stewart v. State
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Thornton v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 267, 69 Tex. Crim. 394, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caples-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.