Carter v. State

12 Tex. 500
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 12 Tex. 500 (Carter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. State, 12 Tex. 500 (Tex. 1854).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The ground relied on for a reversal of the judgment in the brief furnished the Court by counsel for the appellant, is that it does not appear by the record that.the indictment was returned into Court by the grand jury.

The record in this Court is a transcript of the indictment and the proceedings thereon had at the trial. It does not purport to contain, nor need it contain a transcript of the record of all the proceedings had in the District Court anterior to the trial. The absence in the record of the evidence of the bringing into Court of the indictment by the grand jury, therefore, does not disprove the existence of such record evidence in the Court below. If there was not such' record the fact should have been made to appear by the transcript. Where all the proceedings in the case are not shown by the transcript, and the error complained of does not affirmatively appear, regu[503]*503larity in the proceedings will be presumed. (English v. The State, 4 Tex. R. 125.) The objection, it is conceived, is not supported by the record. The trial was at the same Term at which the indictment was found, and in the statement of facts it is said the indictment was returned into Court by the grand jury. There can be little doubt therefore that the fact did appear by the record. If the entry had not been made at the proper time, the omission might have been supplied by an amendment of the record in this respect, at any time during the Term, before the grand jury were discharged. And if there was such omission, this fact may account for the failure properly to reserve the point for review.

It is unnecessary to determine how far the objection, if supported by the record, could avail the defendant, where the indictment appears to have been filed as a record of the Court at the proper time; especially after the defendant has pleaded to the indictment. We have not access to the authorities on this subject cited by counsel. But in the case of the State v. Clarkson, (3 Ala. R. 378,) it was decided by the Supreme Court of Alabama that, “An indictment, found among the “ files of the Court, and recognized as an authentic paper, “ proves itself, when the question of authenticity is raised on “ an issue to a plea to the same indictment.” The Court said: “ The fact to be proved, or rather disproved, was the authen- “ ticity of the indictment, as a record of the Court. There al- “ ways is, and necessarily must be, a period in the progress “of every prosecution, when the indictment is in fieri, and “ we are not aware that any entry made upon it, or upon the “ minutes made by the Clerk is necessary to give it effect as “ a record. Indeed, the very fact of pleading to it, admits ‘‘its genuineness as a record.” (3 Ala. R. 383.) It, however, is unnecessary in the present case to determine that question.

The defence was that at the time of committing the homicide the accused was insane, occasioned by the excessive use of ardent spirits. The Court gave instructions to the jury [504]*504upon the law applicable to this defence, which were not, and are not now complained of. But it has been insisted in oral argument at the bar, that certain legal principles of which the accused should have had the benefit were omitted; and that upon a proper view of the whole law upon the subject, the jury would have been warranted by the evidence in acquitting, or at least in imposing a milder punishment. We have attentively considered the charge of the Court and the evidence; and are unable to concur with counsel in the view they have taken of the case.

It is unnecessary to review the charge of the Court, as there is no part of it applicable to this defence, which is complained of as erroneous. Ror is it necessary to review the evidence. It may, however, be observed that the principal if not the only evidence in the case to support the plea of insanity is to be found in the facts and immediate circumstances attending the killing. There is no other evidence in the case from which the conclusion may be drawn that the accused was bereft of reason, than that which is to be found in the fact of killing under the circumstances. That was such as to afford conclusive evidence of malice; but not of insanity. In a certain sense, though certainly not in a legal sense, every unnecessary or unlawful homicide may be said to be an insane act. But to derive the evidence which is to acquit on the plea of insanity, from that source alone, if not equally as irrational as the act may be supposed to be, would at least be of extremely dangerous consequence. For the more causeless, unnatural and indefensible the homicide, the more deserving of condign punishment, the more fruitful would it be in the evidence which would screen from punishment. It is manifest, therefore, that the absence of any known cause or apparent motive for the commission of a homicide, can never be considered evidence to support the plea of insanity. Every man is presumed to be sane until the contrary appears. Insanity is an exception to the general rule; and before any man can claim the benefit of the exception, he must prove that he is within it. It has been [505]*505laid down as the law upon great authority and consideration, 61 That before a plea of insanity should be allowed, undoubted “ evidence should be adduced, that the accused was of diseased “ mind, and that, at the time he committed the act, he was “not conscious of right and wrong. This opinion related to “ every case in which a party was charged with an illegal act, “ and the plea of insanity was set up. Every person was sup- “ posed to know what law was, and therefore nothing could “justify a wrong act until it wras clearly proved that the party “ did not know right from wrong. If that was not satisfac- “ torily proved, the accused was liable to punishment.”— (Whart. Am. Cr. L. 13.)

It is also to be remarked that it appears from the evidence that the accused was perfectly conscious of what he was about to do; and he does not appear to have even fancied that he was acting upon provocation, or was constrained to act in necessary self-defence. He does not appear to have labored under any delusion; but to have had, or believed he had, and it would seem not wholly without reason,—cause of ill-will towards the decased for being the friend of his enemy. There does not seem, therefore, to have been an entire absence of the usual notice which incites to wicked, malicious and revengeful acts.

But without attempting to trace the act to the secret motive which prompted it, or to find the real or any adequate cause for its commission, (which is unnecessary,) it is further to be observed upon the evidence, (and it is a very material fact where the plea of insanity is set up, alleged to have arisen from the cause to which it is ascribed in this case,) that the accused shortly before starting out with his gun upon an avowed errand of death, indulged in such potations as were calculated, in his excited state, to incite to those acts of desperation, which are not unfrequently the fruits of the madness and frenzy occasioned by a sudden fit of drunkenness; and for which, when voluntarily and intentional, the law makes no allowance, and admits no extenuation of crime.

[506]*506The law as applicable to this defence, and to the facts noticed, is presented with clearness and distinctness by Mr. Justice Curtis, in delivering the charge of the Court to the jury in the case of The United States v. McGlue, (1 Curtis (U. S.) C. R. 1, Law Magazine, Vol. II., No. 4,) where the defence was the same as in the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tex. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-state-tex-1854.