Carter v. State

17 S.W. 1102, 30 Tex. Ct. App. 551, 1891 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1891
DocketNo. 3927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 1102 (Carter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. State, 17 S.W. 1102, 30 Tex. Ct. App. 551, 1891 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 142 (Tex. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Judge.

Appellant was indicted for and convicted of murder in the second degree.

On the night of July 27,1891, about 12 o’clock, Constable Burtschell and his posse, appellant being one of the number, shot and killed Earnest W eishun. The deceased rode into the town of Alley ton about dark and hitched his horse, took his saddle off, and laid it on the ground, and disappeared until about midnight, when he returned, mounted his horse, and rode off north up the street. After proceeding a short distance he was shot and killed by Burtschell and his posse. The wounds in his body were located as follows: “Five shot-holes a little to the right of left shoulder; five below shoulder, a little in the back, came out a little to right of left nipple; one shot in the left leg, about the ankle. There were eleven wounds in the body. * * * The shot entered left shoulder; a bullet entered left leg between knee and ankle, and came out in front.” The witnesses testified, that they thought these wounds were caused by buckshot, except the one in the leg, which was made by a pistol ball of 44 or 45 caliber. All the shots entered from the rear. Weishun’s horse was also shot in the left hip. The body was found lying in the street about thirty or forty steps from where the firing parties were located.

Witness W. C. Davidson testified, that he was justice of the peace, and Burtschell was his constable; that Burtschell came to him for some advice some time previous to the killing, on the same night. He said to witness, “I have been informed that a negro man by the name of Frank Lawson has threatened to kill a negro girl before Saturday night, and is here in town for the purpose of carrying out his threat; that he (Frank Lawson) has hitched his horse near the woman’s house in a clump of trees;” that he (Burtschell) had recognized the horse as belonging to Mr. Weishun, the deceased, but thought the negro Lawson had stolen the horse and rode him there; and wanted witness to tell him (Burtschell) what he had best do. Witness told him to go and get [554]*554two good men that he could depend on. Burtschell said he had already-summoned John Hall and Tom Carter. Witness then told him to get two good white men. Burtschell then asked the witness if the man should run when he attempted to arrest him must he shoot him. Witness said, “Ho;” he would have no right to shoot him. Burtschell then asked witness what must he do if the man should shoot at him first. Witness then said that would show that the man meant something wrong.

Deceased’s whiskers were very nearly white. Deceased was a white man and Lawson a negro. Burtschell went off, and about midnight the shooting occurred. This witness further said, he “could not tell how many shots were fired; a volley first, then some other shots. Do not know how many.”

About 1 o’ clock that night, and about an hour after the shooting, the appellant, Walter Heal, August Burtschell, John Hall, and Mr. Morris came to witness. He saw no arms on them. When there Heal said, in the presence of defendants, that something terrible had hap-■' pened. “We have killed old man Weishun.” Burtschell said, that when deceased rode out into the road he (Burtschell) asked, “Who is that?” when deceased said, “Who in the hell are you?” and fired two shots at him (Burtschell). Burtschell said, at the time he thought he had been hit. Burtschell said that he had been told that Lawson was coming that night to kill the negro woman; that he thought Lawson had stolen the horse, and had come to carry out his threat against the woman.

Morris testified, that he was some five or six hundred yards away from the firing, and heard two shots fired first, and, “after a little intermission, then a regular volley.” He got up, dressed, and went on down by the body of deceased and around to witness Davidson’s, and failing to find anybody, returned along the same street about half an hour later, and met the defendants, four in company, and asked them what had happened. Jake Burtschell, brother of August Burtschell, who had got with defendants after the shooting, said, “An awful thing has happened;” that old man Weishun had been killed by mistake for Frank Lawson. This was in the presence .of defendants. August Burtschell said, “The deceased pulled down a pistol and fired twice right in my face. I thought I was killed.”

Sheriff Townsend testified, that defendant Carter told him that he had got a pistol from Mr. Jake Burtschell, and that he (defendant) fired two shots and Chapman fired one; that all defendant did was under August Burtschell’s direction. “I saw a bullet-hole in the leg. It went in behind, and was a pistol-ball hole, 44 or 45 caliber. It broke both the bones in the leg. * * * I had ten, fifteen, or twenty searching for a pistol. We made diligent search all around and over [555]*555in the cotton-patch for arms, and I inquired of everybody, black and white, if any person had seen any pistol. We found no pistol.”

Other witnesses testified to the same effect, and it is uncontradicted that no pistol was found about the scene of the difficulty .or on the body of deceased.

It was shown by all the witnesses that deceased was never known to swear or use such language as was imputed to him; that he never owned or carried a pistol or gun, and was afraid of guns and pistols and never fired them; except one witness, who said he had a conversation with deceased “about two or three years ago, about carrying arms. * * * I asked deceased, was he not afraid to go through the woods at night, and especially when he had money. He replied that he was always prepared to defend himself, and especially when he had money.” It appears also that deceased was in the habit of loaning money, and sometimes carried it about his person.

Defendant testified that he was summoned by Burtschell to help arrest a man supposed to be Frank Lawson. He fully described the location of the different parties preparatory to the arrest, placing himself on a side street near where the body was found, in company with Chapman, and about fifty yards from Burtschell and Hall. Hall was armed with a shotgun, and the others with pistols. ■

At the time of the shooting, from the evidence of defendant and Heal, it appears the deceased was riding along the street going north toward where he lived. He lived nine miles from town, and was well known to all the parties. Defendant testified: “When deceased got opposite Burtschell and Hall, they halted him. Burtschell asked, 'Who is that?’ The man on horseback answered, 'Who in the hell are you?’ and the man on horseback pulled a pistol and fired twice. Then I heard other firing in the direction where Burtschell and Hall were stationed. I then fired one shot in the air to scare him, and prevent him from coming by where we were. * * * The night was so dark I could not tell a white man from a negro across the road.” He denied telling Townsend that he fired twice. Defendant’s character was put in issue, and shown to be bad. He was a violent and dangerous man. There was no warrant in the hands of any of the party for the arrest of Lawson. This is the substance of the testimony.

There were several questions raised by appellant upon the charge of the court. The important question to our minds raised by the facts is, Did the court err in omitting to charge upon the law of manslaughter? Without recapitulating the evidence to support the State’s theories, it was a question whether or not defendant’s theories of the attempted arrest were true.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 1102, 30 Tex. Ct. App. 551, 1891 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-state-texapp-1891.