Cassel v. State

249 S.W. 1079, 94 Tex. Crim. 23, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1923
DocketNo. 7139.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 1079 (Cassel 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
Cassel v. State, 249 S.W. 1079, 94 Tex. Crim. 23, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 12 (Tex. 1923).

Opinions

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Franklin County of the offense of being an accomplice to the crime of arson, and his punishment fixed at two years in the penitentiary.

It appears in the record without dispute that on the night of July 19th, 1921, a store house belonging to J. M. Dupree and others and occupied by appellant as a place of business, was set on fire be Ferman Sharber, who was caught in the act. Sharber testified for the State herein claiming that he set this fire and another which occurred some weeks earlier at the instigation and upon employment of appellant. Sharber was necessarily an accomplice witness. The question of the sufficiency of the testimony to corroborate him has given us trouble.

John Bradford testified that he and Sharber worked for appel *25 lant, they being the only employees. That on Wednesday before the fire on July 19th, which was the Monday following, appellant came to him and asked him if it would suit him to “Pack the books and have the building burned and he be in Winnsboro.” Witness said he told appellant it would not suit him at all. On cross-examination this witness said that it was on Wednesday and that appellant “asked me to pack the books and burn the building. He told me he had been thinking about it, and wanted to know how it would suit me, and I told him it would not suit me.” Bradford was discharged on Saturday following this Wednesday. On Monday night the building was set on fire by Sharber. Appellant went to Winnsboro in Wood County that afternoon and was in Winnsboro at the time of the fire. Sharber swore that appellant had employed him to set said fire. The fact that appellant sought Bradford’s service to burn said building while he was absent at Winnsboro, would be a circumstance tending to show that appellant had employed Sharber to set said fire. That there be evidence besides that of the accomplice, tending to connect the accused with the crime, is all that our law requires. The jury may legally convict upon the testimony of an accomplice who details sufficient facts, if the facts be believed, and there be other testimony beside which tends to connect the accused with the commission of the offense.

Appellant’s first three» bills of exception present his various objections to testimony showing that there was a fire in appellant’s place of business some weeks prior to the one directly here involved. The State witness Sharber swore that pursuant to an agreement between himself and appellant he set fire to appellant’s stock of goods about a month before the instant fire and that as the result of this fire here was only a partial loss to the stock of goods. Sharber said that he took kerosene from his home to the store that night about 12:30 o’clock, carrying it in a tin syrup bucket; that he met Irvin Case. Irvin Case testified that on the night of the first fire about 12:30 as he was going home he saw Sharber with a tin syrup bucket coming from the direction of appellant’s place of business, and that the next morning he told a Mr. James about this, and a little later told appellant. James testified that'a little later he also told appellant what Case had told him. Appellant asked each of them to keep this quiet and to say nothing about it. The sheriff of the county testified that he investigated the first fire and talked to appellant about the occurrence, but that appellant at no time told him that Ferman Sharber had been seen with a tin bucket that night. We believe the testimony relative to the first fire was admissible. The factus probandum of the instant case was not the burning on July 19th, though that was material, but was the fact that prior to said fire appellant had advised, commanded or encouraged Ferman Sharber to set said fire and to burn said building. Sharber testified that *26 before the first fire appellant promised to pay him between four and five hundred dollars to burn the building, and that after the first unsuccessful attempt to do this, appellant told him he had made a poor job of it and would have to try it again, and that carrying out his said agreement and after further conferences with appellant he set fire to the property on the occasion herein charged. Any testimony lending color to the proposition that Sharber was acting in collusion with appellant in either fire would be admissible on this trial in support of the main fact sought to be proved, i. é., that what was done by Sharber in the instant case was at the instigation of appellant. It could hardly be claimed that proof of the fact that prior to the first fire appellant had been heard to promise to pay Sharber to bum the building, the first effort at which was not successful, would not strongly support á claim by Sharber that his agreement with appellant also induced him to make the second attempt. That appellant had assisted Sharber to escape punishment, evade prosecution or avoid detection as the originator of the first fire, would tend to shed light on the fact that both men were implicated therein, and also that appellant was implicated in the second fire. We think it a sound proposition that an act whose establishment by proof aliunde, would make of the actor an accomplice witness, whether as an accessory or an accomplice, — would be admissible in testimony when issue was joined in the prosecution of such actor as an accomplice, under the terms of our Penal Code. Applying this, we observe that Sharber swore that he set fire to the place in question, as stated above, about a month before the instant fire and gave details of his carrying in a bucket to the store the kerosene, which he used in his attempt to burn the building. Case saw Sharber at 12:30 that night with said bucket and so informed appellant. Appellant told Case to say nothing about this to anyone, and also told James, as above stated, to say nothing about it. The'fact of such concealment of this material evidence affecting Sharber’s guilt of arson at that time, would be of weight as reflecting appellant’s guilty connection with the matter.

By two bills of exception appellant presents his objection to testimony of Sheriff Moore and John Bradford that about sundown on the afternoon preceding the night of the fire they had a conversa-' tion with each other. No part of said conversation was testified to. The fact that following same the officer watched the building in which appellant’s business was located, and caught Sharber in the act of burning same, seems in nowise to inject error into the record claimed to be based on the admission of the statement of each of said parties that they had a conversation. We have examined the authorities by appellant but find them of no application. That a sheriff talks to a defendant in jail and immediately orders the arrest of other parties, might get before the jury the effect of unwarned statements of one under arrest, but we have no such case before us.

*27 Appellant sought to show that the morning after the fire witness Bradford was approached by one Thomas to whom he stated that he found appellant to be as clean and honorable a man as he had ever met or had dealings with. In passing we note an affidavit of said Bradford placed in the record in which he denies that he would have stated as attributed to him in the bill of exceptions, if he had been allowed to testify. The bill of exceptions was filed April 10th and the affidavit is dated May 21st. We can not consider such affidavit.

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Related

Reed v. State
36 S.W.2d 730 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1931)
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257 S.W. 242 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W. 1079, 94 Tex. Crim. 23, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassel-v-state-texcrimapp-1923.