Caylor v. State

68 S.W. 982, 44 Tex. Crim. 118, 1902 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 11, 1902
Docket2312.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 S.W. 982 (Caylor 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
Caylor v. State, 68 S.W. 982, 44 Tex. Crim. 118, 1902 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 93 (Tex. 1902).

Opinions

The following is the charging part of the indictment under which appallant was tried: "That Tony McDonald, on or about the 12th day of May,, A.D. 1901, * * * in and upon Ivy Benton, a female, then and there under the age of fifteen years, did make an assault, and the said Tony McDonald did then and there ravish and have carnal knowledge of the said Ivy Benton, the said Ivy Benton not being then and there the wife of the said Tony McDonald; and the grand jurors aforesaid upon their oaths do further present in said court, that George Caylor on or about the 27th day of May, A.D. 1901, in the county and State aforesaid, after the commission of said offense by the said Tony McDonald, and well knowing the said Tony McDonald to have committed said offense, did unlawfully and willfully conceal and give aid to the said Tony McDonald in order that he, the said Tony McDonald, might evade an arrest and trial for said offense," etc. Under the plea of not guilty, the jury returned the following verdict: "We the jury find the principal Tony McDonald guilty as charged in the indictment herein, and find the defendant George Caylor guilty as an accessory to the said principal as charged in the indictment, and assess the punishment of said defendant George Caylor at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of five years." *Page 120

The testimony adduced on the trial material to the issues is substantially as follows: Mrs. Mattie Benton testified: That she is the mother of Ivy Benton, who died on August 22, 1901. She was 14 years old, unmarried and not the wife of Tony McDonald. Witness was living in Seymour during the June term, 1901, of the District Court, which convened on the first Monday in June. "On Friday night before court convened, defendant Caylor came to my house and said he had heard he had been accused of ruining my daughter Ivy, and that he had not done so, but he was satisfied Tony McDonald was the man who had ruined her; that it would be best for me and Ivy and all parties concerned, for Ivy to be sent out of the country. He suggested that Ivy be sent out of the country, and said that J.C. Manning would go with her. Witness told him that she did not have the money, and he said he would give her $20. On the following Sunday evening Caylor came to witness's house again, and gave the $20 to Manning in my presence, and again said that it would be best to send Ivy away. I told him that I would send Ivy down to the depot on the next Monday in the wagonette, and Caylor said no; that he would send a buggy down for her, and that I could take her down to the depot in the buggy. He said that he did not want Ivy to go in the wagonette; that it would not do for her to be riding around in the wagonette, as the officers might see her and catch on. Caylor sent the buggy down on Monday morning, and I took Ivy to the train on it. I saw Manning and Caylor at the depot, and they took Ivy and went off on the train. They told me that Ivy was going to Roswell, New Mexico. The next day Caylor returned and told me that Manning and Ivy bought their tickets at Wichita Falls for Roswell; that he saw them buy their tickets before they left and that he gave Ivy $7 more at Wichita Falls.

After the last district court, some time about July 18 or 19, 1901, Caylor came to my house and wanted me to take Ivy and leave. I told him that Wheat and Coombes wanted me to leave, too, and go back to the farm. He said, `Yes; but they did not want us to leave and get clear out of the country.' He furnished me a hack and team, and we left in the night. I took Ivy and the children with me after night, and drove out east of town and past Judge Newton's place; and Caylor, Steed and Roscoe Rayburn came to us.. Caylor said that Rayburn would go with us and furnish everything we needed. Caylor and Steed then came back to town, and Rayburn went with Ivy and I, and took us to Jacksboro. Before we left Seymour, Caylor had me to sign a note to him for $125, and sign a power of attorney to all my property, and sign an affidavit. Ivy was pregnant when we left for Jacksboro, and died in a day or so after we returned."

On cross-examination she stated: "George Blythe, a deputy sheriff, and who married my husband's half-sister, came to my house about a week after Ivy left for Roswell, and inquired where Ivy had gone. I hold him that Ivy had gone to her uncle's in Fannin County. I told him that because Caylor told me to tell anyone who inquired where Ivy was that she had gone there. On Monday morning Caylor came to my *Page 121 house and suggested that I send for Suttlemyer, the deputy sheriff; and I told defendant to send him up. Suttlemyer came up, and I told that Tony McDonald had ruined my daughter, and that I wanted him punished for it. I told him about Ivy going to New Mexico. Tony McDonald first met Ivy in December, 1900. I had a good many business transactions with defendant; bought an organ and machine from defendant, giving my notes for the organ and balance on machine. I am now in debt to defendant. Defendant was to give Ivy music lessons, and was at my house a good many times." Defendant then exhibited to her an affidavit, which she admitted signing, because defendant said he wanted it to keep him out of trouble; that she signed it before D.L. Kenan, a notary public, who read the same over to her, who came to her house with Caylor.

This affidavit states substantially that affiant's daughter. Ivy Benton, left Seymour about May 27, 1901, with J.C. Manning, going to Roswell, New Mexico; that it was necessary to raise a sufficient sum to pay her expenses, and on May 25th she arranged to borrow $20 from Caylor; that affiant told Caylor she was going to send her daughter to her uncle's in Fannin County, and did not have money to defray her expenses, and Caylor agreed to lend affiant $20. That on May 27th affiant sent Manning to Caylor to get the $20 Caylor had promised to lend her, which he procured. That said $20 was a loan by Caylor and was made upon the promise to repay said sum at a date not later than the fall of 1901, out of her crop. That affiant offered to secure Caylor, but he demanded no security, having no doubt about the repayment. Affiant states that Caylor has been at her house on a number of occasions since her residence in Seymour, and has at all times conducted himself as a gentleman, and at no time has he shown a disposition to have carnal knowledge of affiant's daughter, Ivy Benton; that if said Caylor had had sexual knowledge of affiant's daughter affiant would have known it. This affidavit is signed and sworn to by Mattie Benton before D.L. Kenan, notary public, on July 22, 1901.

She further testified that defendant furnished her with a hack and team to go to Jacksboro, and took her note for $125 and a mortgage on the hack and team. "Defendant said it was to protect him, and I was in debt to him when we left. I owed defendant three notes of $13.75 each when I left for Jacksboro. I did not buy the hack and team from defendant — he just turned it over to me, and took my note. When I returned from Jacksboro defendant took the hack and team back. He sold my two cows and calves, while I was gone, under the power of attorney I gave him. He has never accounted to me for the cows and calves. There was no consideration for the $125 note; I never owed defendant anything except the three notes. Defendant said when he sent us off with Rayburn he would take us to Paris, but we never got there. Ivy was confined at Jacksboro, and we came back to Round Timbers. The affidavit I made before Kenan is in all things false. It *Page 122 was read over to me before I signed it, but I never paid any attention to the reading."

A.L.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. López Ballester
56 P.R. 292 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1940)
Pueblo v. López Ballester
56 P.R. Dec. 308 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1940)
Harrison v. State
153 S.W. 139 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 982, 44 Tex. Crim. 118, 1902 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caylor-v-state-texcrimapp-1902.