Chapman v. State

28 S.W. 811, 34 Tex. Crim. 27, 1894 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 196
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1894
DocketNo 1047.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 811 (Chapman 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
Chapman v. State, 28 S.W. 811, 34 Tex. Crim. 27, 1894 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 196 (Tex. 1894).

Opinion

HURT, Presiding Judge.

The appellant was indicted for the murder of Dillard Clark, and convicted of murder of the first degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for life. There is but one question suggested by the record in this case: ought the trial court to have charged upon murder of the second degree? In order to a clear understanding-of . this question, we give the main facts in evidence. We adopt the statement contained in the State’s brief, which is a clear, succinct, and graphic account of the facts relied upon by the State.- Appellant offered no - testimony,"except to prove an alibi, which was very weak, and properly disregarded by the jury. The facts áre as follows: ■ • . .

“ The defendant, a man of about 35 years of age, lived in Cherokee County, in Gourd Heck community. He was the husband of Jack Mixon’s sister. - Mixon also-lived in Gourd Heck, and had a daughter, about 17 years old, named Josie Mixon. About a year before.the homicide, defendant and his wife separated, and from about that time defendant was-carrying on a clandestine correspondence, and having clandestine meetings with Josie Mixon.- In the spring of 1894, defendant and Josie Mixon ‘ran .away,’ coming from her home to the city of Tyler, a distance of thirty miles, at night, in a buggy. They occupied the same room at an hotel, in Tyler, wherein there was but one -bed, and the same circumstance occurred a few days thereafter at Atlanta, Texas, and at Texarkana, Texas. From the latter place Josie Mixon returned home, having been away nearly a week. On account of these facts, Jack Mixon had threatened to kill defendant. After Josie. Mixon’s return, the clandestine correspondence and meetings between her and defendant continued. Jack Mixon knew nothing of this correspondence and these meetings, occurring either before or after the elopement, but knew only of the elopement. Defendant had succeeded in partially pacifying Mixon, but was apprehensive that the latter would gain further information regarding him and Josie and would then kill him. About a month before the homicide, Josie Mixon, alone, went to a certain ‘new ground,’ where she met defendant alone. In going to and returning from the new ground, she passed the house in which deceased lived. A day or two after this, deceased had circulated the rumor that Josie and defendant had been ‘doing wrong’ in-the new ground. About three weeks before the homicide, *29 deceased met Josie Mixon in the road, and told her that he knew all about what she and defendant had been doing, and that, unless she would consent to be as kind to him as she had been to defendant, he would spread over the community what he knew about her and defendant. Josie declined the invitation of deceased. On Monday evening, the 14th day of May, 1894, Josie met defendant clandestinely, and told him all that deceased had said to her, and at the same time delivered to him a letter written by her to him, in which she used this language: ‘Dillard Clark says he can tell pa a heap on you and me, but won’t now. You had better attend to his case for him. He is a devil.’

“J. D. Clark, the deceased, was a man about 26 years old. He lived also in Gourd Heck, having moved there in the spring of 1894 from Grayson County. He had left in Grayson County a Winchester rifle, a cooking stove, a bedstead, and some mattresses and quilts. Some two or three weeks prior to the homicide, the deceased had been preparing to go to Grayson County in a wagon after his ‘things.’ On Thursday morning, the 17th day of May, 1894, deceased left the house of Arnet Portwood, with whom he was living, driving a wagon drawn by two medium-sized brown or mouse-colored mules, going to Grayson County after his ‘ things.’ The wagon and mules belonged to deceased. In the wagon, among other things, was a certain quilt. The defendant accompanied deceased in the wagon when it left Port-wood’s house, and the defendant carried a certain double-barreled shotgun. Deceased, driving the same wagon and team alone, reached Tyler, and put up at the wagon yard, the night of said Thursday, May 17th. In the evening of Friday, May 18th, defendant returned to the house of Arnet Portwood alone, and told Portwood that deceased had tried to get him (defendant) to accompany him (deceased) to Grayson County, but that he (defendant) had refused, and should not do so. On the following Saturday evening, May 19th, defendant left Port-wood’s house afoot, going towards Jacksonville, a distance of about eight miles, and saying that he was going to Sulphur Springs to engage in work. Before leaving Portwood’s, defendant left with Portwood a letter addressed to Miss Josie Mixon. This letter was delivered to her on Sunday, May 20th. It was in response to her letter to him, delivered by her to him on Monday, May 14th, and in this letter defendant wrote that he would ‘ attend to Clark’s case for him.’ On Saturday evening, May 19th, defendant arrived in Tyler on the train from Jacksonville at 7:45 o’clock, and went to the wagon yard, where he got with deceased, who was still there. That night about 9 o’clock defendant and deceased left together in the wagon for Grayson County. They went to Grayson County, loaded a cooking stove sitting in a box, a bedstead, some quilts and a mattress, and a 38-caliber Winchester rifle in a leather scabbard, with two leather straps attached to it, into the wagon. With this load, and the double-barreled shotgun defendant had carried with him, they started on their return to Cherokee County, *30 They passed through Greenville, in Hunt County, Lindale, in Smith County, and on the evening of Saturday, June 2, 1894, were seen and well recognized in the city of Tyler. That night, a little after dark, about two miles southwest from the city of Tyler, and on the road leading directly to Gourd Heck, two men in the same wagon, with the same load, drove out by the side of the road, and struck camp. About 9:30 that night two gunshots were heard a short distance from this camp, in the direction of an oat field. Several seconds intervened between the two shots. About fifteen minutes after the shots were heard, a man riding a mule, and followed by another mule dragging a rope or halter, went at a rapid pace down the road in the direction of Gourd Heck, and saying repeatedly, as he whipped the mule, ‘get up.’ The next morning, about 7 o’clock, the body of the deceased, J. D. Clark, was found lying on its back in the oat field where the shots were heard. He was wounded in two places. One ball had entered the back of his head, and had come out just over the right eye, and the other ball had entered his left breast just below the nipple, and had come out just under the left shoulder .blade. A 38-caliber Winchester rifle ball was found imbedded in the ground exactly under where it had come out of deceased’s body, just below the shoulder blade.

“At twenty minutes past 4 o’clock on this Sunday morning, June 3rd, defendant walked into the house of Kile Durret, in Gourd Heck, about thirty miles from the city of Tyler. He stated to Durret, who is his brother-in-law, and to Durret’s son, that he had last seen deceased at Greenville, where he had left him to come on through in his wagon, and that he (defendant) had come from Greenville on the train, and had gotten off the train at Price Switch, a switch on the International & Great Horthern Railway a few miles south from Jacksonville, and had come from the switch on foot. Defendant brought to Durret’s house a valise containing some clothing, but nothing else.

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

Related

Aaron v. State
546 S.W.2d 277 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1977)
Bennett v. State
194 S.W.2d 145 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1916)
Wynne v. State
127 S.W. 213 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1909)
McCorquodale v. State
98 S.W. 879 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 811, 34 Tex. Crim. 27, 1894 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-state-texcrimapp-1894.