Chapman v. State

76 S.W. 477, 45 Tex. Crim. 479, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 216
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1903
DocketNo. 2820.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 76 S.W. 477 (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, 76 S.W. 477, 45 Tex. Crim. 479, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 216 (Tex. 1903).

Opinion

HENDERSON, Judge.

Appellant was indicted for the murder of his brother, Will Chapman; and on the trial was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of twenty years.

The record shows that the homicide for which appellant was tried occurred in a difficulty, in which appellant and his father-in-law, Harris Prince, and his brothers-in-law, Jodie Prince, Wiley Prince, and Edgar Prince, were arrayed on one side; and Len Hanks, Will Chapman, Hurday Chapman, and probably J. C. Chapman, the father of the latter two, and the father-in-law of Len Hanks, were arrayed on the other side. The immediate cause that led to the difficulty was & scandalous charge made by Len Hanks against Mrs. Ida Chapman, wife of Ed. Chapman, who was also the daughter of Harris Prince. This was occasioned by a report which appears to have been circulated by Mrs. Ida Chapman in regard to an undue intimacy between Miss Lou Chapman and Len Hanks. When this report reached Hanks he traced it, as he thought, to Mrs. Ida Chapman, and he then charged her with undue intimacy with one Dutch Wheeler, which occurred sometime previous to her marriage with Ed Chapman. It appears that after these charges were made by Len Hanks and conveyed to appellant; appellant demanded proof; and on Sunday night, preceding the difficulty on Tuesday, some effort was made by Len Hanks to substantiate what he had said about Mrs. Ida Chapman. Appellant, Hanks and Will Chapman went to certain persons in the neighborhood in order to convince appellant, among others to one Boque. It appears that at first appellant became satisfied of the truth of the charge, and determined to leave his wife. Subsequently, sometime during Monday, he seems to have changed his mind; and he and Jodie and Harris Prince demanded further proof on the subject, and by agreement with the other parties they were to meet on Tuesday morning early at a certain place one or two hundred yards from Len Hanks, who lived about 200 yards from J. C. Chapman. Harris Prince at the time lived about a mile from Chapman. It appears from some of the evidence that appellant Ed-Chapman made up his mind on Monday not to leave his wife, and on that night he stayed at his father-in-law’s (Harris Prince), where his wife was. During Monday evening and night it is also shown that Wiley, Jodie and Edgar Prince busied themselves in procuring arms for the meeting on Tuesday, assigning to the parties from whom they procured the guns some other reason than the intended meeting, for instance, that they wanted the guns to go hunting, etc. It is also shown that appellant and those with him. stated their purpose in going to the rendezvous on Tuesday was to receive *481 further proof of Mrs. Ida Chapman’s infidelity, and after they, had heard what the parties said, to carry the matter into the courts. In this connection Jodie Prince is shown to have stated, when one of the parties said, “You had better drop the matter,” that he replied, “No, they would not; if Ida was guilty she had to bear it, but if she was innocent the matter would be prosecuted.” However, Will or Hardy Chapman, the other party, in reply said, when they came the next morning, they had better come with their fighting clothes on. To which he replied that he always wore his, and he guessed the others did, too. On Tuesday morning, about 7 o’clock, Harris Prince and appellant Ed Chapman, went over to J. C. Chapman’s, walking through the field. Jodie, Wiley and Edgar Prince went on horseback by the road. All these parties were armed with guns or pistols. Harris Prince, after arriving at Chapman’s, together with appellant, went down into the field where Len Hanks, his wife and Miss Lou Chapman were working. Hanks states that at this time appellant drew his gun on him and attempted to shoot him, but Harris Prince interfered and told him to hold up until they got all of them together. These parties went on to the house. En route Harris Prince inquired for J. C. Chapman, and went by the smokehouse where he was mending a backhand. The other parties proceeded to the house. Hanks went into the house and got a shotgun, took out the shells loaded with small shot and replaced shells loaded with buckshot, placing other shells in his pocket. He then came out, and all sat down on the gallery; that is, Len Hanks and Miss Lou Chapman sitting on the steps together; appellant, Ed Chapman, sitting to the north and beyond the steps and Mrs. Hanks standing nearby him on the ground. In the meantime Jodie, Wiley and Edgar Prince reached the rendezvous, which was some 100 or 200 yards distant. They were waiting there when Will Chapman came by. He invited the party to come on to the house. They said they were at the place where they agreed to wait, and thev would stay there until the other parties came. Will remarked that he would then go on and bring Hanks up. About this time it appears the difficulty which precipitated the combat began at the house. While appellant and Hanks were sitting on the gallery Hanks remarked, with reference to the alleged report, that he (Hanks) had been intimate with Miss Lou Chapman (appellant’s sister); that appellant ought to take it up as much as he or anyone else. To which appellant replied, “I ought, ought I ?” and immediately drew his gim and attempted to shoot Hanks. The gun was knocked up by Mrs. Hanks, and the load struck the roof of the house. Hanks then fired at appellant. In the meantime Will Chapman arrived at the house and, according to defendant’s evidence, immediately engaged in the difficulty. About this time Harris Prince and J. C. Chapman came up. Harris Prince, according to some of the evidence, fired at and killed Will Chapman. As soon as J odie, Wiley and Edgar Prince heard the firing they came up on their horses in a gallop, and engaged in the difficulty, the firing in the *482 meantime continuing between the parties, already there. According to the testimony of appellant, as soon as Wiley Prince came up, Will Chapman began firing at him, Wiley returning the fire, shooting twice at Will Chapman and killing him. While this was going on Hanks was retreating, and appellant, Jodie and Edgar Prince were firing at him.' As Hanks came out of the gate he fired at Jodie Prince, shooting him down. Appellant still pursued Hanks, they firing several other shots at each other until Hanks made his escape. In all some twenty shots were fired by both sides. As a result Len Hanks was severly wounded, Will Chapman was killed dead on the ground; Jodie Prince and Mrs. Len Hanks.both received mortal wounds, from which they subsequently died. The State’s theory was that the killing of Will Chapman was in pursuance of a conspiracy previously entered into between appellant and the Princes on the one side to arm themselves, and under pretense of seeking a peaceful solution of the trouble in regard to the alleged slander against Mrs. Ida Chapman, they agreed to meet Hanks and the Chapmans at the appointed place on Tuesday, and there precipitate a difficulty and kill Hanks, and whoever else might interpose to protect him or prevent the accomplishment of their purpose; and that in pursuance of this, appellant Chapman did precipitate and bring on the difficulty with Hanks, and that the subsequent killing of Will Chapman by either Harris "Prince or Wiley Prince was within the scope of and the proximate result of said conspiracy to kill Hanks, and that appellant was responsible therefor in the same.measure as if he himself had committed" the homicide. On the other hand, appellant’s theory was that the agreement to meet in the vicinity of J. C.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W. 477, 45 Tex. Crim. 479, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-state-texcrimapp-1903.