Childers v. State

16 S.W. 903, 30 Tex. Ct. App. 160, 30 White & W. 160, 1891 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1891
DocketNo. 7489.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 903 (Childers 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
Childers v. State, 16 S.W. 903, 30 Tex. Ct. App. 160, 30 White & W. 160, 1891 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 68 (Tex. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinions

This is a second appeal. On the former appeal the conviction was set aside for errors in the charge of the court. The case on the former appeal has not been reported, but will be found published in 13 South-western Reporter, page 650.

Hon. W. L. Davidson having been disqualified from sitting in the case, and Presiding Judge White and Judge Hurt having disagreed as to the admissibility of the testimony taken on the habeas corpus trial, R. H. Ward, Esq., was appointed special judge in the case.

The evidence adduced on the trial is as follows:

Jesse Rudder, a witness for the State, being sworn, testified as follows: My name is Jesse Rudder. I am in my fortieth year. My occupation is that of a hackdriver. I have been in the city of San Antonio nearly fourteen years. I have been in the hospital for the last month, and was brought from thence to-day. I knew James Draper in his lifetime; had known him since he was a good-sized boy. I saw defendant Childers the night of the 26th of November, 1889, on the outside of the Minger Hotel bar. I was driving a carriage that day. I had first seen Childers on that day about dusk, I guess. I did not know his name at that time. [Witness pointed out defendant in court] No one was with him when I saw him. I was not with him at that time, but afterward, in the capacity of a hackdriver. He was riding in my carriage. He rode in my carriage from 7:30, the time he got in, and I had him three hours and a half. He was not alone in the back with me. He got out of my back, and I last saw him at the Menger Hotel. He was alone when he got out of the back. I saw him after he got out of the back in the bar room of the Menger Hotel. I went in there with him. No one went in with us. John Russell and Albert Richardson were behind the bar when I went in. The way I came to go in the bar was that he (defendant) asked me to take a drink. This was just after he got out of the carriage. I consented to go in. After he got in he told me to come around in the morning to get my money for riding in the carriage. I told him I would rather have it that night — I was running all night and couldn't get up in the morning and lose my sleep, or something to that effect. Then he turned to the barkeeper and said, "I am not going to pay for that drink" — that is, the drink that he called me in to take. I made a remark then that I would get the money, and turned my back on him and started out, and he followed me to the door. When we got outside I stood in front of the door and stood facing him, with both hands in my pockets. In the meantime Jim Draper followed soon after and walked to one of those boxes which surround the trees in front of the Menger, and was standing with his hands up on the top of the box, and he (defendant) said, "How long did you have me!" and I told him I got him at 7:30 *Page 162 o'clock, and I thought it was $4; and he said, "You are a G — d damned lying son of a bitch." Jim Draper rushed toward him and attempted to get his coat off, and Childers ran backward. Draper said, "That is too much for a cripple to take," and rushed toward him, and I suppose got within about three feet of him, and I noticed Childers with his hand under his coat that way (indicating with his hands in the proximity of his hip pocket) and pulled his pistol out and shoved it forward and fired his pistol at Jim Draper. The next time I saw Jim Draper he was lying dead in the Menger Hotel billiard room, possibly five or ten minutes after the shot was fired. I saw that he was shot in the left breast, near the nipple — near the middle of the left breast. After Draper was shot he said, "I am shot! Oh, I am shot!" and then ran to the door, and the next time I saw him he was lying dead close to one of the tables. As soon as Childers fired the shot he ran and turned around Carter Mullally's corner and turned into Crockett Street, running toward the Alamo, in the direction of the north. When he turned into Crockett Street he was going east. Draper had nothing in his hand; he had hold of his coat. He was holding his coat open with both hands. He was trying to get his coat off when the shot was fired. I didn't notice any one else there at the time the shot was fired. I saw nothing of Childers any more that night. Frank Cochran was in the carriage with him that night. I don't remember seeing Childers and Cochran in company that day. I can not say positively that I saw Cochran at the Menger Hotel, or that he said anything to me in the Menger Hotel in the presence of the defendant. I don't know where Cochran was at the time the shot was fired. I couldn't tell you where he was immediately before that. At the time Childers was in the bar room I had no idea where Cochran was. I saw the deceased (Draper) and Judge Dibble standing in the bar room talking together when we went in. I don't know how long I was in the bar room with Childers exactly — long enough for him to go and take a drink, because I had to go to my team. I don't suppose it was over ten or fifteen minutes, if it was that long, after I got out on the sidewalk that Draper came out there, before the shot was fired. I know a colored man by the name of W. H. Ellis. I did not see him at all at that place that night. No one followed Childers down toward Crockett Street to my knowledge. I saw him (Childers) when he turned the corner, and he was the only one that I saw. I don't know if any one followed him. This happened in Bexar County, in the State of Texas. Immediately after the shooting I did not go away, but I went over and notified the police, and I met — I think it was Captain Shardein and another officer, and brought them over to the Menger. I did not leave there before Draper died. He was dead before I left him. He (Draper) fell in the part that was used as a billiard hall at that time, where the billiard and pool tables were. Draper said, "It is too much for a cripple to take." I am a *Page 163 cripple and have been so since I was four or five years old. I can not state the number of years I had known Draper, but I had known him a long time before he grew up to manhood. We were friendly always toward each other. Jim Draper was a hackdriver by occupation. I am a cripple to the extent that one of my legs is nothing but a bone, and the other having to do all the work, it has disabled that a great deal. Judging from appearances defendant Childers is fourteen times stronger than I am at the present time. He is a good deal taller, and is the heaviest and biggest. When Childers made use of the expression, "You lying son of a bitch," he seemed as though he was angry. I was talking with him, and he asked me the time and I told him, and he said, "You are a G — d damned lying son of a bitch." I don't remember what position he had his hands in. We were standing face to face with one another about eighteen inches or two feet apart. I told him the time he had been with me correctly. It was a true statement of the time that he had been riding with me. That shot was fired, and Jim Draper died in Bexar County, State of Texas.

Cross-examined: I am now in bad health, and have been sick I may say from about a month after the last trial, but not so sick as I have been in the last month. I have been quite sick recently and been a good deal pulled down by my confinement; have been in bed at the city hospital under treatment by physicians. I had been a hackdriver prior to the killing a good while; I can not say positively how long. I had been coming to San Antonio for a number of years before I came here permanently. I came to San Antonio from Cuero, De Witt County. The first thing I went at after I came here was hackdriving, and have been here a number of years, being now in my fortieth year. I was about 25, I think, when I came to San Antonio.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 903, 30 Tex. Ct. App. 160, 30 White & W. 160, 1891 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childers-v-state-texapp-1891.