Clark v. State

40 S.W. 992, 38 Tex. Crim. 30, 1897 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 172
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1897
DocketNo. 1165.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 992 (Clark 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
Clark v. State, 40 S.W. 992, 38 Tex. Crim. 30, 1897 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 172 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

HEKDERSOH, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of assault with intent to rape, and given two years in the penitentiary, and appeals.

Appellant made a motion for a change of venue on the ground that there existed in Kaufman County so great a prejudice against the defendant that he could not get a fair and impartial trial, and also on the ground that there was a dangerous combination against him in said county, instigated by ..influential persons. This application was contested by the State, and the court heard testimony pro and con in regard thereto, and overruled same. We see no error in this action of the court.

Appellant made a motion for a continuance on account of th'e absence of one John Ross. It appears that this witness was formerly under subpoena, but had been absent from the county prior to the beginning of the September term, 1896, of the District Court, for several weeks; and the application itself tends to show that he had removed to Limestone county, though this information does not appear to have been *34 known to the appellant until about an hour before the application for continuance was made. It was the duty of appellant, if said witness was not present on the first Monday in September, 1896, in obedience to the subpoena, to have applied for, and had issued, an attachment. He does not appear to have applied for, and had issued, any process for said witness until the 21st of September, and then process was issued to Hunt County. Appellant attempts to excuse himself for his want of knowledge as to the removal of said witness from ICaufman County on the ground that he lived remote from where said witnesss had formerly lived in Kaufman County; but this fact would certainly not relieve him, when the term of court began, and said witness, was not then present. Ho diligence whatever is shown until the 21st of September, and then process was issued to the wrong county, the witness not being in Hunt County. It appears from the explanation of the judge that one George Deeds, who was a witness for the defendant, lived in the neighborhood where John Ross did, and that, by application to this witness, appellant might have found out about the removal of John Ross to Limestone County. The diligence which appears to have been exercised by defendant as to the witness John Ross was not sufficient. Appellant says he expected to prove by said absent witness that on the day of the alleged offense he was picking cotton near the house where the outrage is alleged to have occurred, and one end of the cotton rows on which he was picking came up to the lane; that a part of the State’s case consisted in identifying the time of the occurrence by some three wagons passing along the Laroe lane, just ahead of the wagon in which appellant was riding, which, it is alleged, stopped in front of the Laroe house, and, after the commission of the offense, overtook the three wagons near the further end of the lane. How, by this witness it was expected to be proved that, as he was picking cotton near that lane, he was in such a position that he would have seen said wagons if they had passed there at any time that morning, up to about 10 o’clock, and that he did not see them pass; that witness saw two men go to the house of the prosecutrix that morning, but saw no wagons in the lane at the time. The theory of the defendant was that the alleged assault, if it occurred, was made on the prosecutrix by some other persons than defendant and his codefendant, and that said parties did not come to the place in a wagon, as insisted on by the State, and that said parties could not have alighted from defendant’s wagon and committed the act, because said wagon passed down the lane in front of the house of prosecutrix, just behind three other wagons. So it occurs to us that the alleged testimony of the absent witness was material, and, in the light of the other testimony in the case, we can not say that same was not probably true; and, although due diligence was not used in suing out process for said witness, yet, when the matter was presented in a motion for a new trial, we believe it should have been granted to give defendant an opportunity to procure this absent testimony.

*35 There was no error on the part of the court in admitting testimony showing that appellant had been formerly indicted for a similar offense to that charged in this case. The question, “If he had not been into a scrape of this kind before?” was perhaps improper, but thy proof elicited the fact from him that he had been previously indicted and acquitted on a charge of assault with intent to rape. This was admissible evidence, going to his credit as a witness.

Appellant presented a lengthy bill of exceptions 'to the action of the court in refusing to allow him to make proof of certain experiments made by him, by driving wagons along said Laroe lane, and past the house where the outrage is said to have been committed; 'said experiments having been made for the purpose, as claimed by defendant, of testing whether or not the wagon in which the appellant and his codefendant were (situated as they were with reference to the three wagons that preceded them, this wagon being some 150 yards in the rear of the hindmost of said three wagons, going at the rate 'they were at the time, as shown by the State’s witnesses) could stop at the Laroe house, and the defendants could get out of their said wagon, and hurriedly go to the Laroe house, some 90 yards, and thence around said house to the Laroe lot, some 100 yards, then commit the assault on the prosecutrix, and rapidly return to their said wagon, get into it, and proceed rapidly up said Laroe lane towards Kaufman, and overtake the preceding three wagons at the further end of said lane, said lane being about 680 yards long. The bill of exceptions shows the character of the testimony upon this phase of the case to have been substantially to the effect that said experiments were made after a careful survey and plat of the ground had been made by competent persons; that the State was solicited by the defendant to join in said experiments and declined. Appellant showed that the State’s evidence upon this branch of the case was to the effect: That the road from Canton to Kaufman passed by the house of the prosecutrix. That at that point there was a lane. The lane elbowed, going from Canton towards Kaufman, nearly in front of said house, and turned then in a southerly direction, and pursued said direction 680 yards; then again elbowed, and proceeded in a northwesterly direction. That on the morning of the alleged outrage, about 9 o’clock, prosecutrix was at her home alone, and asleep. That she heard persons holloing, near the turn of the lane in the direction of Canton, which awoke her. That she got up, opened the front door, looked out in front, and saw four persons in a wagon, driving mules, coming around said corner at the northeast end of the Laroe lane. That she closed the door, walked through the house, and thence in a northwesterly direction to the horse lot, some 100 yards to .the rear of the house. She walked at her usual rate, got a bridle, and was at the lot, attempting to bridle a horse, and, while so doing, saw two men come around the house in a walk. That she continued endeavoring 'to bridle the horse, thinking the parties were neighbors, and while her back was turned to them the heaviest of the two men (who was identified as Farmer, the codefendant of appellant) grasped *36 her around the back and side of the neck, and with his hands choked her until she could not hollo.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 992, 38 Tex. Crim. 30, 1897 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-state-texcrimapp-1897.