Clay v. State

56 S.W. 629, 41 Tex. Crim. 653, 1900 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1900
DocketNo. 1936.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 56 S.W. 629 (Clay 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
Clay v. State, 56 S.W. 629, 41 Tex. Crim. 653, 1900 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 65 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

*655 HENDERS ON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of the theft of one head of cattle, and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of two years, and he prosecutes this appeal.

The State introduced a number of witnesses, who testified they were cattlemen, and familiar with handling stock, some of them having been in the business for a number of years. They further testified that from their knowledge of cattle, and examination of hides of cattle slaughtered and that had died from natural causes, they were able to state whether a hide recently taken from an animal was a hide taken from a slaughtered animal or one that died from natural causes, as of murrain or poverty. On this character of proof the court held these witnesses were qualified to testify as experts; and they were then permitted to testify that the hides they examined on Monday morning, November 7, 1898, the day after the alleged theft of the animal in question, were taken from slaughtered animals, and not fallen animals,—that is, animals that died from natural causes. Appellant reserved an exception to all this testimony, on the ground that the matters inquired about were not the subject of expert testimony; that the testimony given was a mere conclusion or opinion of the witness, about which the jury was as capable of forming a conclusion or opinion as the witnesses. We can not agree to this contention. In our opinion, it is competent for a witness, who is shown to be a stock-man, and familiar with cattle, and who is also shown to have a knowledge of hides taken from cattle from having seen and examined such hides in the course of their business, and who in that connection is able to state the difference in appearance of hides taken from slaughtered animals and those taken from fallen animals (that is, animals dying from natural causes), to give in evidence before the jury his opinion as to whether a certain hide exhibited to him recently after it was taken from an animal was the hide of an animal which was slaughtered or the hide of an animal which died from natural causes. We think all this character of testimony was admissible. Clark v. State (Texas Crim. App.), 43 S. W. Rep., 522; Stonan v. Waldo, 17 Mo., 498.

Appellant complains that he ought to have been permitted to prove that after he was placed in jail he then stated to the sheriff that he had taken the hide from the animal in question, together with the other hides which he sold in Houston on the morning of November 7, 1898, from dead cows at a certain point on Clear Creek, in Harris County, and that he told the sheriff where the carcasses of said cows could be found, and that said carcasses were accordingly found at the point stated by him. We do not think this testimony was admissible, inasmuch as no part of defendant’s conversation with the sheriff at the • time was brought out by the State, nor does the bill show it was a statement made by defendant as to his possession when he was first found in possession of the property and his right thereto challenged. McCulloch v. State, 35 Texas Crim. Rep., 268. The bill should have shown *656 appellant’s object in desiring the admission of the excluded testimony. Levine v. State, 35 Texas Crim. Rep., 648.

Appellant insists that the court erred in permitting the State, on cross-examination of appellant, to ask the following question: “Are^ these all the hides you ever sold to Siewerssen? Is it not a fact that every Monday morning for a year or more prior to this arrest you brought and sold to Siewerssen from two to five hides ?” This was objected to because it related to independent and distinct transactions, not in any way connected with the offense here charged against defendant; and that any answer to said question was calculated to prejudice defendant. In reply to this, we have to say that the answer of the witness eliminated the first objection urged, inasmuch as the witness answered in the negative. We do not agree that his answer was calculated to prejudice appellant improperly.

There was no error in the action of the court excluding the testimony offered with reference to how much money appellant had been making by cutting and selling hay, nor in not permitting appellant to testify as to his reason for skinning said animals.

By appellant’s twelfth bill of exceptions, he raises the question as to the action of the court permitting the witness Levi Arnold to testify on cross-examination that four cattle would not have died at the same time and in.the same place, and within the radius of a mile or so of each other, in November, 1898, unless there had been some disease at the time commonly prevalent among cattle. This testimony was objected to by appellant on the following grounds, to wit: (1) Because the question was a hypothetical one, and the hypothesis was not supported by any part of the evidence in the case, but was contrary to the evidence; (2) because said question sought to elicit the opinion of the witness and a conclusion; (3) because the witness had not shown himself qualified to speak as an expert, nor to give an opinion on the matter inquired about; (4) because the conclusion sought from the witness was not a matter requiring or capable of expert determination. In our opinion, appellant’s objections to this testimony were well taken, and ought to have been sustained. Even if it be conceded that this character of testimony was the subject of expert opinion, the witness was not shown to be an expert. But, more than this, we hold that it was a matter about which the witness could not give an opinion as an expert. That four head of cattle could not have died in that vicinity at or about the same time, unless they died from some prevalent disease, does .not belong to the category of expert tesj timony. As to a matter of this character, the witness could state the facts connected therewith, and the jury would be as well qualified to determine whether the particular four head of cattle died from disease or were slaughtered as the expert. Some of the authorities go a long way with reference to what may be introduced as .expert or opinion testimony, of which there are examples in Lawson on Expert Opinion Evidence, pages 13, 14. But we know of no ease that goes to the extent of holding this character of evidence admissible as expert *657 or opinion testimony. The rule on this subject has been well defined in Cooper v. State, 23 Texas, 331, and followed in Hardin v. State, 40 Texas Criminal Reports, 208. This evidence was admitted on a crucial point in the case. The theory of the State was that appellant killed the animal in question for the purpose of appropriating the hide; that he stripped the same, with three others killed at the same time, on Sunday, November 6th, and carried them into the city of Houston, some fifteen miles distant, and disposed of them early on the following Monday morning. Appellant admitted the possession of the hide, and its disposition, with three others, in Houston, but claimed that he stripped them from cattle he found dead on the prairie near Clear Creek;- and so the case turned on the question as to whether or not, as contended by the State, appellant killed the cow for the purpose of stealing the hide. A good deal of testimony pro and con as to the condition of the hides was admitted, as also expert testimony as to whether the hides were stripped from butchered animals or from fallen animals.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W. 629, 41 Tex. Crim. 653, 1900 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-state-texcrimapp-1900.