Clayton v. State

149 S.W. 119, 67 Tex. Crim. 311, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 428
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1912
DocketNo. 1509.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 119 (Clayton 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
Clayton v. State, 149 S.W. 119, 67 Tex. Crim. 311, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 428 (Tex. 1912).

Opinions

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

Appellant was indicted for the murder of Bob Gibson on May 13, 1909, tried in June, 1911, convicted of murder in the second degree and his penalty fixed at ten yéars in the penitentiary. ■

A brief statement of the case only is necessary. Some sixteen or seventeen years before the homicide appellant was married to a woman whose name was Mrs. M. A. Dement,, she having shortly before the trial remarried. While living with her, there was born to them five children, the older two living at the time of the homicide—one, a son, then about fifteen years old, and the other a# daughter, about thirteen.

The deceased was a saloonkeeper at the time and for some time prior to the homicide. On January 28, 1909, Mrs,. Dement secured a divorce" from appellant on grounds not stated. Some months shortly prior to the divorce, appellant took deceased to his house for the purpose of gambling and at that time introduced the deceased to his wife. Shortly after that, she testified, that one day while the deceased and appellant were .at her home, her two children being present, the appellant having been on a drunk and wanting more whisky, then and there said to the deceased that be wanted $5.20, or a ticket to Lampasas, and if he, the deceased, would give it to him he would turn over to him his wife and children and his interest in their place; that the deceased thereupon wrote appellant a check for $5.20; that she made no objection to it and was willing to be sold for the $5.20; that she had possession of their girl. The appellant then left her home and got drunk and came back to her home the next day. (The appellant denied this.)

By some of appellant’s witnesses he proved, as they expressed it, that deceased run appellant away from his wife and took her away from him; and by another, that the deceased lived in open adultery with appellant’s wife. It was also shown that shortly after said divorce deceased was staying with said woman, and appellant came up there one night, came around the back way-, knocked at the back door and wanted her to open it. She refused. That made him mad and he cursed her; that he said every low-down thing; used very of *313 fensive language to her and threatened, if she did not open the door, he was going to burst it down. Thereupon. deceased ordered him away from the house and shot off his pistol in the house, but not at appellant, for the purpose of driving him away from there. This occurred shortly before the homicide.

On the night of the killing the appellant and his fifteen-year-old son were working for a show that was in San Angelo at that time and the appellant, the said woman and their two children went to the show together at night. Shortly after they reached there, and the appellant and said woman and their daughter had procured seats together, the deceased came in the show drinking, if not drunk. The testimony from all the witnesses shows that soon after the deceased appeared on the scene a difficulty occurred between appellant and him. Just how it occurred the witnesses differ. just about as much as would be expected, seeing it from different standpoints. We give substantially appellant’s version which is about a fair statement of it, to the effect: That the deceased came in and sat down four or five seats above him; then got up and walked down in front of him, Avho was sitting two or three seats from the ground, stopped and turned his face to him, and each watched the other and deceased made some remark, perhaps insulting, when he told him not to do that, that he did not want any trouble with him. Deceased, then put his foot on the seat in front of him and turned like he was going to sit down. Appellant then slapped or knocked him down and the deceased fell on or among some Mexicans sitting still further down, and upon getting up asked, Where is the son-of-a-bitch that hit me?” or some such language. Some persons got between them then and appellant told the deceased to go on. The deceased then went off some fifteen or twenty feet and sat there the remainder of the show, AA'hich lasted some íavo hours. The deceased and appellant during this whole time watched one another and deceased made some insulting or threatening gestures towards appellant and was heard to use some opprobrius epithets, or perhaps make some threats. Appellant Avas too far off to hear and did not hear this. After the show closed the appellant and said woman and their daughter started to leave, going the back way, the same they had come; others were doing the same thing, while many others of the audience went out the front way. Deceased also started out the back way and deceased and appellant came close to one another, each watching the other and the deceased still giving appellant, as he claims, an offensive look. Appellant testified further as follows: “As I walked on towards the door he butted up by my side, almost between me and the woman, and started out after us. I said to him, “Don’t follow me any further; I don’t want to have any trouble with you.” He just made a face at me and I walked on but did not take my eyes off him. He followed on after me three or four steps when I turned and hit him with a snuff bottle. This checked him, and I said, “Don’t follow me any *314 further; if you do I will hurt you.” We all started on again towards the door and got nearly to it, I looked back and saw him make a quick move and when I grabbed my gun he was picking up a rock. I said to him then, ‘If you pick that up I will hurt you/ He kept on trying to pick up a rock and I commenced shooting. He had his hand nearly on the rock when I shot. I shot him because I thought he was going to kill me. Tes, I was afraid of him.”

The testimony by the State would show, in effect, that after the appellant, the woman and his daughter started out the back way, the deceased was going out the same way following them when the altercation between the deceased and appellant occurred; appellant ordered him not to follow him, they all still moving along, and that as deceased did not stop the appellant threw a snuff bottle at him, striking him .on the head above the eye, cutting his face; that blood flowed therefrom and that deceased stooped down to pick up a rock about the size of one’s fist, but did not do so, when the appellant jerked out his six-shooter and began firing at deceased; that deceased then somewhat retreated, stooped down or got down in a crouching position and begged appellant not to murder him; that appellant’s first shot missed deceased, struck and killed a Mexican, one of the audience, going out or waiting to go out this back way. That he continued to shoot and struck deceased in the back in the shoulder, the balls ranging down and through the body, one of them going to the skin but not through it, about the left nipple. The witnesses did not agree fully as to the location and direction of the bullet wounds. The last of the five shots struck another Mexican in the leg but did not kill him.

The court charged murder in the first and second degree, manslaughter and self-defense. There is no complaint of the charge of the court.- The evidence was ample to justify the jury to find the appellant guilty of murder in the second degree.

Appellant’s attorneys have filed a forceful brief. They present and urge in their .brief and assignments several grounds for reversal.

The first ground urged is to the .introduction of the divorce decree in favor of his wife. The judgment is copied in the bill.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 119, 67 Tex. Crim. 311, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clayton-v-state-texcrimapp-1912.