Coker v. State

241 S.W. 482, 92 Tex. Crim. 41, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 349
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1922
DocketNo. 6926.
StatusPublished

This text of 241 S.W. 482 (Coker 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
Coker v. State, 241 S.W. 482, 92 Tex. Crim. 41, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 349 (Tex. 1922).

Opinion

MORROW, Presiding Judge.

— Conviction is for theft; punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of five years.

A five-passenger open Ford car belonging to Mrs. Hammett was stolen from near her home at Denton, Texas, on the night of the 21st of August. The registration number was 555212.

The State's theory, supported by testimony, is this: Appellant, in company with a woman whom he described as his wife and going under the name of McKinney, was in possession of the stolen car at Sulphur, Oklahoma, and sold it to the witness Gentry. Appellant *42 represented to Gentry that the ear was the property of Mrs. Murphy and gave to Gentry her address at Ardmore, naming the room which she occupied in a certain hotel. Gentry talked to Mrs. Murphy and later delivered a check in her favor of $450 to the appellant in payment of the car, taking from him a bill of sale signed by Coker.

Appellant, in company with one Jameson, was shown by direct testimony to have been in Denton in a Ford Sedan automobile on the day preceding the theft. Two persons coinciding with the description of appellant and Jameson were seen at points in Oklahoma, one driving a Ford Sedan, and the other a Ford touring car. After they had made a stop upon the road, a number plate was found where it . had been thrown in a pasture. It was identical with the number on the car lost by Mrs. Hammett, and was introduced and identified upon-the trial as belonging to her car. A-tax seal from an automobile, bent and crumpled, was also found and later identified as coming from the lost ear. Certain articles which were in the lost car were found in a grip which was in the possession of the appellant who, with his wife, was traveling on the train at the time of their arrest. The room occupied by Mrs. Murphy in the hotel at Ardmore was also occupied by the appellant and his wife. Mrs. Murphy was a sister of appellant’s wife.

Gentry learning that the car he had bought from the appellant had been stolen, sent it to Ardmore by the witness Hendricks, and after some controversy, Mrs. Murphy surrendered the cheek which had been given to the appellant for it.

Appellant did not testify but interposed the defense of alibi, supported by the testimony of his wife and his mother. From the testimony of the wife, it appears that neither she nor appellant had any interest in the car; that it belonged to her sister, Mrs. Murphy; that she and her husband took a trip in it from Ardmore to Sulphur, and there sold it to Gentry and obtained a cheek; that Mrs. Murphy got the car from George Velmer Coker at El Reno; that appellant’s name was Joe Velmer Coker, and the two men were related and bore some resemblance. She said that appellant had left Ardmore on Friday, August 19th, and returned on Monday, August 22nd; that he went to his mother at Middlebrook, Oklahoma. His mother, Mrs. Moore, and one of her grandchildren verified the statement that he was at her place. She said that appellant had nothing to do with making the bill of sale; that Mrs. Murphy did that; that Mrs. Murphy had a bill of sale from George Velmer Coker and that was the bill of sale , which she turned over to Gentry.

The- criminating evidence was circumstantial, and the jury was so instructed. No effort has been made in this opinion to state the evidence in detail, but only such part as is deemed appropriate to illustrate the questions of law necessary in the disposition of the appeal.

Against the charge the point is made that there was error in refus *43 ing to instruct the jury that if the automobile was stolen by some other person than the appellant, his subsequent connection with it would not authorize a conviction for theft. Of course, if the appellant was not the original taker of the car, he was not guilty of theft, though his conduct might have made him guilty of receiving stolen property.

It is also the law in this State that in a case depending wholly upon circumstantial evidence, if there is testimony to the effect that another committed the offense, an appropriate charge upon that subject should not be refused. Such a charge, however, is not required unless there be evidence bringing some other person in such proximity to the offense as would be of some degree of cogency in tending to furnish the basis for the reasonable hypothesis that the other person committed the offense. Wallace v. State, 46 Texas Crim. Rep., 349; Brown v. State, 74 Texas Crim. Rep., 356; Taylor v. State, 81 Texas Crim. Rep., 364; Taylor v. State, 87 Texas Crim. Rep., 338. In the instant case, the appellant’s theory revealed by his wife’s testimony is that Mrs. Murphy got the'car in question from George Velmer Coker at El Reno, Oklahoma, on the 2nd day of August, which was some nineteen days before it left the possession of the owner named in the •indictment in this case. George Velmer Coker was not produced as a witness or accounted for; nor is there any testimony that he was in the State of Texas at or about the time the theft was committed; nor was there any testimony that Mrs. Murphy was in Texas at any time prior to the date of the offense. We are constrained to believe that there was no evidence presenting the hypothesis that any other specific person committed the theft. The true defense advanced by appellant is that he did not commit it and could not have done so for the reason that at the time the car was stolen, he was at the home of his mother in Middlebrook, Oklahoma. This hypothesis or theory was submitted to the jury in a definite and affirmative way in a charge of which there is no complaint. So far as we are able to discern, it was the sole affirmative defense. There was direct testimony that the appellant was in Denton on the day before the car was stolen and that a few days thereafter he was in possession of it in Sulphur, Oklahoma, and, acting under an assumed name, sold it to Gentry.

There are also circumstances tending to connect him with the possession en route between the place at which it was stolen and the place at which it was sold. He and his wife occupied the same room of the hotel with her sister, Mrs. Murphy, in whose behalf appellant claimed that he sold the car and to whom he delivered the check which he received for it. Appellant’s wife, his mother, and another relative testified that he was in Middlebrook, Oklahoma, at the time the car was stolen.

The real defensive theory was embraced in the charge on alibi. It in substance covered the phase of the case under discussion, that is, *44 that the car was not stolen by the appellant but by some other person. If he did not steal it, there is no evidence pointing out the thief, nor upon which to base a charge undertaking to identify another as having committed the offense. Under these circumstances, we do not understand the law to require the instruction suggested by appellant’s exception. Even if this were doubtful, the true and only affirmative issue being fairly submitted, the omission of the instruction for which appellant contends was not of a character to authorize the reversal of the judgment. Such effect is precluded by the statutory rule stated in Code of Crim. Proc., Art.

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Related

Brown v. State
169 S.W. 437 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1913)
Wallace v. State
81 S.W. 966 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1904)
Taylor v. State
195 S.W. 1147 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1917)
Taylor v. State
221 S.W. 611 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 482, 92 Tex. Crim. 41, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coker-v-state-texcrimapp-1922.