Cook v. State

180 S.W. 254, 78 Tex. Crim. 116, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 1915
DocketNo. 3790.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 254 (Cook 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
Cook v. State, 180 S.W. 254, 78 Tex. Crim. 116, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 207 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of manslaughter, his punishment being assessed at five years confinement in the penitentiary.

This ease, as is usual, has two sides to it. The undisputed facts will show that appellant and his deceased wife had been married something like twelve years at the time of the tragedy, having three living children. It is also a fact that his wife had been going to dance halls and places at night over appellant’s protest, coming home late at night. On this particular occasion the deceased, her two sisters, who were living or boarding at the house of the deceased and appellant, and a relative of the appellant went downtown to do a little shopping, and* later to attend moving picture shows. After they finished their shopping, the question of choice of picture shows came up, the deceased said she was not going to a moving picture show, that she was going to a dance hall, perhaps designating the Moose dance hall. Her sisters,, then, one or both of them, suggested that if she would designate the' time of her return home when they left the picture shows they would call- for her. She stated no, they would not be able to find her, and that she would get home probably before they did. They reached home about 11 o’clock, or later, accompanied by appellant’s relative, Louis. Cook. Appellant asked the young ladies about his wife. They re-' peatcd to him, in substance, what had occurred and was said between them and they supposed she was at home. Appellant became worried and anxious about it, got up, partially dressed himself and put on, his overcoat, got his gun, — a single barrel shotgun, — and went in quest] of his wife. He went a block or such matter. Not seeing or hearing anything, he sat down on the steps of a vacant house not far from the] corner of a street. After he had been sitting there something like thirty minutes his wife, accompanied by Grimes, came in sight. Appellant approached and told them “to run” or “get away” — both ex- , pressions are used in the testimony. Not heeding his remark, appellant fired two shots. Grimes and his wife both were killed. Grimes! lived a while and made some statements with reference to the trans- j action. Appellant’s wife was killed instantty. Grimes was shot in the! stomach, and the woman in the back of the head. The State’s theory j was that when appellant shot Grimes his wife ran and slipped or¡ stumbled and fell on the edge of the sidewalk and appellant walked to, and shot her in the back of the head. Appellant’s theory was, sup-; *118 ported by testimony, that when lie saw them approaching Grimes had his arms aronnd his wife and his wife had her arms aronnd his shonlder or on his shonlder or aronnd his neck, and when they got to a certain point they stopped and embraced each other closely, and as he saw it Grimes had his hand down about the private parts of his wife trying to pull up her dress, and when he reached them he told them to run nr get away, and that it took them some time to get themselves apart. They did not obey him. He fired to kill Grimes, and his wife was in such position that the shot struck her; that he did not intend to kill her, but only intended to kill Grimes, and thus the first shot entered the back of her head, from which she died, and the second shot entered Grimes’ stomach. There is quite a lot of testimony in regard to the conduct of the deceased wife with other men. There is also a statement of Grimes introduced called a dying declaration, and also á confession made to the county attorney by the defendant. The substance of the confession was as to the immediate facts when appellant shot Grimes, and that his wife in some way slipped and his gun went, off. The dying declaration of Grimes was to the effect that he met deceased, appellant’s wife, at the foot of the steps leading up in the Moose hall, and at her request he was accompanying her home. That she stated to him, substantially, that her relatives, two sisters, and Louis Cook had failed to come and as an accommodation to her he was escorting her home. There is quite a lot of testimony showing that these statements were untrue; that he had been with her a great deal that night and had danced with her. His relation to her for quite a while had been such as to indicate undue familiarity. One of appellant’s daughters, who was something like eleven years of age, testified that she had gone with her mother at nights to different places, and that Grimes would come home with her mother, and that she, the child, would be ahead of them and they would get behind her and she would stop and hear and see them embracing each other, kissing and doing amorous performances of that nature and character. The conduct of the wife was such that appellant had become uneasy and nervous about it and expostulated about her going out so much at night and coming home so late; that on this particular occasion he became outraged and concluded he would investigate it, with the result of the tragedy.

Appellant offered to prove by Sargent, who was a letter carrier, that in a conversation with other carriers they were discussing matters, and, to use his expression, “joshing one another”; that the letter carriers were supposed to make eight hours a day and that a man could not make two full trips in eight hours; if he just has time to make one he will just make one and a piece of a trip; that they call it a trip and a piece; that the boys were joshing one another about making a trip and a piece or getting a trip and a piece, and that Grimes said, “I am' going to get two trips today and a piece tonight”; that the witness Sargent had never had any trips at night because there was no letter earmng at night; that the trips and pieces of trip did not apply to an}dhing at night. The object and purpose of this testimony is not *119 stated in the bill. I't occurs to tlie writer that as the killing occurred that very night, that under the circumstances and facts of the ease if this bill of exceptions had been properly reserved to show all these matters, the testimony ought to have gone to the jury for what it was worth as showing the relations, in view of the facts, existing between Grimes ¿nd the deceased woman.

Another bill recites that Melton was permitted to detail before the jury a statement made by deceased Grimes after the shooting upon Melton’s arrival at the scene of the traged}1. There are no objections stated or reasons explained in the bill by the defendant why this testimony should not be admitted. It may have been admissible, but without some reason shown in the bill why it was not admissible, the bill does not show error. No grounds of objection are stated. The same will apply to the next bill with reference to the testimony of F. M. Patten. There are no grounds of objection stated, nor is it sufficiently connected to show why it was not admissible.

The statement, which is called a confession, was introduced over many objections. There was a controversy as to this confession as to how it was obtained, and the testimony in regard to the matter was narrowed down to that for the State by the county attorney, and for the defendant by the defendant. One shows proper warning; the other excludes it. The defendant says he was not warned, and that just after he had been placed in jail the county attorney sent after him and had him brought into his office and told him to make a statement. He says he was not warned, and that the county attorney had it written down, and that he signed it, and it was never read over to him, and he did not really know what he was signing.

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Related

Reed v. State
59 S.W.2d 122 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1933)
Jordan v. State
294 S.W. 1109 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 254, 78 Tex. Crim. 116, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.