Cordes v. State

112 S.W. 943, 54 Tex. Crim. 204, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 355
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 17, 1908
DocketNo. 3894.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 112 S.W. 943 (Cordes 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
Cordes v. State, 112 S.W. 943, 54 Tex. Crim. 204, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 355 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

BEOOKS, Judge.

Appellant was indicted for the murder of her child, and upon conviction her punishment was assessed at imprisonment for life.

The facts, in substance, show that appellant and her brother, Eilert Cordes, lived upon a farm in Gonzales County, occupying alone their home. In August, 1906, Eilert secured the services of several negroes to assist in picking cotton. These negroes lived in a house twenty or thirty yards from the home while engaged in picking cotton. One negro, Johnnie Hamilton, testified that he slept in the kitchen by the cooking stove in the same house and in an adjoining room to appellant. "That night I heard a baby cry in the night and heard them walking around in the house. I don’t think I heard it cry but once that night before I went to sleep. I got up the next morning before sun up and heard it crying in the house next morning. It sounded like it was in the room from me adjoining the kitchen. I don’t know who lived in there. I .couldn’t say what room they stayed in. Nobody else lived in that house but these people. It was about between six and seven o’clock in the morning when I heard the baby cry. I saw Mr. Cordes around the house that morning and I saw him afterwards during the day when he passed me going down towards the creek. He had a bundle under his arm that looked like a eroker sack or saddle blanket hailed up under his arm, but I couldn’t say what it was. When he came back from the creek he had nothing with him. I never heard the baby cry after he carried the bundle off. I stayed there Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, and went to town Friday .evening and heard that the baby had been found Saturday night ,of the same week.” A baby was found in the creek, which was some three or four hundred yards from appellant’s home.

Dr. Finny Blackwell, in reference to finding the child, testified as follows: "I visited the water hole about two or three hundred yards away from the house of the defendant about the 10th or 11th of August of last year, and then went with Mr. Johnson, the sheriff, on that night to Cordes-’ house. At the water hole I found something covered up in a. gunny sack and blanket very badly decom *207 posed. I came to the place and found Mr. Pittman 'and another gentleman there and stayed on' the bank and waited for the justice of the peace and Mr. Johnson. And they didn’t come and I picked the gunny sack up and unwrapped the blanket and found a little girl baby and I examined it and went over it very thoroughly. The body was very much decomposed. The head had been fractured and the ribs had been broken or fractured. The brains were gone, and the membranes were intact. It was either the third and fourth or the fourth and fifth rib that was fractured. In addition the child had a string tied around its neck three times and tight .as tight could be, and the back and shoulders of the child were badly decomposed. I pried the ribs open and got hold of the lung and opened it and extracted the lung and introduced two fingers and pulled out a part of the lung tissue, and when I pushed around in it air and water escaped. That air might have come from two or three places. It might have 'been caused from putrefaction and it might have been caused from natural prevailing conditions. The color of the lung tissue differed; it was light in places, but where it was badly decomposed it was of a brown hue, but I could not say positively just what the color was, looking at it with my naked eye, and from a scientific standpoint. I could not say whether the air had been breathed in there or whether it was the result of putrefaction. The child was well developed and would have weighed about eight or nine pounds. For a living child to have its brains knocked out would kill it sure; the wounds in the side untreated I think would have killed it. I don’t think it would have produced immediate death. The string tied three times around its neck would have killed it. A living child would live a very few minutes with that string around its neck. A still born child would have a flat chest and the diaphragm would be way up. In a child that had lived you would find air in its lungs that could not be expelled. If jt had been completely submerged for four or five days it would not have decomposed that fast. From my examination of the body and the appearance of the lung tissue I could not state whether that child had ever lived or not. I can state that you would have found those conditions in a child that had breathed, but I must state that results of putrefaction would produce the same results. A child by the act of breathing produces a rounded condition of the chest, and this child’s chest was rounded. The lungs were extended; its abdomen was swollen and the skin around its neck had broken where the string was tied and it was decomposed all over. Any part of that child would float. As a medical expert I can not say whether or not that child lived. I can state that the air and extension of that lung would indicate that the child had breathed, but at the same time I believe the results of decomposition in that side would! produce the distension just the same. The *208 child’s breast was round and distended and the diaphragm was down.” The child had been taken out of the water upon which it was floating a short while before the doctor reached the scene. Johnnie Hamilton swore it was two or three o’clock in the evening on Monday that he saw Cordes go down to the creek with a bundle under his arm. The negroes who lived in the house on the farm testified that appellant was sick at the time that Johnnie Hamilton says he heard the baby cry, and was sick for several days. Various witnesses testify that appellant appeared to be pregnant a short while before the child was found, and at that time did not show any signs of pregnancy. The doctor who examined appellant after she 'was placed in jail testified 'that everything indicated that she had given birth to a child a short while before the examination, some seven or eight days. The testimony shows that this will correspond with the date that Hamilton says he heard the baby cry. The sheriff testifies to taking a sack and blanket and a string that were found around the baby’s neck and comparing them with blankets and cloth found in the home of ■ appellant, and they correspond in texture and color with said blanket and cloth so found. He says the blanket he took from around the child was dirty and bloody and after washing it, it was of a lighter color than the blanket found in the house, but in texture and bther respects corresponded. The figures on the cloth string around the babj^’s neck corresponded with the figures on the cloth in the home. The sheriff through an interpreter asked appellant if she had given birth to a child prior to her arrest. She denied it. Several bloody clothes and garments were found in the house indicative of child birth. This, in substance, as we glean from the statement of facts is the testimony.

Appellant complains the court erred in refusing to give the following charge: “In this case you are instructed that unless you find from a preponderance of the evidence, that the child with whose murder the defendant is charged had a complete and independent existence from its mother and was wholly born alive then you must acquit the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.W. 943, 54 Tex. Crim. 204, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordes-v-state-texcrimapp-1908.