Cox v. State

123 S.W. 696, 57 Tex. Crim. 427, 1909 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 482
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
DocketNo. 77.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 123 S.W. 696 (Cox 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
Cox v. State, 123 S.W. 696, 57 Tex. Crim. 427, 1909 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 482 (Tex. 1909).

Opinion

RAMSEY, Judge.

Appellant was indicted in the court below for an assault with intent to murder. His trial resulted in a conviction of aggravated assault, and his punishment assessed at a fine of $100. From this judgment appellant has appealed to this court for a reversal on sundry errors assigned.

An inspection of the statement of facts discloses that appellant, on the night of the 3d of December, 1908, went to the home of the prosecuting witness and injured party, Fuller, in his absence. On the night in question Fuller, the prosecutor, had gone to a neighbor’s house some two miles away, accompanied by his wife, to some kind of social gathering. After he had been at his neighbor’s house some while he received information that induced him to return home, leaving his wife at the festival. In this connection prosecuting witness testified as follows: “When I got the information I borrowed a mule and went back home, which was about a mile from there. And when I gets to the yard gate I gets down and hitches the mule at the gate, and I goes all the way around the house and comes back to the gallery and goes in on the gallery and there was a chair against the front door and I pushed the door open with my left hand and I goes in my pocket with my right hand and gets a match and strikes it, and when I struck the match I saw a man person coming from the direction of the bed where my little girl was sleeping, and when he run out he run to the middle door and jerked it open with one hand and jerked it to behind him, and I run on after him right behind him and jerked the door open, and by that time he was at the back door and jerked the back door open and run out and jerked it to behind him, and *429 by that "time I jerked the back door open, and when I opened the door he was standing on the outside right down on the ground. I didn’t know who he was at that time, and when I opened the door he just reached up and caught me on the right side is my recollection. He caught hold of my coat and I walked backward and stepped back up in the room, and when he stepped back in the room he struck me in the side with some sharp instrument, knife or something, in my right side; he cut me in the side with something or other, and by that time I grabbed him and we gets in a tussle there and I managed to throw him down and I jumped straddle of him and choked him until he was about out of breath, and I gets up and goes back in the house on the mantleboard and gets a match and come back and struck the match, and when I come back and struck the match I found out who it was; it was W. M. Cox. He was laying down there by the stove when I struck the match.” This is a sufficient statement of the prosecuting witness’ testimony. Appellant took the stand in his own behalf, and, in substance, testified that he had been in the habit of meeting the prosecuting witness’ wife at various places and having intercourse with her, and that he had an appointment with her to meet her that night at the prosecuting witness’ home, she informing him that the prosecuting witness would be away from home, and that he went to the house for that purpose. That he had just gotten in the house when the prosecuting witness broke in on him; that he discovered the prosecuting witness’ Wife was not at home, and that he immediately attempted to beat a retreat, and was hurriedly leaving the place and abandoning the premises of the prosecuting witness, when he was pursued by the prosecutor, knocked down, and in the scuffle he cut prosecuting witness.

1. How, upon this state of facts the court charged the jury as follows: “If the occasion of the difficulty was the entry of defendant into J. H. Fuller’s home at night, with intent to procure or solicit sexual intercourse with Fuller’s wife, and being found there fled and was pursued by Fuller, then, in such case, if defendant voluntarily stopped, and intentionally cut Fuller with a knife or other sharp instrument, before Fuller had committed any assault or violence upon him, further than pursuit, then defendant could not claim, or be allowed any right of self-defense, and the grade of the assault thus committed would be determined by you from the evidence under other instructions herein given you as to the constituents of the different grades of assault submitted to you for a finding; but if, while fleeing, defendant was overtaken and assaulted by Fuller, and by choking or other violence at the hands of Fuller, was in danger of death or bodily injury, and he cut Fuller to protect himself from injury from such assault, then, in such latter case, although defendant could not, on account of his unlawful invasion *430 of Fuller’s home, claim perfect or complete self-defense; "yet the offense, if it would otherwise have been an assault with intent to murder, would be reduced in degree by reason of such first assault by Fuller, and would be an aggravated assault.” This charge was complained of by appellant because it did not submit a correct rule of law, and that it deprived the defendant of the right, though his intention at the beginning was unlawful to abandon any evil intention, and that the same was a charge upon the weight of the testimony, and deprived the defendant of the right to defend himself against an assault upon him when he had abandoned any evil intention lie' may have had. We think that the charge of the court was error,- and that this error was prejudicial to the rights of appellant, for which the case will have to be reversed. A question similar to this came before the court in the case of Roach v. State, 21 Texas Crim. App., 249. In the Boach case it seems that Boach went to the house of Hefner at night, some five miles north of Greenville, in Hunt County. One Poindexter was living at said house. The witness Poindexter started to leave the room about 9 o’clock at night, and as he - opened the door he saw a man standing on the edge of the gallery in front of the door. The witness did not .at that time recognize the party, but afterwards the party was recognized. Poindexter immediately closed the door, ran back in the house and got his pistol. Beturning, the witness threw the door wide open, and by means of the light thrown from the sitting-room, saw and recognized the defendant. Defendant turned and fled toward the gate. Witness followed into the .yard. When the defendant reached a point fifteen or twenty steps from the gallery, he turned and opened fire on the witness. The witness then fired on the defendant, and advanced on him until both of them had gone some distance beyond the gate. Several shots were fired between the parties. It seems there had been a difficulty previous to this between witness and the defendant, in which the witness had been shot. The witness further testified upon cross-examination that the defendant made no demonstration as if to shoot when witness first went to the door. He made no effort to shoot when witness went outside with his pistol, but fled towards the gate. Hefner testified, substantially, to the same facts.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Leza v. State
195 S.W.2d 552 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1946)
Carlile v. State
255 S.W. 990 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1923)
Roberson v. State
203 S.W. 349 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 S.W. 696, 57 Tex. Crim. 427, 1909 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-state-texcrimapp-1909.