Crippen v. State

189 S.W.2d 496, 189 S.W. 496, 80 Tex. Crim. 293, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 332
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1916
DocketNo. 4196.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 189 S.W.2d 496 (Crippen 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
Crippen v. State, 189 S.W.2d 496, 189 S.W. 496, 80 Tex. Crim. 293, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 332 (Tex. 1916).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Presiding Judge.

Under an indictment and trial for an assault to murder J. R. Spillers, a police officer of Waco, appellant was convicted of an aggravated assault and his punishment assessed at two .years in the county jail.

The testimony on behalf of the State by a preponderance would show a most aggravated case of an assault with intent to murder—an attempted assassination—and would show such a state of fact as to exclude manslaughter if Spillers had been killed. On the other hand, by his own testimony, supported by some other, appellant showed such a state of fact as to show that if he had succeeded in killing Spillers his offense would have been no higher than that of manslaughter, thereby raising the issue of aggravated assault. On this point the jury acquitted him of assault to murder and found him guilty of aggravated assault, as stated. Appellant introduced testimony of threats against him hv Spillers, both communicated and uncommunicated. In his testimony, Spillers denifed all such threats, testifying that he made none of them. Appellant by practically his testimony alone raised the issue of self-defense from apparent danger. The testimony of the State by Spillers and other eyewitnesses would exclude self-defense.

Appellant assigns a large number of claimed errors,—a good many to the admission of testimony; others, to various paragraphs of the court’s charge, and still others to the court’s refusal to give some of his special charges. As most of his refused charges and some of his complaints as to the court’s charge were solely with reference to the *296 question of an assault with intent to murder and as he was acquitted of that offense, they pass out and are not discussed.

The shooting occurred on the night of July 28, 1915. In the claimed discharge of his official duties. Spillers arrested appellant on October 1, 1914, for a minor offense against the city ordinances of Waco. Again, early in December, following, he again arrested him for the violation of another city ordinance. The arrest in both instances was made without Spillers having a warrant for appellant’s arrest at the time. Appellant was tri^d the next day after his first arrest in the city court and acquitted. He was tried under the second arrest on December 8, 1914, and convicted. He appealed that case to the County Court. The charge in that case was vagrancy. After the said appeal, twice before July 28, 1915, appellant forfeited his bond. On July 28th, when his case was again called, at which time it was set for trial, he failed to appear, and his bond was again forfeited. Spillers was a witness against him in that case and was present when this last forfeiture was taken. The assistant county attorney in charge of that prosecution and other officers in the sheriff’s department at the time instructed Spillers that if he could find appellant to again arrest him so as to have him present the next morning for trial., No warrant for his arrest was issued, and Spillers had none that night when he again arrested him in compliance with his instructions from said officers. He found him that night in the reservation district of Waco and arrested him. Appellant did not resist arrest at that time, nor did he attempt to escape while arrested and in custody. When arrested on this occasion, appellant by his own testimony, abused and cursed Spillers in the "most outrageous way, and offered and wanted to fight him, if Spillers would take off his pistol. Spillers called for the officer in charge of the hoodlum wagon for the purpose of transferring him to the jail and confining him therein. The officer with this wagon soon appeared. Appellant got on it and with that officer went to jail. Spillers did not go with them, and had nothing more to do with the matter. Within a very few minutes, three or four, he says, he 'was ordered released by a deputy sheriff and was released from jail and from this arrest. Appellant is shown then to have in effect stated he was going to arm himself and kill Spillers. He proceeded to hunt up a shotgun and shells with large shot, loaded his gun and went to hunt Spillers to kill him, found him, shot him three times, the three loads taking effect in Spillers’ body, wounding him most dangerously, shot at him a fourth time, but missed him, and then fledi

Appellant contended, and so testified and introduced other testimony somewhat tending to support him, to the effect that each of said arrests by Spillers of him, and especially on the night of July 28th, was because of Spillers’ malice towards him, and done to humiliate, embarrass, discredit, punish and impose upon him, and that he was using and had used his official position as a policeman to accomplish these purposes and to run over and overawe him; that Spillers’ said actions and con *297 duct were not actuated by any desire on bis part to discharge his duties as a policeman, but were solely for the purposes stated. With these issues thus made by appellant, we think all the testimony of Spillers himself and of the various officers of the city and county to the effect that all arrests by the police officers of said city were made without warrants and that the police officers were so instructed to make arrests without warrant by their superior officers and that Spillers was instructed by the assistant county attorney and the other officials to arrest appellant on this occasion,—in other words, all such testimony as would show, or tend to show, the reverse of appellant’s contention as just stated and that Spillers was acting in good faith in the discharge of his duties as a policeman,—was admissible. This disposes of a large number of appellant’s bills of exception to the admission of testimony on these lines. The court properly admitted said testimony on the question of the motive of Spillers in making said arrest and restricted the jury to the consideration thereof for that purpose alone..

If appellant had resisted said arrest at the time it was made, or had attempted to relieve himself of arrest after being arrested, and at that time had shot Spillers, his rights would have been very different from what they were under the unquestioned facts shown by this record. He did not then shoot Spillers, nor attempt to shoot him, but shot him some twenty-five minutes to an hour thereafter, and after he had been entirely released and relieved from all arrest. It is unnecessary, therefore, to discuss what his rights would have been if the shooting had occurred when he was arrested or during his confinement under that arrest by Spillers.

Our Constitution (sec. 9, art. 1) guarantees: “The people shall be secure in their persons . . . from all unreasonable seizures . . Our law has all the time, and especially since our codes were adopted in 1856 (arts. 259-263) expressly authorized arrests by peace officers in a great many instances without warrant, and expressly authorized municipal corporations to establish rules authorizing arrests without warrant in a great many instances. These statutes have uniformly been sustained bv all the courts as constitutional. (2 Branch’s Ann. P. C., pp. 1114-1Í15.)

Ho error is shown in the court’s action in admitting the testimony complained of by appellant in his bills from 2 to 11, inclusive, and 15, along the lines mentioned. As qualified by the court and as shown by the record, the court correctly admitted the testimony of a threat by appellant against Spillers, objected to in appellant’s twelfth bill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 S.W.2d 496, 189 S.W. 496, 80 Tex. Crim. 293, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crippen-v-state-texcrimapp-1916.