Crow v. State

26 S.W. 209, 33 Tex. Crim. 264, 1894 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 1894
DocketNo. 279.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 209 (Crow 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
Crow v. State, 26 S.W. 209, 33 Tex. Crim. 264, 1894 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 88 (Tex. 1894).

Opinion

HURT, PRESIDING Judge.

Tbe defendant in this case stands convicted for tbe murder of Miss Mollie White, tbe verdict being for murder of tbe first degree, with life sentence.

To show motive actuating this man to commit tbe crime, it was shown that be bad waited upon her for a long time and bad courted her unsuccessfully; that be bad rivals in one Em Cast and one Ellison Lock-hart. A witness for tbe State testified, that defendant told him that. Miss Mollie bad rejected him; that defendant on this occasion seemed very much affected — seemed to be crying; said be was going up there-next day, get bis letters and ring, and ‘‘she could go to bell.” In a conversation afterwards be told this witness: “I will give you to understand that if I court a girl and can’t get her nobody else shall have-her, and especially Em Cast.” This occurred more than a year before-tbe killing.

A note was found in tbe field of deceased’s father reflecting upon Miss Mollie. Another note was found at defendant’s father’s place of a similar character, and delivered to tbe Whites. Tbe authorship of this note was attributed to Cast, and was tbe cause of tbe breaking of an engagement to marry between him and Miss Mollie. On the trial it was proved to be in tbe bandwriting of defendant. Miss Mollie was killed on tbe 10th of July, it being Sunday night, at about 12 o’ clock. She had attended church that night with Ellison. She and tbe rest of tbe family retired between 11 and 12 o’clock, and before 1 o’clock she was dead. Her throat was cut by a sharp instrument. Near tbe bed upon which she slept was an open window through which the assassin came and escaped. The father of the deceased testified, that outside of the window there were tracks leading off through the cotton patch. There was one track deeper than the rest, where it seemed that the party had jumped out of the window.

W. H. Strickland, a constable, testified: “A short distance from the window there was a track deeper than the other tracks. * * * The tracks then led off in a northwesterly direction about ten or-twelve steps to the cotton patch, and then diagonally across the cotton patch. The party appeared to be running across the cotton patch. I measured the best tracks that I could find for measurement in the cotton patch. It was difficult to get a good track to measure on account of the soft condition, of the ground, but I found some tracks that were tolerably plain, and where I could get a plain track the measurements, were the same; first measured with a stick, then with a rule. I only measured the tracks in the cotton patch. [Defendant pointed out to witness the shoes he had worn on the day of the homicide.] I compared the measurement of the shoes with the measurements of the tracks. I had measured the length of the foot and the width, and the *268 length and width of the heel. The track and the shoes measured the same except the heel. There was a difference of a quarter of an inch either in the length or width of the heel, and I can’t say for certain which, but think it was in the length.”

Sheriff Bickett testified, that he followed the tracks out across the cotton patch. “I measured the length of the tracks. Did not measure the heel nor the width of the tracks across the toe. I measured the tracks with a switch. On next day measured the shoes which defendant said he had worn on Sunday. I thought that the measurements fitted the shoes pretty well. The shoes were about a seven.”

Deputy Sheriff Gambill, at the instance of the sheriff, got the shoes of defendant to compare with the tracks in the cotton patch. He made the comparison on Tuesday. He testifies: “I thought they were exactly alike. The shoes were run in, and the left shoe was run in more than the right. I noticed the corresponding peculiarity about the track. I placed the shoes in the tracks and I thought they fitted exactly. I made tracks by the side of the original tracks with the shoe and they appeared to be the same. One tap had been removed from the heel of the left shoe, and the tacks projected about one-sixteenth of an inch. I noticed the imprint of the tacks in the tracks. The tacks that projected were on the left of the heel, and nearer the back than the front. On the left shoe the tacks were exactly the same way. I did not count the tacks. I noticed near the house, where the party had stepped on a rock with his left foot and slid off, and the tacks had left scratches on the rock. * * * There are some worn places about the size of a half-dollar on the inside of the sole of each shoe, where the soles were worn out. I did not see anything corresponding to these places in the tracks, but they were filled up with mud and the bottom of the shoes appeared smooth. * * * The tracks were very plain and clear. I found many, and compared and examined many tracks, and every time the left was running in, had a missing tap, and the extending tacks corresponded exactly with the left shoe of defendant. * * * These are the shoes that made the tracks. Defendant wears about a number seven.”

Strickland, the constable, also testified, that he followed the trail beyond the cotton patch, through a pasture of mesquite grass, by the dew being brushed away from the grass. No foot tracks here. Three or four hundred yards beyond this pasture there was no trail. At this distance there was a fresh track of an unshod horse. This led to a crossing on the Gabriel. The horse track led up to about three feet of the water. “I saw a man’s track. The toe of the track was just in the edge of the water and was tolerably plain. It was the track of the left foot. To the right of it, and about a foot from it, there was an indentation about the size of the palm of my hand, and about an eighth or a quarter of an inch deep, that might have been made by the knee *269 of a man. * * * On Tuesday I saw an unshod horse at defendant’s house. I moved him off and looked at his track, and it was similar to the one I had traced that morning. I saw the pants that defendant said he had worn on the day before. There was some mud on the right knee of the pants. I think I called Mr. Bickett’s attention to the mud on the knee.”

Neither the sheriff nor his deputy remembers having noticed any mud on the knee of the pants.

On the other hand, appellant proved facts by a number of witnesses which, if they were in fact true, negative very powerfully his guilt. If true, he was not at the place of the homicide when it occurred, but was at his home. This evidence of alibi was followed by the testimony of W. H. Strickland, namely: “I compared the measurements of the shoes with the measurements of the tracks which I had made. I had measured the length of the foot and the width, and the length and width of the heel. The track and the shoes measured exactly the same except in the heel. There was a difference of a quarter of an inch either in the length or the width of the heel, and I can’t say for certain which, but think it was the length.” Now, we are not informed by this witness whether the heel or the shoe was longer than the track. If the heel was the longer, evidently the tracks in the cotton patch near the place of the homicide were not made by the shoes of the defendant, and all of the supposed inculpatory inferences drawn from the tracks crumble to dust. If the track of the heel was longer than the heel, the length of the whole track and the shoe being the same, it is certain that the shoe of defendant did not make the tracks.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 209, 33 Tex. Crim. 264, 1894 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crow-v-state-texcrimapp-1894.