Culp v. State

124 S.W. 946, 58 Tex. Crim. 74, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1910
DocketNo. 350.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 946 (Culp 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
Culp v. State, 124 S.W. 946, 58 Tex. Crim. 74, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 40 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was charged with aggravated assault upon one Murl Alsup by cutting him with a knife inflicting thereby serious bodily injury. The jury found him guilty of simple assault and battery, assessing his punishment at a fine of $25.

Murl Alsup, the alleged assaulted party, testified that on Sunday, the 13th of December, 1908, he saw appellant, and spoke to him, and asked him why he did not turn him in, as he was drunk; that appellant replied, that he was no officer, that he had not been sworn in. Alsup had a bolt in his hand at the time and punched appellant in the stomach with it two or three times. Alsup said this was done in a good humored way, and in fact he was not drunk, but had had two or three drinks. The parties separated. The second time the witness met appellant it was in front of Butler’s barbershop. Witness was sitting on the edge of the sidewalk whittling on a piece of pine when appellant came from around the barbershop. Witness had been talking to some parties who were with him about what he had said to appellant in regard to him, witness, having been at a certain house one night. He says: “I had just told the boys who were sitting on the sidewalk with me, that is, Jokie Burks and George C. Jones, that I had called Henry Culp a son-of-a-bitch there in town on a previous occasion and that he took it. About this time Culp walked up and I thought that he had probably heard what I had stated, so I, after having shut up my knife and put it in my pocket, got up and walked up to Culp and said: 'Henry, you know I cursed you for a son-of-a-bitch, if you said I was out at that house that night didn’t I ?’ And Culp said that it was not him.” Witness further testified: “I took Culp by the lapel of the coat when I first walked up to him, but I never attempted to strike him at all; at this juncture Jim Alsup came up; Culp stooped down and got a piece of an old buggy and hit me with it across the arm.” Jim Alsup interfered at this point, and took hold of the witness. Appellant stepped back, jerked his knife, and as the witness jerked away from his brother, appellant came within reach and cut him in the back just over the right kidney, and cut at him the second time as witness was going away; that attempt to cut him made a hole in his coat, but did not touch his person. This witness denied having his knife in his hand during the difficulty, and stated he made no effort to strike appellant, but took hold of the lapel of his coat. The witness Ward testified that he was standing away some distance when he saw Murl Alsup approach defendant; he says when he and Jim Alsup got to where they were Jim Alsup got between Murl Alsup and appellant, and pushed Murl Alsup back. That appellant stooped down and picked up a piece of a buggy spoke and struck Murl Alsup with it; that Culp then threw down the stick, and jerked out his *76 knife and cut Murl Alsup with it, and struck at him again, and followed him twelve or fifteen feet as Murl Alsup went away. Jim Alsup testified that when his brother approached appellant in front of Butler’s barbershop, Ward and himself were standing a little distance away, and went to where they were; that Murl took hold of the lapel of appellant’s coat with his left hand, but he did not see him make any attempt to strike appellant; did not see a knife in Murl Alsup’s hand; that he caught his brother and pushed him back, and got between the parties. He describes the remainder of the trouble about as did Ward. The attending physician described the wound as being about three quarters of an inch deep and three or four inches in length. He stated it might have become a serious wound had infection occurred. Jokie Burks testified he was sitting on the edge of the sidewalk, in company with two or three other parties, when Murl Alsup came up and engaged in a conversation with Jones and himself. He says: “Murl Alsup told me and Mr. G. C. Jones that he had tried to get Henry Culp to turn him in for being drunk, and that Culp stated that he was no officer, and that he had called the defendant Culp a son-of-a-biteh sometime before that and Culp would not resent it, and that he had something else to tell Culp, when about this time Culp came up. I did not notice where he came from. Murl had been whittling on something while he was sitting on the porch, but I did not see the knife after he got up off of the porch. Culp said something to Jones, who was sitting to my left, next to the east gallery, and when Culp stopped, Murl Alsup got up from the porch and approached Culp, and said to him, ‘I have been telling these boys about the time I cursed you for a son-of-a-biteh.’ Henry says, ‘Murl, do you want trouble out of this, I have treated you nice, and jrou had better go on and leave me alone.’ He (Murl) did not call Henry (appellant) a son-of-a-biteh but told him he had called him a son-of-a-biteh at a prior time; that is, if he said that he was at a certain house. Culp said that he guessed that it was not him; and that he must be mistaken, and that he did not remember of him ever calling him that. I did not see a knife in Murl’s hand while he was approaching Culp, for I was not in a position to have seen one if Murl had one in his right. Murl made some kind of gesture at Culp, but I won’t be sure, because I was not in a position to see his right hand. Jim Alsup came up and interfered, and Henry Culp stooped down, got an old buggy spike and stepped back to Murl and struck Murl with the stick.” The witness says they separated and appellant stepped back and pulled his knife out and said, “God damn you, I have been run over as long as I am going to,” and that as Murl jerked loose from Jim Alsup, appellant cut him across the back, and Murl went around the barbershop to the west, appellant following him until he got about half way around. Jones testified as to the position of the parties on the sidewalk at the time appellant approached. Murl Alsup had stated that about the time appellant approached him that he had called appellant a son-of-a-bitch, and that appellant had not resented it. Appel *77 lant asked the witness Jones if he had sold the mule, it seems they had had some discussion about a mule trade. Witness told him that he had, and appellant said, “Well, I am too late,” and witness said, “Yes, you have waited a little too long.” Witness says he and defendant had been on a trade and appellant wanted to borrow the mule to haul some wood if he had not sold it. He describes the difficulty about as did the other witnesses, and in regard to the beginning of the difficulty, he stated that Alsup, the alleged assaulted party, got up off the porch, and went to where appellant was, stopping right in front of him. As he did so he remarked, “I have just been telling these men that I called you a son-of-a-bitch and that you took it.” He then caught appellant by the lapel of the coat, and this witness says it was his best impression that Hurl had his right hand drawn back, and from his position he could not see whether he had anything in his right hand or not, because his right hand and side were opposite from where he was. That Jim Alsup came up and got hold of Hurl, and tried to separate the parties. Hill testified in regard to the first meeting between the parties, that they were standing in front of Dr. Daniel’s store, and Hurl Alsup called for the defendant to come to him, and that he and appellant walked over to where Hurl Alsup was, or near where he was; that appellant and Hurl Alsup were talking while the witness was talking to other parties.

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Related

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901 S.W.2d 724 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1995)
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490 S.W.2d 839 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1973)
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150 S.W. 940 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 946, 58 Tex. Crim. 74, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culp-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.