Davidson v. State

208 S.W. 664, 84 Tex. Crim. 433, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1919
DocketNo. 5117.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 664 (Davidson 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
Davidson v. State, 208 S.W. 664, 84 Tex. Crim. 433, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 14 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellants were convicted of burglary, their punishment being assessed at six years confinement in the penitentiary each.

The owner of the alleged burglarized house testified, substantially, that he did not know whether his house had been .broken and entered or not; that there was no evidence of a breaking. If there was a breaking the circumstances will be stated hereafter in this opinion with reference to a piece of iron found in the pocket of a coat belonging to defendant Davidson. The State relied on inferences from other facts to show the *434 house had been broken and entered. Some goods were found at the residence of Shipman, where the defendants were staying or boarding. These goods were in possession of Shipman and his wife, and not in possession of the defendants. Shipman was indicted for the same alleged burglary as charged in the indictment; was placed in jail, and turned State’s evidence, under contract of immunity from punishment, and testified for the.State. His evidence was, substantially, that the defendants brought the goods to him at night and delivered them to him. Among other things was some bed ticking and another piece of cloth found in Shipman’s house. He says: “While at my house they brought some things there. I saw that bed ticking at my house. . . . .One time they brought a ham and two pieces of bacon, I think it was, and then the bed ticking and a piece of red cloth. . . . They did not tell me where they got it. They said it was all bought and paid for, and I did not ask them where they got it.” Further testifying, he says: “On the morning just before the arrest I heard Davidson talking to the other two men. He was talking to John and Frank in this west room, and I was in the middle room and my wife was in the kitchen, but was at the machine making a skirt, and I heard him say: 'Hell, he will go in the hands of a receiver and never know how he got there.’ I didn’t know what he was talking about. I never had any conversation with either óf them or all of them with referenee to going in a store on the Aveniie; they never talked to me about going into any store on the Avenue. I asked them about closing a door to the store,—I' said: 'What do you do, go in and leave the door open?’ 'Ho,’ he said, ‘We come out and leave it just like we find it.’ They didn’t tell me what store it was, I don’t know whether they knew the name of the store or not. They told me where the store was, said across the Avenue. I live on the east side of the Avenue, and Caldwell & Miller’s store is on the west side.”

Mrs. Shipman’s testimony is very brief. She testified, substantially, to defendants bringing them goods and their receiving them, and some other things that were brought there by defendant Davidson, which were sent her from a distance. She made those up into clothing of different sorts and sold them.

Mr. Caldwell, one of the alleged owners of the house burglarized, says: “I do not know anything about my store having been burglarized about December 5, 1917, as charged in the indictment in this case, and the first suggestion that such was the case came when I was-called upon by officers to examine certain articles of merchandise to see whether or not they belonged to the firm of Caldwell & Miller. I had no idea up to that time that my store had been broken into or that anything had been taken out of it, but I went with the officers, who exhibited several yards of bed ticking, that was marked or flawed in making it, and some red cloth that I could identify as belonging to Caldwell & Miller. I also recognized a small remnant of red cloth as being a piece of goods of the same kind we had in stock, which has been missed between De *435 cember 5th .and several days thereafter, and was a remnant that was gone from our store that we had been unable to account for. Hone of these articles had any particular mark by which I could identify them except the bed ticking, which had flaws in it as I have testified, and I will not swear more positively to them than I have sworn. In my best judgment they are our property; my judgment is based upon the facts I have testified to. . . . An examination of the building showed that the building, windows and doors had not been broken, bruised. or tampered with in any manner, and if the goods exhibited to me were taken from the store it must have been by someone who was able to enter the house by opening the doors without breaking same of in any way interfering with them otherwise than being able to unlock them in some manner, and so far as I am concerned if my store was burglarized, as charged, I would have been perfectly unaware of any forced or unlawful entry into the store.” He further states: “I would not have known that anyone had entered my store or had any idea of it if the officers had not called upon me to examine certain merchandise of the character carried in a store such as is operated by me and Mr. Miller. I do not know that the store was entered and if entered I do not know when it was entered, nor by what manner unless by someone able to manipulate the lock on the double doors without breaking them and closing them without leaving any traces of the entry that were discoverable by me or any traces except the scratches and marks on the tongue of the lock made by the parties who entered the store.” He further testified that the goods showed to him were part of a large lot of goods and merchandise that firm carried, and that other merchants in the city of Austin carried the same character of goods. In that connection ho says: “It is true that many other general merchants in Austin and Travis County -buy bed ticking and red cloth of the kind presented to me for examination from the same houses or people that I bought that.” Deputy Sheriff McCoy testified that he went to the residence of Shipman in South Austin, where he resides with his wife. He said he met Shipman and asked him if any men were staying there, and he said they stayed all night, but that he, Shipman, went to Mr. Brown’s market to work. “I went in the little shed and there was no one there, and then into the back room, and I heard voices. I pulled the door and opened it, and these three men were in the little room. I spoke to and arrested all three.” He found some of the goods already mentioned while he was at the house. He says: “In a trunk I found some handkerchiefs and a piece of silk, and in this room I got a blue serge suit of clothes belonging to George Davidson, and in one of its pockets I found the iron piece about an inch wide and a sixteenth of an inch thick with which Mr. Barbisch and myself afterwards manipulated the lock on the double doors of Caldwell & Miller’s store, opening said doors with said instrument.” He seized and took to the sheriff’s office all these goods that have been mentioned. Appellants claimed none of the goods except the blue serge suit, which was claimed by the defend *436 ant Davidson, and in the coat of this suit the officer found the piece of iron above mentioned, and with which they manipulated the door.

The appellants took the witness stand and denied all connection with the burglary; said they had nothing to do with bringing the goods to Shipman’s house; had entered nobody’s store, and went into an elaborate history, under rigid cross-examination as to where they had been spending practically all their lives.

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Related

Ysasaga v. State
444 S.W.2d 305 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1969)
Sims v. State
253 S.W. 278 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 664, 84 Tex. Crim. 433, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.