Dover v. State

277 S.W. 675, 102 Tex. Crim. 113, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1021
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 1925
DocketNo. 8872.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 675 (Dover 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
Dover v. State, 277 S.W. 675, 102 Tex. Crim. 113, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1021 (Tex. 1925).

Opinions

BERRY, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Smith County for the offense of manslaughter and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of two years.

The Statement of Facts covers 129 pages, and there are thirty-seven special charges and thirty-eight bills of exceptions in the transcript. We have very carefully gone through this entire record and, on account of the very earnest insistence of appellant’s counsel that many errors have been committed, we have given the case a great deal of time and thought.

On. Saturday night, on or about the first day of September, 1923, appellant and deceased and other parties went out to a house occupied by one Bill Owens, a negro, where they engaged in a poker game, first playing draw poker, Sim Adkins, appellant, the deceased, Adams and Boggs indulging in this game. The record also shows that some whiskey was drank by the participants during the progress of the game. It seems *116 that this game of draw poker broke up because most of the participants went broke. After this draw game broke up, appellant and deceased, it seems, began a two-handed game of heads up stud poker. During the progress of this two-handed game some dispute arose about a pot, which seems to have been smoothed over, and the parties, appellant and deceased, again played for several hands and another dispute arose and deceased grabbed the money on the table and ran.- The next morning about eight o’clock appellant and deceased met near a restaurant in the town of Bullard and the difficulty between ■them was renewed and the deceased was killed by the appellant, after the appellant had been shot by the deceased.

This is a sufficient statement of the facts to enable us to discuss the questions raised.

Bill of exceptions No. 2, the first in the record, complains of the action of the court in permitting the State to ask the witness, Adkins, concerning the rules of a poker game, the objection being that there was no evidence that the defendant knew what the custom was about the right of a party playing poker to go into his pocket after money. This bill is explained by the court to the effect that the defendant testified as to his familiarity with the rules of the game, and under this explanation no reversible error is shown by the court’s action in admitting the testimony complained of.

By bill No. 3 appellant complains of the action of the court in permitting the State to ask the witness, Sim Adkins, as to whether anything was said there at the time of the dispute in the poker game as to who was wrong about it, and in permitting the witness to say that all of them that were around the board said that the deceased had won the money and that the defendant was wrong.' This was the detailing of a conversation in the presence and hearing of the defendant concerning a matter about which appellant was fully aware at the time, and was a part of the details of the transaction that led up to the killing, and was clearly admissible.

Bill of exceptions No. 4 raises practically the same question as that just discussed in bill No. 3, and same shows no error.

By bill of exceptions No. 5 and by bill No. 10 appellant complains of the action of the court in refusing to permit him to ask the witness, Sim Adkins, how many times he had played poker at this negro Bill Owens’ house before, and in refusing to permit the witness to answer such question, to the effect that he had played there several times. This testimony *117 was not admissible. It had no bearing, directly or indirectly, on the case, and was not the proper method of impeaching the witness, Adkins.

Bill of exceptions No. 6 complains of the action of the court in refusing to allow the appellant to ask the witness, Adkins, if it was not true that he was arrested and charged by complaint in the County Court of Smith County with the theft of money in 1928, and the bill shows that the witness, if he had been permitted to answer said question, would have answered that he was arrested and a complaint filed against him charging him with theft of money in 1923. This bill is qualified by the trial court with the statement that the matter inquired about was filed in the justice court and the record and the evidence shows that three grand juries have been convened since said complaint was filed and no indictments were returned as to said matter. The bill as qualified fails to show any error.

By bill No. 7 appellant complains of the court’s action in refusing to permit the appellant to ask the witness, Sim Adkins, if he had ever been charged with the crime of seduction. The court qualifies this bill by showing that the crime about which this witness was asked occurred about twenty-four years ago. This occurrence was too remote, and the court properly excluded any reference to it. Emerson v. State, recently decided by this court and not yet reported.

Bill No. 8 complains of the action of the court in permitting the State to prove by the witness, Hensley, that he told deceased of a threat that the appellant had made against him. According to the record, this" threat was made by appellant at the time the difficulty arose at the poker game the night before the killing and was conveyed to deceased while he was out of the house but still at the place where the game was being played and where the dispute concerning it occurred and where the threat was made by the appellant. Under these conditions the State had a right to show that the appellant had made the threat and that the deceased knew of such threat.

By bill of exceptions No. 9 appellant complains that the State was permitted to prove that on the morning a very short time before the fatal difficulty, in the town of Bullard, as appellant came up on the west side of a house the deceased left on the east side. We are at a loss to understand why-appellant considers this testimony inadmissible. It has always been held that the movement of the parties at the scene- of and shortly before and' shortly after a- difficulty Is *118 admissible, and this testimony comes within this well known rule, and no error is shown in its admission.

Bill No. 11 complains of the court’s action in refusing to allow the appellant to ask the State witness, John Beam, if it was not true that his uncle was then charged by indictment with selling whiskey in Smith County. This testimony, of course, was not admissible for any purpose, and the question itself should not have been asked.

Bill No. 12 complains of the following matter: Hon. N. E. Gentry asked the defendant while on the stand if he had ever been charged with a felony, to which he answered “No”, and the defendant then and there excepted to the asking of said question by the private. prosecutor, and as ground for said exception stated that it was a lead which could not be followed and that the only purpose the private prosecutor had in asking the question was to prejudice the defendant in his defense before the jury; and in response to these statements by appellant’s counsel Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 675, 102 Tex. Crim. 113, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dover-v-state-texcrimapp-1925.