Dowell v. State

126 S.W. 871, 58 Tex. Crim. 482, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1910
DocketNo. 69.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 871 (Dowell 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
Dowell v. State, 126 S.W. 871, 58 Tex. Crim. 482, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 161 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

RAMSEY, Judge.

On a charge of assault with intent to murder presented by indictment of the grand jury of Travis County, on the 9th day of Hay, 1908, appellant was, at a trial in said court, on February 27, 1909, convicted and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of two years. The record is a very voluminous one and it will be impossible in any opinion which we ought to be asked to write to notice any considerable number of the questions presented in the record. In addition to a voluminous statement of facts the record contains thirty-one special charges requested and refused by the court and seventy-eight bills of exceptions, and presents altogether more than a hundred assignments of error. Again, it is impossible to make, in fairness to the entire, record, a summary of the evidence which will do entire justice to the case. We shall do no more than make such a general statement of the case as will illustrate the few questions discussed. After a most painstaking investigation of the record we have concluded, in the light of the facts and in the light of the entire record, that the judgment of conviction ought to be reversed on account of the action of the court in ruling upon matters of evidence. The record shows that appellant was, at the time of the happening of the events hereinafter referred to, and for many years prior thereto had been, a lawyer, residing in Austin, and that during 1906, 1907 and 1908, and years prior thereto, he was the owner of a considerable ranch, and that some time not far from 1907 he became indebted to the West Texas Bank & Trust Company, of San Antonio, and to secure this indebtedness it took a mortgage on some or all of his property. In the matter of closing out, or efforts to foreclose said mortgage, Mr. Mason Williams, then as now residing in San Antonio, was counsel for the bank. This bank had, about the year 1907, sought to foreclose its lien and had seized and sold certain of the property covered or claimed to be covered by the mortgage, both real and personal. These efforts of the bank and the differences between the parties as to what was included and covered by the lien, the amount of the debt and other matters brought on a serious controversy between the bank and appellant in which to some extent Mr. Williams was involved. The transaction between appellant, who, it seems, for the most part acted in his own behalf, and Mr. Williams, later brought about and induced the filing of a petition by appellant in the District Court of Travis County to disbar Williams. In this proceeding Mr. Chas. W, Ogden appeared as counsel for Williams, *484 When the matter came on to be heard on the 15th of April, 1908, Mr. Jas. B. Hamilton, the District Attorney, of Travis 'County District, appeared with appellant in behalf of the motion to disbar. The matter had proceeded to some little extent, appellant talcing an active and probably the leading part in the prosecution of his motion, when it developed on the 16th day of April that Mr. Hamilton was too unwell to proceed with the morning session of the court. Thereupon, at the suggestion of appellant, as he claims, and as the evidence seems to show, arid with the consent and as some of the evidence indicates, at the suggestion of the court, the matter was postponed until 3 o’clock in the afternoon. Both Messrs. Ogden and Williams were at the time stopping at the Driskill Hotel, located on 6th Street, in the city of Austin. About 1 o’clock they were both at the hotel and at the Driskill bar when appellant entered. Just what occurred at this time is not agreed upon by the witnesses. A summary of the controversy between the parties may perhaps be gathered from the statements of Mr. Ogden and of appellant. Ogden states that while himself, Williams and a Mr. Green were standing at the bar appellant came in the room and he spoke to him pleasantly and asked him if he had heard whether Mr. Hamilton would be present and able to go on with the case at 3 o’clock, when appellant replied: “You must not speak to me—you can’t speak to me; you have insulted me.” To which he, Ogden, replied: “Why, yes, I can speak to you—I can speak to anyone; I have not insulted you.” Appellant replied: “You did insult me. You asked me when I was on the witness stand whether I was willing to pay my honest debts or not.” To this Mr. Ogden says he replied: “Ho, I did not ask you any such question as that; I had not asked you any question, and you know it, because you have testified only on direct examination, and I had not asked you a single question in cross-examination.” That the matter was disputed vigorously for some minutes and Dowell finally replied: “Well, I may be mistaken; I will look at the stenographer’s notes, and if I am mistaken I will apologize; but if I am not mistaken, you have got to fight.” To which he, Ogden, replied: “All right, that is satisfactory; does that end this controversy?” Appellant stated: “Yes,” and Ogden said: “Well, then, will you answer the question which I asked you in the beginning ? Have you heard whether Mr. Hamilton will be ready to go on with the case at 3 o’clock ?” To which Mr. Dowell replied he had not heard, and about this time, or perhaps a little before, Mr. Williams stepped up and said, speaking to Dowell: “Mr. Ogden is my attorney and I am responsible for whatever he says, and you can hold me responsible if he has insulted you;” that he, Ogden, then spoke to Mr. Williams and said to him: “That’s all right, to let it go,” and he stepped back and the conversation was concluded and Colonel Dowell walked out, and immediately after that he, Ogden, walked out. Appellant gives a somewhat different version of the matter and to this effect: He gays in the first place that he did not know that any of the parties *485 were in the saloon when he went in there and was not expecting them and would not have gone in the saloon if he had known this fact; that immediately on entering the room Mr. Ogden said to him in a friendly way: “Dowell, do you know whether Mr. Hamilton is going to be able to go on with the case at two o’clock?” and he, appellant, replied that he did not know. Ogden then said: “0 well, Jim Hamilton don’t want to prosecute that case anyhow,” and, “You have got no case,” and talked to him in “bullragging” way, when he said to Mr. Ogden: “0, Ogden, don’t talk that way; you made a remark about me,” and that was all he said; that he just said: “You made a remark about me—you and I are friends; yon made a remark about me in the courtroom that I don’t think you ought to have made.” That he, appellant, said: “You said that if a debt was honest in this transaction, that I wouldn’t acknowledge it.” That he, appellant, said: “How, Ogden, you ought not to have said that.” That Ogden said to him, witness: “John, I didn’t say it, I didn’t say it.” That he, appellant, said: “Why, Ogden, you go and look at the stenographer’s reports and you will see that you are mistaken and that you did say that,” when Ogden said to him, appellant, a second time: “I didn’t say it;” that there was no question about it. That just about this time Mr. Williams pushed Ogden aside, stepped up in front of him and said: “I assume the responsibility of that remark,” and put his hands on a pistol and faced him, appellant, and that Williams walked up face to face with him between himself, Mr. Ogden and the bar and said: “I assume the responsibility of that remark.” At this juncture the parties all separated, Mr. Dowell going out of the building, Mr. Ogden going into the rotunda of the hotel preceding Mr. Williams, and there was an intermission of a few minutes, probably ten or fifteen, before the next scene in the difficulty.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 871, 58 Tex. Crim. 482, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowell-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.