Escobar v. State

133 S.W.2d 781, 138 Tex. Crim. 71, 1939 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 574
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 1939
DocketNo. 20261.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 133 S.W.2d 781 (Escobar 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
Escobar v. State, 133 S.W.2d 781, 138 Tex. Crim. 71, 1939 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 574 (Tex. 1939).

Opinions

GRAVES, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of enticing and decoying a minor from the custody of her parents, and was by the jury fined $150.00, hence this appeal.

*72 There are no bills of exception found in the record, and consequently we are relegated alone to an examination of the facts in order to ascertain their sufficiency.

The facts show that the minor, Mildred Cook, a girl fifteen years old, was living with her father and mother in Knox County, in rather poor circumstances. She testified that she did not longer want to live with her parents, and that she asked appellant to take her away from home; that she asked him six or seven times. Her parents both testified that they did not want her to leave home, and that they did not give their consent for appellant to take her away.

The State introduced appellant’s confession, as follows:

“My name is John Escobar, I am 28 years of age; my post-office address is Benjamin, Texas; I live at Benjamin, Texas, in Knox County. My father’s name is Phillip Escobar. He lives at Benjamin, Texas. He is about 81 years of age.
“I had met Mildred Cook at the straw stack near the League Estate Barn twice before I met her there on the 31st day of March. We had talked about going to Old Mexico, and Mildred had asked me one time before we left there to have intercourse with her, but we did not have time to do it as she had to go back home. This was close to the straw stack on the League Ranch in Knox County, Texas. I knew she was only fifteen years of age when I left Knox County with her. She said she had been going with boys when she was between 14 and 15 years of age.
“She asked me to take her away from home, as her father was mean to her. She said if I did not take her away from home that she was going to turn me in for something. I was afraid she would turn me into the laws. We had been loving one another up about two weeks ago and I tried to get into her pants, but she said let’s let it go for a while. And she got mad at me. She said she did not love me any more and I told her that it was up to her. On March 31st, 1938, she sent me a note by her little brother, the one that was with her when we met and left Knox County, and said I am going to the hay stack after dinner, and I want you to take me as far as you can from my folks. After I got.the note I went to Knox City to Guadalupe Flores, and went to his house and ask him what to do, that I was in a serious tight and I didn’t know what to do. I told him that this girl had sent me a note telling me what she had written. He said the only chance was to leave out with her. I told him that Mildred had a friend that she wanted to look for. I asked him to take us to Old Mexico. I was going *73 to take Mildred to Old Mexico and live there. Lupe told me that he could not take us to Old Mexico, but he could take us to San Angelo. That I would be safe there. Lupe had a brother there in San Angelo. He took us to his brother’s house. We spent the night there at his brother’s house. We slept in the dugout. I had four intercourses with her that night. She asked me for it. We stayed there yesterday. I had one act yesterday, last night I had four more acts of intercourse with her. I do not know of any one else ever having had intercourse with Mildred Cook.
“J. C. Patterson) “John Escobar.
“Keith Whitt ) Witnesses.”

Mildred Cook, the girl, testified that she loved appellant, and would marry him if he was not already married. That she wanted to go to Old Mexico and live with him; that he never tried to get her to leave home with him; that she had an act of intercourse with appellant in Knox County, and several acts in San Angelo.

Guadalupe Flores testified that appellant came to his house on the night of March 31, 1938, near Knox City, and asked him to take him and a white girl to Old Mexico. He said he was in trouble with a white girl. The witness told appellant that he could not take him to Old Mexico, but would take him to San Angelo, where witness had a brother, and he did take them there, and appellant paid him about $17.00 for the trip.

These are the salient points in the case, and present appellant’s contention, and that is that he could not be guilty of enticing and decoying a minor away from the custody of its parents when such minor requested him to take her away from such custody, and went with him voluntarily.

We are not impressed with the soundness of such doctrine. In this instance the person offended against is not the minor but the parents of the minor who thus loses the privilege of the society and the custody, care, control and services of such minor. It is the parent’s duty, and should be his pleasure, to train and care for the child, and attempt to bring it up in such a manner that it may become a useful member of society. This is a valuable right, and by proper thinking parents treasured most highly. That such a right can be wished away at will by a wayward child is not based upon sound reason, and, in our judgment, the voluntary leaving home with another, — who might have held out enticing and alluring ideas and promises to such child, — should not be a proper defense to a charge such as this.

*74 The case of Cummins v. State, 37 S. W. Rep. 435, cited, by appellant, is not in point, the facts therein widely differing from those in the instant case, that case holding that the bare fact that a party hires a minor with knowledge that such minor has a parent living is not sufficient to constitute the offense of knowingly decoying or enticing a minor from his parent.

In the case of Cockrell v. State, 160 S. W. Rep. 343, we also find a different state of facts from the instant case. In that case accused was a 19 year old girl. She and her cousin, Edna Cockrell, 18 years of age, went to a party with the knowledge of Edna’s mother but not the knowledge of her father. When the two girls returned to Edna’s home her father whipped her, and Lula, the accused, told Edna that she would leave home before she would stand such treatment. On the next night they again went to a party, and upon returning home Edna told her mother that if the mother was going to tell the father about this last party, that she, Edna, was going to leave home, and upon the mother refusing to promise not to tell the father, Edna did leave home and went to accused’s home, accused’s father being Edna’s uncle. The next day they heard the father was looking for Edna with a gun, and they finally sent her from one uncle to another until she reached Oklahoma, in order to keep the enraged father from killing her. In this case no one enticed her, no one decoyed her; it was the unreasonable act of the father that forced her to leave her home, and surely he had no right to complain because of the fact that it was his outrageous conduct towards his daughter that forced her to leave.

We think the true doctrine is adverted to in the following quotation from Truelove v. State, 96 Texas Crim. Rep. 537, 258 S. W. Rep. 826, as follows: “* * * we do not regard the contention that the young lady may have left the home of her father voluntarily as any defense to the charge that appellant enticed her away.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W.2d 781, 138 Tex. Crim. 71, 1939 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/escobar-v-state-texcrimapp-1939.