Espalin v. State

237 S.W. 274, 90 Tex. Crim. 625, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 210
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1921
DocketNo. 6420.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 274 (Espalin 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
Espalin v. State, 237 S.W. 274, 90 Tex. Crim. 625, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 210 (Tex. 1921).

Opinions

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the Thirty-fourth District Court of'El Paso County, of being an accomplice to the crime of murder, and his punishment assessed at fifteen years in the penitentiary.

Appellant owned land in the Rio Grande valley below the city of El Paso. On said land he had patches of watermelons enclosed by wire - *628 fences. Prior to the date of this homicide he had employed various parties, among them one Luis Garcia, to guard said melon patches, against depredations. On the night of the homicide four young men came from El Paso down a road adjacent to the melon patch guarded by Garcia. Two of said parties, deceased Grady Weeks and one Ca-píes, alighted from the automobile in which the four were riding, got over a fence and into a melon patch of appellant. Garcia, from a position across the road and in another enclosure, fired a rifle, shooting Grady Weeks in the head-and killing him. Garcia was indicted and convicted as a principal and appellant was convicted as an accomplice to the murder of Young Weeks. Other facts necessary to elucidate our opinion will be stated in discussing the various questions raised.

Appellant claimed that deceased and Capíes, his companion, had gone into the melon patch in question in the night-time for the purpose of committing theft, and that this being true, the act of Garcia in killing Weeks was justifiable homicide under the provisions of Article 1105, Vernon’s P. C., which makes justifiable a homicide inflicted for the purpose of preventing theft at night. The State contends that taking melons from the patch is not theft under our statute. In the early Penal Code of Texas it was made theft for one to steal or felo-niously take any growing, standing or ungathered corn ... or other agricultural product. Our Legislature enacted Article 1105, supra, in 1871. Three years later, what’ is now Article 1234, Vernon’s P. C., was enacted specifically declaring that if any person shall take or carry away from the farm, orchard, garden or vineyard of another, without his consent, any fruit, melons or garden vegetables, he shall be fined in any sum not exceeding one hundred dollars. By the Revised Statutes of 1879 this Act was classified as malicious mischief, and has been so classified in succeeding revisions or codifications of our statutes since. When the Legislature selects certain acts, though theretofore or otherwise made penal under an existing statute, and by specific designation makes such acts punishable by a different penalty from that theretofore applicable and essentially changes the ingredients of the new offense, such specified acts are íemoved from the list or classification of crimes to which they formerly belonged and must thereafter be in that class in which they are placed by such new Act. This is illustrated by the well known rule applicable to laws making theft of certain designated property punishable by different penalties from that applicable to theft ir general, such as theft of hogs, cattle, horses, etc. It would clearly no longer be proper to prosecute or to punish one charged with violating such law, under the general theft statute.

While the question here presented was not raised by the accused on appeal in Busey v. State, 87 Texas Grim. R.p., 23, still it appeared to us so clear that one charged with taking ten bushels of pears from an orchard could not be prosecuted under an r -c inary indictment for *629 theft, but must be prosecuted under the provisos of Article 1234 for malicious mischief, that in reversing said case upon another error, we felt it our duty to call attention of the trial court to the provisions of said last named article, and to the fact that the prosecution should be brought thereunder.

With the legislative purpose in the enactment of a given law, we are not concerned save we be called upon to construe some part or the whole of such law by reason of some ambiguity therein or lack of clarity of expression. The language of Article 1234, supra, omits the well recognized elements of theft, and would seem to plainly indicate that the Legislature intended to remove the acts therein named from the domain or classification of theft. While this appears to be the plain indication, it may not be amiss, in view of the language of Mr. Black in his work on Interpretation of Laws, p. 107, where.the learned author says: “It must always be supposed that the legislative body designs to favor and foster rather than to contravene, that public policy which is based upon the principles of natural justice, good morals and the settled wisdom of the law as applied in the ordinary affairs of life,” and in view of the sequence in point of time in the enactments, to conclude that our lawmakers did not intend that that class of offenders most frequently composed of ignorant, youthfu and thoughtless persons, who ordinarily take fruit, melons and vegetables from our orchards, farms and gardens, could be ruthlessly shot down when so engaged and those who killed them claim themselves justifiable as persons who had taken human life in preventing theft at night. We think it correct to further state that as far as our information goes, no other State save Texas justifies homicide when committed to prevent theft at night, except such theft be a felony.

Our conclusion is that one who kills another while the latter is engaged in an act comprehended by the terms of Article 1234, supra, could not as a matter of law claim such act to be justifiable homicide, but this in nowise affects one’s right to act in defense of property as given under Article 1107, Vernon’s P. C. This disposes of many of appellant’s contentions as set out in his various assignments of error in his brief and contained in several bills of exceptions.

The cases of Grant v. Haas, 75 S. W. Rep., 345; Slack v. State, 67 Texas Crim. Rep., 460, and Davis v. State, 81 Texas Crim. Rep., 450, 196 S. W. Rep., 521, are cited by appellant in support of these assignments of error, and this contention made by him that Garcia was justifiable in taking the life of young Weeks.

The expressions of the courts in their opinions must be read in the light of the issues and facts in the case under discussion in such opinion. Whether the taking of melons was malicious mischief or theft, was in no way an issue discussed in Grant v. Haas, supra. The case was one of damages sought by a party injured by a spring gun set in the melon patch by its owner. In Slack v. State, supra, the defense relied for justification of a homicide, on the fact that deceased *630 was in the act of stealing corn from a field of the accused. The State witnesses swore that deceased left the wagon in which they were and entered the field to look for a watermelon. While there is no discussion of the question involved in the instant caseras to whether taking melons from a field is theft or malicious mischief, we do find this expression in the opinion in the Slack case:

“If deceased was merely trespassing on the premises of appellant, and at the time he was shot he was not engaged in committing a theft, and his acts and conduct were not such at the time as to make it reasonably appear to appellant that he was there for the purpose of committing a theft, the killing would be unjustifiable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 274, 90 Tex. Crim. 625, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/espalin-v-state-texcrimapp-1921.