Evers v. State

18 L.R.A. 421, 20 S.W. 744, 31 Tex. Crim. 318, 1892 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1892
DocketNo. 56.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 18 L.R.A. 421 (Evers 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
Evers v. State, 18 L.R.A. 421, 20 S.W. 744, 31 Tex. Crim. 318, 1892 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 67 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

SIMKINS, Judge.

There are numerous bills of exceptions and assignments of error, but it will be only necessary to consider the following:

1. The defendant complains that the court refused to charge the jury on manslaughter. The ground relied upon was the fact that Richter, while jeering at and abusing defendant, told him “he didn’t know who 'his father was.” If any such remark was made by Richter, it can not •avail defendant; for after it was made, said defendant turned and went away, and Richter went into the house, and according to the same witness (Florea), called to him to come back, and shook his fist at him. The statute declares, that to reduce homicide to manslaughter, the killing must take place immediately upon the uttering of the insulting words. Penal Code, art. 598. The insulting language seems to have been disregarded. Defendant drew out of his own witness, Florea, the fact that defendant would not have come back, even after the alleged insult, if deceased had not kept calling him. But while the taunts and cries of “ Come back, and kill me,” of the infuriated Richter may have led to that result, it' would be none the less murder on the part of defendant.

2. The court did not err in refusing to permit defendant to prove the' reputation of deceased as a violent, dangerous man. If such a character could have been proven, the deceased had certainly done no act indicating any purpose whatever to take defendant’s life, or do him any harm: He stood in his yard, in shirt-sleeves and stocking-feet, and, according to defendant’s own witness, had declined to touch defendant’s pistol,' when defendant proposed to have a combat. Willson’s Crim. Stats., sec. 1054.

3. The court erred in admitting the cry of the cab driver, “ There he *325 goes,” referring to the defendant, when the officer went out to arrest him. If the cab driver saw the defendant making his escape, he ought to have been placed on the stand to testify to that fact.

4. There is, however, a serious question presented by the record, which will necessitate a reversal of this cause. The court charged the statute on drunkenness, and then instructed the jury that the law just quoted places a person charged with crime before the law to be tried without reference to his drunkenness, unless said drunkenness goes to the extent of producing temporary insanity. It is therefore your duty, as a preliminary inquiry, to discover the mental status of the defendant at the time of the homicide.” Conceding the charge to be correct, so far as it goes, it was manifestly insufficient merely to submit to the jury, without further comment than the charge above quoted, a statute about which there was such uncertainty and diversity of opinion, and let the jury draw their own inference as to its purport and meaning. We think the exception, duly reserved by the defendant, was well taken, to the effect that the court erred in failing to define temporary insanity,” and in failing to charge they could consider it in mitigation of the penalty after they had determined the degree of murder.

The statute on drunkenness (article 40a, Penal Code) has been twice considered and passed upon by this court, and it was held., as we think, correctly: first, that mere intoxication from the recent use of ardent spirits should not excuse nor mitigate the degree or penalty of crime; second, that intoxication must go to the extent of producing temporary insanity before it can mitigate the penalty in any crime, or be considered in murder cases to determine the degree of murder. Clore’s case, 26 Texas Court of Appeals, 624, and Evers’ case, 29 Texas Court of Appeals, 539, in which this case was heard on habeas corpus on a state of facts different from that here presented. The difficulty, however, seems not to be so much in the terms of the statute as in the reluctance of the trial courts to hold that one grossly intoxicated, or temporarily insane from intoxication, is any more liable for punishment for crime than one insane from any other cause.

The history of the statute is well known. Some ten years ago, one Porter, a traveling actor, was shot down without provocation, in an eastern- town in this State. The defendant was tried and acquitted on the ground of temporary insanity, caused by drunkenness. The Legislature, assembling shortly after, passed this act: “Article 40a. Neither intoxi-

cation, nor temporary insanity of mind produced by the voluntary recent use of ardent spirits, shall constitute any excuse in this State for the commission of crime, nor "shall intoxication mitigate either the degree or penalty of crimfi; but evidence of temporary insanity produced by such use of ardent spirits may be introduced by the defendant in any criminal prosecution in mitigation of the penalty attached to the offense for which *326 he is being tried, and, in cases of murder, for the purpose of determining the degree of murder of which the defendant may be found guilty.” By its terms there were two purposes clearly intended; first, to eliminate, mere intoxication as any defense in any criminal prosecution whatever, regardless of the constituent elements of the crime; second, to prevent, temporary insanity from being a defense to any crime, but permitting it to be introduced in murder cases to determine the degree, and in all criminal prosecutions to mitigate or lessen the penalty. The object of the-statute was to prevent parties from pleading their own wrong, after voluntarily placing themselves under the influence of drink, and becoming a terror to the community, or a menace to other citizens, whose feelings are often outraged and their lives endangered or destroyed by the insolence and recklessness of such intoxicated persons. The undertying principle of the statute is that laid down by common law writers, to-wit, that a sane man, who voluntarily puts himself in such a condition as to have no control over his will or actions, must be held to intend the consequences springing therefrom. Puff. De Jur. Nat., lib. 3, ch. '6, sec. 4: 2 Co. Litt., 247a; 1 Hale, P. C., 32; 4 Bl. Comm., 20.

There is no question that, under the common law, intoxication was not deemed a defense for any criminal act, even though done while a person was insensible to his surroundings, unconscious of his acts, and had no memory or understanding (Reniger v. Fogossa, 1 Plowden, 19; Beverley’s case, 4 Coke, 123; Pirtle v. The State, 9 Humphrey, 663); and such was the law in England and America as late as 1835. The State v. John, 8 Ired., 333; The State v. Turner, 1 Wright (Ohio), 31; Cornwell v. The State, 1 Mart. & Y., 147; Rex v. Carroll, 7 Car. & P., 145.

During the past sixty years there has been a persistent, and in the English and many of the American courts a successful, effort to ingraft upon the common law doctrine the proposition that drunkenness ought to be admitted in evidence, not to excuse, justify, or mitigate the crime, but simply to throw light upon the mental status of .the offender, to enable the jury to find out what crime had been committed; or rather, by proving the absence of the necessary constituents of the .crime (such as malice, premeditation, intent, etc.), to show that no crime was committed.

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Bluebook (online)
18 L.R.A. 421, 20 S.W. 744, 31 Tex. Crim. 318, 1892 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evers-v-state-texcrimapp-1892.