Farris v. State

144 S.W. 249, 64 Tex. Crim. 524, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1912
DocketNo. 1455.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 144 S.W. 249 (Farris 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
Farris v. State, 144 S.W. 249, 64 Tex. Crim. 524, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 33 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

The appellant was convicted for unlawfully carrying a pistol and his penalty fixed at thirty days confinement in jail.

The testimony shows that late Sunday evening in the town of Palmer, Ellis County, Texas, the four-year-old child of the appellant threw a can of water on a boy sixteen or seventeen years of age, weighing about 120 or 130 pounds, while he was passing along the street. The child and the boy were both on the street; that the boy thereupon slapped the child down and kicked him; that this occurred about twenty steps from appellant’s residence. Appellant was in the back room of his residence engaged at the time and knew nothing of the occurrence until afterwards. The child was helped to his home by an older brother. He was then -crying and screaming and became sick. His mother fixed a pallet and placed him on it and he soon began vomiting, was pale and quivering. Appellant’s wife then went into the room where he was and told him of the occurrence and the condition of the child. He at once went into the room where the child was and saw his condition. His wife testified that she also then told him that three men had been out, within about twenty feet of their house—one of them had a knife open in his hand and said to her, “'Yes, we fixed your kid, and will do your old man the same way if he will come out.” That the appellant thereupon got his loaded six-shooter, held it in his hand, went out on the street of the town inquiring and hunting for the person who had mistreated his child. Although there were some twenty-five or thirty persons out on the street at the time, no one seemed to know, or at least no one told him who had mistreated his child. The person who had done so was not there and had left before the appellant ever came out of his house. Appellant carried the pistol in his hand all the time on this occasion. After failing to find the person who had mistreated his child he went back into his residence with his pistol. When the deputy sheriff heard of the occurrence and that the appellant had been out on the streets with his pistol in his hand he went to the residence and business place of appellant and asked him if he had a pistol out there in that crowd on the streets, and he said that he had; that what he had done was not a violation of the law because he had the pistol openly and unconcealed in his hand. The deputy sheriff replied to him that it was a violation of the law. He did not at that time claim to the deputy sheriff or tell *526 him anything about the main spring of the pistol being broken. The deputy sheriff asked him nothing about it. He testified further that he did not know that the main spring of the pistol being broken was any defense to carrying a pistol; that he" found that out for the first time when he employed an attorney on July 3.

In appellant’s favor his fourteen-year-old son testified that he knew the pistol that his father took with him out on the streets on this occasion; that the main spring of it was broken at the time and had been ever since October or November, 1910; that it was broken while they lived at Ferris in the section-house; that there was a screw, in October or November, 1910, on the .under side of the handle of the. pistol which was sticking out some little distance and this screw would hurt the hand of the section hands when they twirled and snapped the pistol; that one of the section hands, a German, took a screwdriver and screwed the screw into the handle of the pistol until there was none of the screw protruding, and the next time he twirled and snapped it the main spring broke; that he, the witness, was present when this happened, but his father was not; that the pistol had never been mended since then.

Mrs. Farris, the wife of the appellant, also testified that the main spring of the pistol was broken and it had been broken since February of that year (the case was tried and she testified on July 7, 1911; the carrying of the pistol was charged on April 1, 1911). That it had never been fixed since it was broken and that she knew it was in the same condition at the time appellant was charged with carrying it as it had been when the main spring was first broken and that “the pistol can not be fired or shot.” The appellant himself testified that he was not present when the main spring of the pistol was broken, but that he had never had it fixed since it was broken. That it was in the same condition at the time of the trial as it was when he carried it as charged. He testified that he knew the main spring was broken when he took it and went out there with it, and he could have used it as a club or bluff. He also testified that the pistol could not be fired at the time of the trial, nor when he carried it, nor at any time since the main spring was broken in October or November of the preceding year. A. L. Robinson, who was not related to the appellant, testified as to the condition of the pistol, the same as the appellant and his .wife had testified, and that it would not shoot and could not be made to fire. The appellant also proved by two witnesses that his general reputation as an honest, law-abiding citizen was good.

The pistol was identified by all of the witnesses on the stand, was produced, introduced in evidence before the jury and inspected and handled by them.

The State introduced several witnesses who testified that they were present and saw appellant’s child slapped and kicked; that there were some twenty-five or thirty people in the crowd about there at the *527 time; that when the appellant came out with the pistol he tried to find out who hurt the child and said he would shoot it out with them if they wanted to. Three witnesses for the State testified that while they were there they did not see three men in twenty feet of appellant’s home, nor hear them say to Mrs. Farris what she testified, shown above. None of them undertook to say that such thing did not occur, but that while they were there they did not see or hear any such thing.

In the first part of the court’s charge he correctly stated that the appellant was charged “with the offense of unlawfully carrying on and about his person a pistol,” giving the time and place and that the appellant plead not guilty. In the second paragraph he correctly told the jury what the statute was as to unlawfully carrying a pistol and the punishment therefor. In the third paragraph he told them that if they believed from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the .appellant had on his person a pistol as charged, but if they should further believe that at the time he had reasonable grounds for fearing an unlawful attack upon his person and that the danger was so imminent and threatening as not to admit of the arrest of the person about to make such attack, upon legal process, then he would not be guilty and that the jury should so find. That it was for the jury to determine from the evidence whether the fear of an unlawful attack was reasonable, and whether the danger was so imminent and threatening as not to admit of the arrest of the party about to make such attack upon such legal process. In the fourth paragraph he tells the jury that if they believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the appellant did at the time and place charged on premises not his own, unlawfully have on or about his person a pistol as charged, then he would be guilty and to so find him and fix his punishment. The fifth paragraph of the court’s charge is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 249, 64 Tex. Crim. 524, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farris-v-state-texcrimapp-1912.