Fleming v. State

274 S.W. 616, 101 Tex. Crim. 19, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 635
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1925
DocketNo. 8958.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 616 (Fleming 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
Fleming v. State, 274 S.W. 616, 101 Tex. Crim. 19, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 635 (Tex. 1925).

Opinions

MORROW, Presiding Judge.

The offense is murder; punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for life.

The facts, to some extent, are embraced in the opinion of this court in Ex parte Fleming, 97 Texas Crim. Rep. 305.

Annie Fleming, wifé of the appellant, received a gunshot wound from which she died.

From the dying declaration of the deceased, introduced by the State, we take the following:

“I got my things fixed up then so I could go down to mama’s. So after dinner he fooled around. I was not going to leave until after he left. So he took his shoes down to the ear and fooled around there and then started back, and I saw him talk to Mr. Anderson • awhile. So he came into the dining room and tried to get Sonny Boy to go over to Oil’s with him; he wouldn’t go, and he tried to force him to go. And Son told him he would go some other time; that he wanted to go down to Uncle Bill’s with me. So Sonny Boy kept coming into my room, and grandpa was sitting in his big chair, and I told Homer, so he was standing .right there in that door, and I told him that I was going to mam’s and would be gone several days. I saw him pull his pistol out, and I don’t know, I believe he fired one shot at grandpa. I don’t know. So I had an old piece of iron there in my room, and I grabbed it and tried to hit the pistol out of his hand, and Son just a screaming right at my heels. Ánd I saw the fire of the pistol, and he hit me and I fell right there on that rug by the dresser. And Mrs. Anderson and grandpa managed to get me up on the bed some way. And,I told grandpa to phone for the doctor, and I think Homer phoned for the doctor. ’ ’

*21 The tragedy took place at the home of O. B. Fleming, father of the appellant, at which it seems the appellant and his wife resided though they did not live together as husband and wife. They had a son, a small boy, who, according to the appellant’s testimony, it had been his custom to take with him on occasions.. On the day preceding the homicide, appellant and his wife had engaged in a quarrel about the whipping of a dog, and the father of the appellant had interposed. He and the appellant engaged in a quarrel. Immediately before the homicide, the appellant’s father was sitting by the fire with a knife in his hand which he was using to open pecans. Appellant intending to spend the night with his brother, asked the boy if he would like to go with him. Upon the boy indicating that he would, the father became angry, rose to his feet with the knife in his hand, and said that the boy should not go. According to the appellant, hot words followed, and his father, who was a vigorous and dangerous man, advanced upon the appellant with a knife in his hand, endeavoring to strike him. Appellant retreated, holding his pistol in his hand, and finally fired a shot for the purpose of deterring him but not with the intention of killing him. Appellant was engaged in backing out of the room and did not see the wife ■ at the time he fired at his father, but as he was backing out, she advanced upon him with an auger in her hand. According to the appellant, “She rushed up behind father with that auger and began striking at me. She come up to the right of my father and was striking at me with that auger, and when they come up I backed then into the room — backing away from both of them. They were both right at me and father was cutting at me with this knife.” The appellant’s wife struck him across the sleeves a time or two, and the blows were- knocked off. Appellant presented his gun at his father and commanded him to stop. She struck him and tried to knock the gun out of his hand, and also grabbed his hand and pushed it over her shoulder when the gun was discharged and she fell on the floor. He had not intention of shooting her at that time; neither did he have any idea of killing her. He was using the gun in order to prevent his father from cutting him with the knife. After his wife fell, he ’phoned for a doctor and did what he could to relieve her suffering. He also ’phoned for his brother. He was crying, broken down and scared to death.

The knife which the appellant claims was used by his father and the piece of iron which he claims was in the possession of his wife, were introduced in evidence.

It appears from a bill of exceptions that after the appellant had telephoned for a doctor and for his brother, but before either of them arrived and at a time when he was in tears and under excitement, he said to his wife: “You know that it was an accident and I did not intend to shoot you”, to which she replied: “I know it, *22 and I forgive yon and want you to forgive me.” The exclusion of this testimony is made the subject of complaint.

Mrs. Nora Anderson, who was present in the house at the time, described the encounter in substantial accord with the appellant’s version and testified that immediately after she was wounded, the deceased was placed in bed by the witness and O. B. Fleming, and the deceased said: “Mrs. Anderson, protect my child. I don’t care for him taking the boy.” The witness said that deceased then tailed to Mr. Fleming and stated that she was going to die; that she wanted Mr. and Mrs. Huffman to have the boy. The doctor who arrived a short time subsequent to this conversation said that upon his arrival Mrs. Fleming began to talk. She was excited and was calling for water. She said: “I am dying. Homer shot me in the stomach and I am going to die. The doctor said that she was suffering intensely at that time.

In qualifying the bill the judge adverts to the fact that the conversation took place before the arrival of Doctor Stone and Mrs. Brown and that only Mrs. Anderson and Homer, Fleming had testified to facts showing that the deceased was conscious of the approaching death. The court also said that Ollie Fleming may possibly have arrived; that he testified that he did not hear the deceased say that she was going to die. If we comprehend the record, the time that the declaration of the deceased was made was before the arrival of Ollie Fleming. Assuming that it was not, however, the testimony of the appellant and Mrs. Anderson was to the effect that the deceased declared that she was going to die, taken in connection with her desperate condition, would at least prima facie establish a predicate which would require the receipt in evidence of the dying declaration of the deceased at that time. See Underhill on Grim. Ev., Sec. 179.

Mrs. Brown, who arrived soon after the tragedy as did Doctor Stone, testified that the deceased made declarations showing that she was conscious of the impending death, and upon their testimony, at least in part, the dying declaration which we have quoted above, was received in evidence against the appellant. Whether the testimony was admissible as a dying declaration or not, it was admissible to contradict the State’s testimony embraced in the dying declaration which had previously been introduced. A dying declaration may be contradicted by the declarant’s statement or otherwise to the same effect as the testimony of a witness. Bishop’s New Crim. Proc., Vol. 2, p. 1033, sec. 1209. A dying declaration is hearsay but is received in evidence by reason of necessity in the ease. The conditions under which it is made preclude cross-examination and dispense with the necessity of an oath. The reasoning and authority upon which the practice is founded is stated by Judge Hurt of this court in Felder’s ease, 23 Texas Grim. App.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 616, 101 Tex. Crim. 19, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-state-texcrimapp-1925.