Ford v. State

142 S.W. 6, 64 Tex. Crim. 14, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 512
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1911
DocketNo. 1398.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 6 (Ford 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
Ford v. State, 142 S.W. 6, 64 Tex. Crim. 14, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 512 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was indicted and tried for murder, being convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at twelve years confinement' in the State penitentiary.

The evidence would show that appellant and deceased, Will Turner, had a difficulty on Friday evening, in which deceased gave defendant a whipping, and that on the next morning defendant went near the place where deceased was at work and shot and killed him. The State’s evidence is, that while deceased and some companions were at work in a field planting cotton, the shooting took place. Doc Williams testified: “Me and Will Turner were opening and Ed Brooks and Will Taylor were planting. What called my attention, Will Taylor looked up and seen appellant and hollered to him not' to shoot in the crowd, and hollered to Will Turner to look out. Sanders Ford was at the lower end of the bushes next to the fence. I don’t know how far he was from Will Turner when he killed him, but he wasn’t no piece. He was over inside the woods and we drove up to the fence, and got’ right at the fence and was ready to turn around at the time he shot. When Will seen him, he dodged behind me, and Sanders Ford shot him, and Will whirled to run and fell, and after he fell he shot him again, and after he fell he got up and began to run across the field. Will Turner ran about forty-three or forty-five steps, I reckon, before he fell and died. Sanders Ford was on the outside of the fence, right over in the pasture, in the woods. We had gotten nearly out to the end of the rows and were nearly ready to turn around, and Will Taylor, who was planting cotton, saw Sanders and hollered to him not to shoot. I was facing Sanders at the time, and when Will Taylor hollered, Will Turner jumped behind me ’ and-Sanders shot then. We both whirled to run and then he fell. I guess Sanders hit him when he was down on the ground. He was shot from here on up (indicating). After he quit shooting, we both jumped up and ran. I did not get hit. Will Turner did not have any gun or anything of the kind in his hand when he was shot. I didn’t see no gun. I could have seen it if he had one. He did not' have any. He did not attempt to draw a gun or pistol or anything. He did not say anything to Sanders Ford. Sanders Ford and Will Turner had had a fight the Friday evening before that, in the same field, up at the other side. That was in the field where Will Turner worked. When he got through fighting, Sanders got up and went' off and told Will Turner that that was all right, that he would see him again.”

*16 Will Taylor testified: “Sanders Ford killed deceased. We were all planting cotton that morning, and were going on out to the end of the row, and before we got to the end of the row—I was behind t'he planters, and we were all plowing on, going to the end of the row, and I was behind, and my mule looked up, and I looked ahead of the mule, and I seen this Sanders Ford on the outside of the fence, in the bushes. He "had a gun in his hand. I said, ‘Look out, Willie; look out, Sanders, don’t shoot in this crowd.’ Then Will went to dodging, and he dodged behind Dock Williams. Sanders said, ‘Oh, yes,’ and shot. Will was running and dodging behind Dock Williams. After Sanders shot the first shot Will kept' on running and dodging behind Dock, and they fell, and Will fell across him. I don’t know what Sanders was doing at that time, but he made the second shot. Will Turner did not make any effort to get a gun, and he did not' have any gun in his hand or about his hand. He didn’t have any gun on his person after he was killed and he ain’t had no gun yet.”

Deceased was shot in the hip, in the side and other parts of the body, one shot striking him in the forehead. Defendant testified in his own behalf: “On Friday evening I went over there to the Scott place, which Henry Slaton had in charge, and I went there about four o’clock, and when I left there, he told me to go and attend to my mule, and I told him I had to come through the Hutcheson farm to go home, and as I was coming through there, I seen these four men sitting on their plows about three or four hundred yards before I got to them, and I stops trotting, and I says I will walk along, and by the-time I get there they will be gone, and I walked along and rode up two or three steps from them, and I says, ‘Good evening,’ and they said, ‘Good evening,’ and Will Turner came walking towards me, and says, ‘Wait a minute,’ and I says, T ain’t got time,’ and he says, ‘Wait, I want to see about this mule,’ and I says, ‘You know this mule ain’t none of mine,’ and he says, ‘Do you want to trade?’ and I said, ‘No,’ and about that time, he slapped the mule side the head with his hand, and the mule went round and round, and threw me off, and I fell off, and got up, and says, ‘Look out,’ and-he slapped me, and when he slapped me, he hit me a time or two, and I says, ‘Let me alone,’ and Dock Williams says, “Will; I believe you are a coward,’ and about that time, he hit me again, and I thought he never would stop beating me, and I left there a crying, and with one hand over my eye, to keep the dirt from running in my eye, I went home and put up the team, and by that time the sun was down, and I didn’t go nowhere, but come on in the house. I did not say anything to Will Turner, but just left there a crying, asking him all the time to let me alone, and he said he would when he got ready. I never told him that I would see him again, or anything of that kind. I never breathed it. I stayed at Henry’s that night. Henry told me that evening what to do the next morning, and I got up as usual and got my gun and *17 went on down in the pasture, and-when I got outside of'the farm, I was in the pasture, and I kept right on. That was a lane and the trail was in it. It was in the Scott field, and I went on down there, and kept on around and was in the old road, coming right down the side of the wire fence, and had never stopped walking, and this here Will Taylor was coming driving up, and all of them, and he says, ‘Look out Will, there is Joker, shoot, shoot!’ and Will Turner, he turned and when he turned, he made the first fire, and then I shot. He fired at me with a pistol, a thirty-eight, and then I fired. After the fight was over, I wheeled and come on back to the house. I saw Frank Bates just as I walked up from down there, and run up from over there up to the house. When I saw Mr. Bates, I did not know whether the man was dead or not. I told Mr. Bates who shot first, and I told Mr. Bates what I shot him for. I didn’t have no intention of killing Will Turner, or nothing of that kind. I was just aiming to shoot him in the leg somewhere. I had bird shot in my gun, and didn’t aim to kill him, and was not thinking about meeting him down there at all at that time.”

This testimony presents the theory of the State and defendant. Defendant is corroborated by no witness in the statement that deceased was armed. However, a witness, John Shannon, testified that on Sunday, before the killing on Saturday, deceased had told him he was going to whip defendant, and remarked, “If I start at him, I will whip or kill him,” and that he had informed defendant of this threat. F. T. Bates testified that he saw defendant shortly after the killing, and the defendant first told him that he shot deceased because deceased had beaten him up the evening before. The witness says that after he had told defendant he was not going to let him leave, defendant then claimed that deceased had shot at him at first with a pistol.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 6, 64 Tex. Crim. 14, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-state-texcrimapp-1911.