Forrester v. State

248 S.W. 40, 93 Tex. Crim. 415, 26 A.L.R. 537, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 403
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1923
DocketNo. 7030.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 40 (Forrester 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
Forrester v. State, 248 S.W. 40, 93 Tex. Crim. 415, 26 A.L.R. 537, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 403 (Tex. 1923).

Opinion

MORROW, Presiding Judge.

Appellant is under conviction for the murder of B. F. Posey; punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of twenty-five years.

Posey and his wife were young people. They resided at Barstow, in Ward County, Texas. Forrester and Posey were old friends, and Forrester was unmarried and made the Posey house his home. They decided to move to Fisher County. Posey, with his household effects, went by railway to Rotan, while Forrester and Mrs. Posey went through the country in an automobile. They reached Rotan in advance of Posey and spent the- night at a hotel, occupying the same room, though not the same bed. This occurred on Easter Sunday preceding the homicide in June. Posey had located on a section of land near Rotan and all resided there in the same house until the day of the homicide — June 17, 1921. There was a contract of sale of a half interest in the land from Posey to Forrester. In the contract there was incorporated a reservation to the effect that before appellant was permitted under the contract to sell his interest, Posey was to be accorded the opportunity to buy it, and Posey in turn obligated himself to buy it in the event appellant became dissatisfied and wanted to sell.

On the day of the homicide, Mrs. Posey and her husband were starting to the railroad station in order that she might visit her father. The appellant had spent the previous night at Rotan, leaving there early in the morning, and went to his home, arriving there soon after the deceased and his wife had started on their trip to the railroad station. The parties met near the gate of the Herrod home. They *417 stopped, apparently conversing for a time and returned to the house, and soon after, both Posey and his wife were killed. Some conver.sations between the deceased and appellant were proved suggesting that they were about to dissolve their relations in accord with the contract mentioned. The deceased and his wife, while on their way to the railroad station, passed the home of the witness Herrod and were met by the appellant at the gate, he riding horseback.

The homicide took place in the house. Posey was shot in the breast one time. His wife was killed by blows from some blunt instrument. The evidence points to an iron bar found near the bodies with bloodstains on it as the weapon used in killing Mrs. Posey. There was some blood sprinkled on the face of Posey. A washpan with a bloody rag in it was found pushed under the kitchen cabinet. There was blood upon the dress of Mrs. Posey and down as far as her lap. There were several wounds upon her, either of which, according to the medical men, would probably have rendered her unconscious.

After the homicide, appellant went to the home of the Herrod family, about a quarter of a mile distant, and had a conversation with Mrs. Herrod. Out of Mrs. Herrod’s testimony there arose one of the legal questions presented on this appeal. Mrs. Herrod saw the parties meet at her gate, and apparently after having had the conversation, saw them go to their home. She hollered at them as they passed and Mrs. Posey replied with a smile, though the witness did not understand what she said. About an hour and a half later, the appellant came to the home of Mrs. Herrod and had a conversation with her. She was interrogated about this conversation in her direct examination by the State to the following extent:

". . . he told me at that time that he killed him; he says, ‘Frank tried to kill Maggie and I killed Frank.’ He didn’t tell me how he killed him; he didn’t tell me then that he shot him. Before he told me he killed Mr. Posey, I pressed him to know what was the matter, he kept wanting to know where Mr. Herrod was, and I had to go out and show him the direction in which to go; I told him where Mr. Herrod was.”

Mrs. Herrod went to the scene of the homicide and found Mr. Posey dead and Mrs. Posey still alive, and further testified on behalf of the State as follows:

“As quick as I could tell Mr. Forrester we had to have a doctor, he turned and started to his horse to go to ’phone for one; that left me and Mr. Herrod there. I couldn’t tell you how long we two was there together before any one came any more than as quick as Mr. Forrester could ride -to the ’phone and back. I didn’t see Mr. Forrester go all of the way. I saw him go and when I saw him come back, he was riding as hard as he could ride. Mr. Forrester got back about the time Mr. Gregory and the other men come, I don’t know which one got there first but it was about the same time.”

*418 , From the same witness on cross-examination, the appellant elicited the following testimony:

“I said that in about an hour and a half Mr. Forrester came back to my house. . . . He was on the horse; when he called me and I run to the door, his horse was reared up on his hind feet, standing almost perfectly straight on his hind feet. He seemed to me to be very much excited at that time. He asked me where Mr. Herrod was; he had not got off of the horse then. . . . He was so excited he couldn’t open the gate and he came thru then and still couldn’t think where Mr. Herrod was and I went around the house and pointed the maize out to him, showed him the maize and told him my husband was there. I asked him what was the matter. He was crying and I knew there was something the matter. . . . And I says, ‘Mr. Forrester, tell me what is the matter,’ and he says, ‘Something bad happened at Frank’s’, and I says, ‘Anything the matter with Maggie,’ and he says, ‘Yes, Frank tried to kill Maggie and I killed Frank,’ and he got on his horse and went to the field; he went just as hard as the horse could run, right across the field. I asked him, I says, ‘Is Maggie alive?’ and he says, ‘She was when I left.’ He went away to the field, he went just as hard as he could ride to where I told him I saw my husband last, ... I don’t remember anything he said when he came back to the house with reference to how the .killing occurred except he said he shot Frank; he told me Mrs. Posey called him, said: ‘Lord a mercy, don’t kill me. Oh, Mr. Forrester, run and help me,’ and he said he went to the kitchen door and couldn’t open that as readily as he wanted to and the north door in the west room was open and he went in that door, and when he got to where he could see, Frank hit Maggie one lick, and as he hit her, he said, ‘Damn you, I’ll kill you,’ and then turned on him and says, ‘Damn you, I’ll kill you too, and then after that he said he run in and caught hold of Mr. Posey and Mr. Posey slung him off back in the northwest corner of the kitchen and he says, ‘Then I shot him.’ As to whether he said that Mr. Posey drew the iron bar on him, he said, ‘He turned on me.’ I believe he did say something about having an iron bar in his hand at that time; I believe he said, ‘He turned on me with the iron bar.’ ”

The court instructed the jury on the law of murder, manslaughter and self-defense and in defense of another. These issues were submitted in a manner of which the appellant finds no fault, and we will add that the charge submitting these issues is open to no just criticism perceived by us .

The only serious attack upon the charge is that in which appellant complains of the omission to embrace in the charge an instruction to the jury to the effect that the State, having introduced the statement made by the appellant to the witness Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 40, 93 Tex. Crim. 415, 26 A.L.R. 537, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forrester-v-state-texcrimapp-1923.