Gaines v. State

148 S.W. 717, 67 Tex. Crim. 325, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 431
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1912
DocketNo. 1797.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 717 (Gaines 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
Gaines v. State, 148 S.W. 717, 67 Tex. Crim. 325, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 431 (Tex. 1912).

Opinions

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

—Appellant was given ten years in the penitentiary for murder in the second degree.

The statement of facts is in rather disjointed condition and does not present very intelligently the incidents, circumstances and facts attending the homicide. The first witness Alford testified that he was sometime called Charley Munroe, but that was his stepfather’s name. He said: “I remember -the occasion of Smith Gaines shooting Dick Vann on or about the 3d of August, 1907; it was in this county; Dick Vann is dead; died in the hospital; was right beside him when he died; both of us got shot at the same time,” This is the evidence in this *327 record with, reference to the death of Vann. We may suppose from this statement that Vann died from being shot by appellant. Appellant was tried in December/1911. When Vann died is not stated. This witness was not before the grand jury, and he testified that this shooting occurred in August, but he did not know what date. Perhaps to make this as connected as it is possible from this record, it can be stated that appellant was living in the house where the homicide occurred with a woman named Georgia; that she was his mistress. She testified she had rented the house and permitted appellant to stay there until he could get employment. He testified he rented the house and was sleeping with her and had been sleeping with her as his mistress, and was the father of her youngest child. A witness named Grady testified that appellant had rented the house from him, Grady, for which he paid him $6 a month, and that the woman Georgia did not rent the house; that after this difficulty and appellant’s disappearance the woman remained in the house for a while, but' did not pay the rent and he put her out. Alford testified that he went to appellant’s residence with some fish and requested a woman named Tiester to cook the fish. She said “I have no grease.” Alford said, “I have some at the house,” and she said, “I have no meal,” and he said, “I will tell you what to do, you take this twenty-five cents and let your little boy go to the store and get some meal and a bucket of beer, and the other dime, let him have that,” and she said, "All right,” and he said, "I will go down and get the grease and by the time I got back the little boy was. back from the store with the meal and beer, and so then I says, "Call the gentleman on the gallery and give him some beer;” that occurred just that way; did not know Dick Vann then; did not know none of the people there, only got acquainted with the people, Mrs. Tiester; was not over at Johny Smith’s yard a short while before this killing; I have done told you I was not drunk that night; did not have any pistol over there because I was in my shirt sleeves; did not buy any fish from Johny Smith, bought it in town; did not tell Johny Smith a short while before this shooting that I was going over there and that I was going to raise hell over there in that yard that night; never saw Johny Smith; have known Johny Smith about seven months; don’t know what he was doing at that time or where he was working.”

On redirect examination he said he requested Mrs. Tiester to ask the man on the gallery to have some beer. Mrs. Tiester was the sister of Georgia, the woman with whom appellant was living. Dick Vann, the deceased, had not made his appearance at that time. Subsequently he came. The woman Georgia said that Dick Vann was her brother-in-law, and introduced him to witness as her brother-in-law. Witness further testified: “We did not get the fish cooked before the shooting occurred; at the time the shooting occurred, Dick Vann says, I am going now, do you want to go around to the gate with me;’ I said, I won’t mind it;’ I walked on around the house; Vann went through *328 the house and I went on around and just as I got to the corner of the gallery, I heard somebody say something, but there was no man sitting on the gallery then because I was right at the corner, and I heard some one off that way say something. I don’t know who it was, and about that time they shot and when they shot, I turned; that was the first shot; I was in my shirt sleeves, and when they shot again, I turned plumb around, and when I got turned around and started off, the next shot struck me right there and I was going back the way I came from; at the time of the first shot Dick Vann ran out the front gate; did not see Smith Gaines then, the shot came from toward'the house, but like the opposite corner beyond where I was; I was on the east corner and the pistol shot looked like on the west corner; that is not a very large yard, but then you know there was another little cross fence and a big China tree; that shot seemed like it might be right around that China tree. At the time the shot was fired, I heard somebody make an oath but I don’t know who it was; he said, ‘I will kill you if you come a God damn step.’ Dick Vann was not doing any shooting, and had on a light coat.and a light pair of pants; when he ran out the gate there I did not see him with a gun; I was not that close to him any way; I did not do any shooting there, I did not have any pistol there.”

The woman Georgia testified under the name of Georgia Mills, and stated she rented the house, and sometimes appellant lived there; that he had been there about nine months at the time of the shooting; that he came to her broke; wanted a place to stay until he got a job. Vann came there about eight o’clock; knew Vann near about two or three years. “Smith Gaines came in just about half past five o’clock in the evening; had a conversation with him that evening, he came in there, he came running through the house with a six-shooter in his hand and I took it away from him and he said that he was going to kill Will Brown; talked to him and asked him what did Will Brown do to him, and he said, ‘Well, Brown had been talking about him carrying the six-shooter, trying to turn him up to an officer’ and he wanted to kill him for doing that; that is what he told me; I am slightly acquainted with Will Brown; Will Brown and Dick Vann were not the same men. Will Brown is another man all together; he stayed right back of us. Will Brown came over there that night when he heard the shooting; was not there before the shooting to my knowledge because I works out and don’t get home until late in the evening; was there when the shooting took place; was standing right opposite Dick Vann, that man that was killed; Dick Vann did not have a gun; he was not trying to shoot anybody; Smith Gaines shot Dick Vann; I heard Smith Gaines shoot once and I goes to the door and said, ‘Smith (I had begged him not to shoot on my place when he first came in the place with the gun; he was so mad he would do the shooting), please don’t shoot before my children, you don’t know you are liable to kill,’ and he said, ‘You will just' have to get them out of the way.’ I kept trying to get to him *329 to get the gun and he kept backing from me so that I could not get my hands on him; he shot Vann right here in the front leg.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 717, 67 Tex. Crim. 325, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-state-texcrimapp-1912.