Gamble v. State

193 S.W.2d 680, 149 Tex. Crim. 282, 1946 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 748
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 1946
DocketNo. 23291.
StatusPublished

This text of 193 S.W.2d 680 (Gamble 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
Gamble v. State, 193 S.W.2d 680, 149 Tex. Crim. 282, 1946 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 748 (Tex. 1946).

Opinions

GRAVES, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of the murder of Mrs. Lydia McBride, and given the penalty of death, and he appeals.

*284 Mrs. Lydia McBride was a widow fifty-five years of age, and an employee of a substation post office located at Meacham Field, a short distance north of Fort Worth, Texas. Her hours of work were from 3:30 P. M. to midnight. On June 15, 1945, the proof shows that she rode a bus into the city of Fort Worth at about 12:35 A. M. At about 2:00 o’clock A. M. she was seen on the Polytechnic bus in such city, and alighted therefrom at a point near the D. McRae public school. At about 6:15 A. ,M. thereafter her dead body was found about one and a half blocks from where she had alighted from the bus, the body giving evidence of having been beaten with some blunt instrument, crushing the skull in two places, and the presence of male sperm in her parts evidencing the fact that she had been criminally assaulted. Eight days thereafter appellant was arrested at the nearby town of Maypearl, and he was charged with the offense of murder.

The record contains seven bills of exceptions, and we will attempt to discuss them in their numerical order.

Bill of exceptions No. 1 contains naught save appellant’s motion for a new trial, it being but a repetition of what the remaining bills of exceptions show and need not be discussed.

Bill of exceptions No. 2 relates to the following occurrence: Mrs. O. J. Atkinson, a witness for the State, was being interrogated upon her cross-examination as follows:

“Q. You haven’t in other words talked with anyone that you know of about your testimony up here today, is that right? A. No, I haven’t talked---

“Q. Then you just dropped in as a witness, did you? A. No, no.

“Q. How come you up here? A. Just because this colored boy chased me and I reported it.”

This testimony as shown by the last above set out answer was objected to “as the voluntary statement of the witness and not in response to the question,” which objection the court overruled, and in a qualification to the bill we find the following proceeding the first quoted statements:

“Q. Of course, you have talked with Mr. Parker and many people about this case, haven’t you? A. Yes.

“Q. You have talked to a lot of people about the case, haven’t you? A. Not too much, no^

*285 “Q. Well, you have talked with these lawyers here before they put you on the stand there, didn’t you? A. No, I haven’t talked to them today.

“Q. You haven’t talked with anyone up here at the court house that you know anything about before they put you on this stand? Is that right? A. Today?

“Q. Yes. A. No, I haven’t talked with anyone.

“Q. Yesterday? A. No, not yesterday.”

In connection with bill No. 2 we here advert to bill of exceptions No. 3, which last bill shows the following questions to the same Mrs. O. J. Atkinson by the State, after she had previously identified the appellant as being the person she had seen near the scene of the alleged crime just a short time prior to the time the offense is claimed to have occurred:

“Q. Where was he when you last observed him on that night? A. That night? He was just a few feet from me. •

“Q. And you say you live how far? A. Two and one-half blocks.

“Q. From where you first saw him? A. That’s right, and he chased me all the way down the street.” The last part of this answer was objected to as follows:

“We object to that voluntary statement of the witness” whereupon the court said: “I sustain the objection to the last answer of the witness as not being responsive to the question asked;” and appellant’s attorney reserved an exception “to making a statement to the jury,” at which time the court instructed the jury to “not consider the last answer given by the witness for any purpose.”

We are impressed with the proper allowance of the answer of the witness as shown in bill No. 2, as the presence of appellant near the scene of the crime and at about or near the time Mrs. McBride met her death was material matter as well as appellant’s conduct in pursuing this lady might have some bearing on what caused some one to attack and outrage the deceased lady. Again, we do think that in bill No. 3 this answer was not responsive to the question, and the careful trial court was correct in withdrawing the answer from the jury. Surely no error can be predicated on the “making of the answer” since the same statement was properly admitted in the matter shown in bill No. 2. . ,. . . .....

*286 Bill of exceptions No. 4 brings forward appellant’s objections to the court’s charge, his first objection being because the weapon offered in evidence as the one used in the assault upon .the deceased was not a deadly weapon per se, nor one ordinarily calculated to produce death, and appellant requested a charge herein on an aggravated assault. To the same effect are "paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of such objections, and we note that the trial court gave such a charge to the jury; he also charged on an intent to kill in connection therewith. Appellant also reserved an exception to the court’s refusal to charge the jury on the law of self-defense. It will be observed that appellant did not testify in the trial of this case before the jury, but the request to charge -on the law of self-defense is based upon statements appearing in the confession of appellant introduced before the jury at this -trial, one of such statements found therein being that when he first appeared before the deceased lady, “I walked out on the sidewalk and the lady hollered ‘Oh’. She had her purse in her hand down by her side and she jerked it up with both hands against her breast. I struck her on her head with the iron pipe. "When I hit her the first time she fell on the sidewalk, and I says, ‘Oh, my goodness,’ and grabbed her up in my arms.” It is doubtless contended that the gesture of the lady in grasping her purse with both hands and bringing it up against her breast was an indication of an intent or purpose to strike appellant with such purse, but we are not impressed with such reasoning. There was no hostile move nor intent evidenced further than this involuntary gesture of self-protection. Again it is insisted, however, that a further statement found in such confession was a fair basis upon which the court should have given a charge on self-defense, the statement being as follows:

“* * * There were some other things in this purse which I threw away as I was going east on Millett St. towards my mother’s. I was looking for a pistol in this purse. I went on to my mother’s that night and stayed all night.”

There appears nothing further in such confession relative to such statement, and there is nothing shown that would evidence a thought upon appellant’s part that Mrs. McBride was attempting to procure a pistol from this pocketbook with which to do him bodily harm. There is no proof that a pistol was in such "pocketbook, and appellant did not testify before the jury in this 'cause.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.2d 680, 149 Tex. Crim. 282, 1946 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamble-v-state-texcrimapp-1946.