Gill v. State

247 S.W. 855, 93 Tex. Crim. 496, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 717
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1922
DocketNo. 7134.
StatusPublished

This text of 247 S.W. 855 (Gill 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
Gill v. State, 247 S.W. 855, 93 Tex. Crim. 496, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 717 (Tex. 1922).

Opinions

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Franklin County of burglary, and his punishment fixed at two years in the penitentiary.

As we regard the record appellant’s principal contention is that his application for a continuance was improperly refused. He was indicted, arrested and made bond on February 16, 1922. His application was *498 presented to the court on March 9th. and set forth the fact that he desired the testimony of his sister who resided at a given street and number in Los Angeles, California, to aid him in the establishment of an alibi, it being alleged that his sister was visiting appellant’s home in Texas on the occasion of the alleged burglary, and that on the night alleged she knew and would testify that appellant came to his home between eleven and twelve o’clock and was not away from it until after the sister had gone to bed after one o’clock. The materiality of this testimony was set out as dependent upon the proposition that the State’s proof would attempt to show that the alleged burglary was committed between eleven and one o’clock, and that appellant would prove by other witnesses where he was prior to the time he came home. In our opinion the application for continuance fails to show diligence. We have stated that appellant made bond on February 16th. It is admitted that no affidavit or interrogatories were filed until February 21st, and it appears that the, only effort then made to secure service of a copy of said interrogatories upon the State’s attorney, or to ascertain his attitude in regard thereto, was a direction to the district clerk to have said attorney served with such copy. It appears from the record that the State’s attorney did not care to cross said interrogatories and that he was willing to waive service of a copy. No further effort in the matter on the part of appellant appears until the latter part of the week on which the interrogatories were filed with the clerk. The commission was not procured and forwarded to Los Angeles, California, to take said deposition until February 27th. It was in evidence that a letter would go from Mt. Vernon, Texas, to Los Angeles, California, in three days and vice versa. The deposition had not been returned or heard from at the date of trial, which begun on March 9th and concluded on March 10th, nor had same apparently been heard from at the end of the term of court. Our statute and decisions place upon one applying for a continuance the burden of showing by exact, definite and certain averments the exercise of diligence, and one who does not apply for process promptly or who fails to set forth in his application for continuance distinct averments of diligent efforts to secure the presence of the witness or his deposition, .does not bring himself within the rule. The term of the trial court ended by law on March 11th, or about three weeks from the date of the arrest of the accused. For him to wait nearly half that time before sending a commission off to take the deposition would not be diligence. In this matter we do not think appellant has shown himself to be without fault.

The burglary was alleged to be that of a building occupied by and belonging to Mr. Prather. Same was used for a bakery and other purposes. The owner of said house testified that it was burglarized on hallowe’en night, same being October 31, 1921, and that entrance was effected by forcing the lock of a door; that the money drawer was extracted from his safe in which there was silver, paper money *499 and checks. Among other moneys in said drawer was a black nickel of date 1903, and a dented and chewed nickel and a half dollar with the initials “A. L,.” cut on it. One Smith Walker was a witness for the State and testified that he and appellant had agreed to enter the building of Mr. Prather and obtain his money, and that on the night in question, after discussing the best way to enter the store, and after being asked by appellant whether he had better cut the screen or break the lock, and after having told appellant that the lock was small, that appellant left him to keep watch and took a pair of pliers and went down in the direction of the bakery; that witness had agreed to whistle if he saw anyone coming, and that presently appellant returned and told him that the box of money was sitting near an iron post in front •of the bakery, and that witness, at the place indicated by appellant, found the money in the box and took it in appellant’s car and they went out to a certain place and divided it, witness taking the paper money and nickels and appellant taking the half dollars. Appellant has a bill of exceptions complaining of the testimony of a witness who testified that on the afternoon of October 31st he paid to Mr. Prather a certain black nickel, and that on the morning after the alleged burglary Smith Walker paid said nickel to witness. The objection made was that the transaction was not in the presence or hearing of appellant and was hearsay as to him. The objection is not sound. Such evidence is in no sense hearsay. The fact that appellant was not present when the transaction took place is no ground for the rejection of such evidence. It was but the narration of the facts developing the offense charged and such objection is as if one -objected to testimony of the finding of the body of one murdered, or a description of the wounds on the body, or the finding of stolen property and its return to the owner, upon the ground that such evidence was of transactions transpiring in the absence of the accused. The same character of objection appears in appellant’s bills of exception Nos. 4, 6, and 7.

That on another occasion State witness, Smith Walker had impli•cated another party in a crime charged against him, and had later admitted that the other party was not so connected therewith, would not be a provable fact on this trial. Such testimony comes within no method of attacking a witness known to us. Said witness Walker was tainted by his admitted attitude as an accomplice, and unless other •evidence in the record tended to connect appellant with the crime, he •could not be convicted on Walker’s testimony.

Bill of exceptions No. 5 complains of a leading question. As we gather it the question set out seems to evidence a desire on the part •of the State’s attorney to find out if he correctly understood what the witness had already testified. We do not think it error under the facts of this case to repeat what the attorney understood to have been ithe testimony of the witness and ask him if that was correct.

*500 No sufficient facts are stated in bill of exceptions No. 8 to apprise us of the merit of the objection that the State was leading and prompting the witness. The question objected to was, “You don’t say now that it was not eleven-thirty, do you?” The only information given us of the setting of this question as it was asked appears in the statement that appellant had laid a predicate to impeach the witness as to the time of night he claimed the burglary had taken place. This leaves us without power to weigh the objection. The rules require that sufficient facts be stated to let us know and make clear to us the soundness of an objection.

Bills of exception Nos. 9 and 10 complain that witnesses were allowed to testify who had been in the courtroom, the rule having been invoked. Neither bill shows that the witness had heard any of the testimony relative to matters sought to be elicited from him.

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Related

Crews v. State
31 S.W. 373 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1895)
Bass v. State
127 S.W. 1020 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1910)
Cabrera v. State
118 S.W. 1054 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 855, 93 Tex. Crim. 496, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-state-texcrimapp-1922.