Gilmore v. State

241 S.W. 492, 91 Tex. Crim. 31, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1922
DocketNo. 6554.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 492 (Gilmore 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
Gilmore v. State, 241 S.W. 492, 91 Tex. Crim. 31, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 65 (Tex. 1922).

Opinion

MORROW, Presiding Judge.

—The judgment appealed from condemns appellant to confinement in the penitentiary for a period of twenty years for the offense of murder. Appellant shot and killed Lunsford Warrick. Besides murder, the issues of manslaughter, self-defense and provoking the difficulty were submitted.

Appellant was a son-in-law of C. I. Boules and resided at his hotel. The deceased was also his son-in-law.

There was evidence that the deceased and Pete Boules, a son of C. I. Boules, had told the appellant’s wife that his relations with a certain woman domiciled in t.he Todd Cottage were improper. The truth of this was denied by the appellant, and the relation of it was resented by him. His wife, upon investigation of the matter, became satisfied that it was unfounded. She persuaded the young woman in question, however, to return to her home about twelve miles distant, and took her there in appellant’s automobile. Appellant, upon learning of his wife’s intention, followed and overtook her. She was .also followed by C. I. Boules and the deceased. These parties met on the public road, and an altercation took place. Boules exhibited a pistol, Warrick, a knife, and appellant, according to some of the evidence, a pistol. On returning, Boules informed appellant that he could no longer reside at his home. Appellant and his wife agreed to depart and got in their automobile with that declared intention. They stopped at Hale’s Garage in the town where they all resided and obtained some oil and water for the car. While there, Pete Boules and the deceased appeared, and the homicide took place.

*33 It was the State’s theory that appellant acted upon malice engendered by the reports of his conduct made to his wife by the deceased and Boules.

Appellant was a constable and claimed to have caught the deceased and Pete Boules violating the liquor law; that they made demonstration of arms against him and threats in the event he revealed their conduct. There is other testimony that later the deceased declared that appellant must leave town: before the grand jury met and made •threatening declarations against him.

The theory advanced by the appellant is that his conduct was defensive and made necessary by the aggression of the deceased and his companion, Pete Boules, and that they were inspired by the desire to prevent his divulging their law breaking before the grand jury.

There were a number of eyewitnesses to the homicide. Pete Boules, for the State, said that he and Warrick went to the garage without the knowledge of appellant’s presence; that Warrick began the conversation and inquired where appellant and his wife were going, to which appellant replied that they were going to leave town but would return the following day. The deceased said: “You wanted me to two-time something, and now I am ready to do it.” Appellant asked him to go on, stating that they were going away. The deceased repeated his remarks, when appellant got his gun and said: “I came here to kill him and I am going to do it.” His wife called for help. Appellant walked to the curb and Warrick stepped in front of him and renewed his remark and said: “I can two-time anything you want me to, and slap you in the mouth while I do it.” Appellant said: “Don’t touch my wife,” when deceased struck him with a stick and appellant shot.

Several witnesses for the State, who were present, described the occurrence in the main coinciding with that of Boules, but some related additional facts and controverted some of the declarations imputed by Boules to appellant. One of them, Hale, responding to the request of Mrs. Gilmore for help (she at the time being between the appellant and deceased attempting to interfere) when Pete Boules, who was present, directed that he let them alone as it was a family trouble; that the deceased pushed appellant’s wife away, when appellant shook his finger at him and said: “Don’t push my wife.” The deceased pushed her again and appellant slapped him with his right hand. The witness saw nothing in his hand. The deceased struck appellant with a stick and appellant shot.

According to the testimony of appellant and his wife, the deceased told appellant that he had to whip or kill him before leaving town; that he (deceased) was going to two-time what he had said; that after being told that they were going to leave town and wanted no trouble; the remarks of the deceased were in substance repeated. Appellant said he would fight him like a man if there was nothing else to do, and got out of the car, when deceased started toward him. Appellant *34 turned in another direction, but the deceased confronted him. Appellant’s wife sought to interfere and called for help, and when Hale responded, Boules commanded him to desist. Appellant said that when Boules pushed Hale back, the deceased pushed appellant’s wife and said: “Damn it, get backthat appellant remonstrated with him and he again pushed his wife. When appellant’s wife said to appellant: “Don’t get your gun,” Boules said: “Damn him, let him have his God-damn gun. He hasn’t got the guts to use it.” On pushing the wife back, the deceased raised the scantling to strike, and when he struck, appellant drew his gun and fired.

The expressions of the deceased about “two-time” were repetitions of the language used- in the previous encounter upon the same day when deceased and his father-in-law and appellant had an altercation. It was explained that by the term “two-time” it meant repeat, and in the previous altercation, the matter of deceased connection with the report of appellant’s wife was called in question.

There was testimony that at that time appellant said, in substance, that he was too slow but he would not be in a subsequent occasion.

The propriety of charging ori the law- of provoking the difficulty and the manner of so doing is questioned. At' the time of the meeting at which the homicide took place, the evidence is uncontroverted that there was ill-feeling between the deceased and the appellant. At an earlier hour upon the same day, an encounter had taken place in which the deceased, in company with C. I. Boules, exhibited weapons in a threatening manner and used insulting language towards the appellant. In the same altercation appellant participated, he also, according to some testimony, exhibited a weapon. Following this, the appellant quit the home of C. I. Boules and was in the act of going with- his wife away from the town. The deceased and his companion, Pete Boules, approached them. From every angle, the testimony shows that- from the beginning, the attitude of the deceased was hostile and his language insulting. From some of the testimony, his demand that appellant fight him was imperative. Appellant, responding to the request of deceased, got out of his car. The words and conduct of the deceased continued threatening and insulting. The deceased was possessed of a piece of timber. Appellant’s wife sought to interpose, and upon her solicitation bystanders sought to do so, but were prevented by Pete Boules, the companion of the deceased, who was also hostile to the appellant. It was under these circumstances that the blows began to fall. According to some of the state’s testimony, appellant first struck the deceased. Deceased responded, striking appellant with a stick and was shot by the appellant.

The court, in his charge, treated the blows as the beginning of the difficulty.

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 492, 91 Tex. Crim. 31, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-v-state-texcrimapp-1922.