Goodwin v. State

126 S.W. 582, 58 Tex. Crim. 496, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 164
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1910
DocketNo. 462.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 582 (Goodwin 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
Goodwin v. State, 126 S.W. 582, 58 Tex. Crim. 496, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 164 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

RAMSEY, Judge.

The conviction from which this appeal results *498 was secured in the District Court of Limestone County on the 17th day of July of last year. The judgment carried a conviction of murder in the second degree, in which appellant’s punishment was assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of twenty years.

The indictment filed June 26, 1909, contained three counts. The first count alleged that appellant with malice aforethought did unlawfully kill Woody Clancy by shooting him with a pistol. The other counts were dismissed by the district attorney, and the case submitted to the jury on the first count charging appellant with murder in the usual form. There are a great many questions raised in the record, a few of which only we will notice. For the most part the case seems to have been well tried, and except in the respects herein noted we think no error was committed for which the judgment should be reversed.

The testimony shows that appellant was a young man about 20 years of age, and that he had been married but a short time before the homicide. One A. L. Eggleston, who is shown by the evidence to have fired the shot that killed Clancy, was a much older man. Appellant had lived in the community where the killing occurred many years. Eggleston had lived there but a few months. Clancy, who was killed, was a young man, and had'lived in the community for several years. There is some evidence that a few years before the killing there had been some disagreement between appellant and Clancy, but for a long time before the killing their relations seemed to have been not unfriendly. The evidence shows that there was very slight, if any, acquaintance between Eggleston and 'Clancy, and there is no pretense of any motive for the killing except it may be found in the conduct of the parties towards each other on the night of the fatal meeting. Jackson, who figures in the case, was an uncle of appellant, and lived between 100 and 200 yards from the residence of a negro where, on the night in question, some kind of festival was in progress. The evidence shows that appellant and Eggleston went to this negro’s house where there were a number of other negroes, and that appellant, at least, was engaged part of the time in gambling with them. These parties went to the house about dark on the night of the homicide. Clancy, with a number of other white boys, came to the house somewhere around 10 o’clock at night, probably later. The evidence discloses that something was said between Eggleston and Clancy about playing cards, when Clancy said, in substance, that he could beat Eggleston playing pitch, and he would bet anything from one dollar to one hundred dollars on that kind of a game. Thereupon Eggleston went off to get some cards, and soon returned with the statement that he could not find any, when deceased remarked it was all right, he did not want to play anyway, that he was just “stalling.” Something was said about this time about the presence of the other white men there other than appellant and Eggleston, and some suggestion was made that they might give information as to "the gambling going on, *499 when appellant, among other things, said that deceased was a tattler. Some short time before the killing, and while most, if not all of the white men, whose names appear in the record, were in the house, some four or five shots on the outside were heard. Soon after this appellant obtained a pistol from Eggleston and went outdoors, as he says, to make some investigation as to the firing, and that he carried the pistol with a view of protecting himself if assaulted. While outdoors appellant sought to buy some more cartridges for the pistol, and manifested some anxiety so to do. He did not, however, obtain any cartridges. Soon after this Eggleston appeared on the scene of action and said to appellant that he was going to run those yaps or pimps away from the house. That in this connection appellant called to him, “Come here and get this,” when Eggleston came and got the pistol, and that thereupon some inquiry was made as to what pimps he referred to, when appellant replied: “That damn Clancy boy.” That in the conversation Joe Holley, a negro, spoke up and said, “I think Mr. Woody (meaning deceased) is all right;” that he was in the house, and had told J alee that the boys ought not to gamble- while the white boys were there; that they might get some of them sent over to Coolidge, when appellant spoke up and said, “Ho; he is the very God-dam rascal.” That on obtaining the pistol from appellant Eggleston left, going around the house. It is shown by the testimony of Ivey Blunt, a young white man, that very soon after Eggleston had left that appellant said to him, “I had better go and stop that fellow; he is just about drunk enough to hurt somebody,” and started going in the direction Eggleston had taken. Appellant locates himself, and other witnesses place him, a few feet from and behind Eggleston. There is some slight testimony of an angry conversation between deceased and Eggleston. The issue of self-defense is raised mainly by the res gestae statements of Eggleston. Appellant, who was present, by his testimony scarcely raises this defense. It is not claimed in the evidence that appellant fired the shot or that he did anything at the very time of the shooting. Appellant expressly denies any conspiracy to kill deceased or any knowledge that Eggleston intended to kill him. There is some evidence in the record from which we think the jury were authorized to draw the conclusion that Eggleston’s act in killing Clancy was done and his purpose formed so to do on account of the matters involved in the angry conversation testified to by the witnesses. Immediately after the fatal shot was fired the evidence shows that appellant went in great haste to where his uncle, Mr. Jackson, lived, and soon thereafter returned, made some examination of deceased, and again left the house where the killing was done, going in the direction of Jackson’s place, and almost immediately returned with him. That Jackson and appellant were the first white people to reach the body of deceased, and the first persons to make any examination of him at all. Deceased’s body lay within but a few feet of the house in which was at least one window in a room where a number *500 of negroes were at the time. Immediately on getting to deceased Jackson and appellant both insisted upon the negroes getting in the house, letting down the windows and closing the blinds. Very soon after this some of the other witnesses arrived. Jackson had a lantern, and in examining the body of deceased and the location of objects immediately surrounding him, Jackson claimed to have found a knife, and made the statement: “Here is a knife,” when appellant replied, “Yes, here is a knife.” The examination of these witnesses, who were white men, plainly conveys the idea, and there seems to be at least some fair basis of truth in the suggestion that the knife had evidently been placed there by Jackson or appellant, or both, and that their object in making the negroes go in the house and remain there and let down the windows was to enable them thus secretly to place a knife near the body of deceased, and in such position as to imply that it was his knife, and to thus aid in manufacturing a defense. Hr. Jackson was produced as a witness for appellant, who frankly admitted his interest in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 582, 58 Tex. Crim. 496, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.