Griffin v. State

274 S.W. 611, 100 Tex. Crim. 641, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 617
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1925
DocketNo. 9112.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 611 (Griffin 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
Griffin v. State, 274 S.W. 611, 100 Tex. Crim. 641, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 617 (Tex. 1925).

Opinions

HAWKINS, Judge. —

Defendant is under conviction for murder resulting from the killing of Hugh Riley, Jr. The punishment is confinement in the penitentiary for twenty-five years.

Defendant (Griffin) and Hugh Riley, Sr. had purchased considerable land together in Archer County. Riley, Sr. had conveyed his interest to his two sons, Hugh Riley, Jr. (deceased) and Ed. Riley. A partition had taken place between them and Griffin. In this partition a note for some thirty thousand dollars had been executed in favor of Griffin. Suit was instituted on this note. The case was tried and appealed. A controversy relative to the location of k land line had arisen between defendant and deceased. They had gone to Dallas some two weeks prior to the homicide to see the attorney representing deceased, seeking to settle all the controversies between them, including the land line. The attorney was expected in Archer County about June 1st to try to adjust matters. The homicide occurred May 16th. On the morning of the killing, defendant learned that deceased was having a fence built on land claimed by defendant. About noon he saw deceased in the town of Dundee and protested against building the fence. Deceased stated that he intended to complete the fence, whereupon defendant told him that he (defendant) would be at the place where the fence was being built and asked deceased when he would be there. There is disagreement in the testimony as to the exact language used by each of them, but there is no dispute that both said they would be there in the afternoon. After dinner defendant went to where two men (employees of deceased) were building the fence, and requested them to stop, telling them there was a dispute about the line. They quit work. Defendant came back across the river, as he explains, to watch and see if the fencers undertook to resume fencing. The State claims his purpose was to lie in wait for deceased. It is not disputed that defendant had told deceased to stay on his own land. Defendant says that in view of this request he expected deceased to approach on a different route from the one he did come. Deceased stopped his car near the corner of his and defendant’s land, and went down a fence line not in dispute, and on the inside • of deceased’s field. Defendant claims that deceased stopped his ear because he saw defendant, while the State claims he did so in compliance with his custom. The body of deceased was near the fence but on his own land about six hundred feet from the point where he stopped his car. Defendant claims that deceased got out of his car with a shotgun and rifle, both of which, together with some cartridges,„ were found near his body. The State *643 claims he was unarmed at the time of the shooting; that the guns and cartridges were taken out of deceased’s car after the shooting by defendant and “planted” by him near the body for defensive purposes. It is admitted by defendant that he drove his car down the bluff, and drove under the bluff to a point opposite where deceased was shot, where defendant left his car and came up near the top of the bluff. Defendant claims to have done this because he feared deceased would shoot when the latter got out of the car with his two guns. The State claims defendant did this to seek a vantage point in order to shoot deceased from ambush. It was some two hundred and sixty feet from the point under the bluff where defendant stood when he fired to the body of deceased. He was shot one time with a Winchester rifle. Defendant claim to have told deceased that he (defendant) had stopped the fence builders, and requested deceased to await the coming of his lawyer, but that deceased, instead of agreeing to this, expressed his intention of coming through the fence; that he dropped his shotgun against the fence and presented his rifle as if to shoot and did shoot about the same time defendant fired. The point of the killing was a half mile from where the fence was being constructed, and across the river from it. The land in dispute was claimed by defendant, had been in his possession, and used by him for a number of years.

The court charged the jury that if they found from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant, acting with malice aforethought, not in self-defense or not under circumstances which would reduce the offense to manslaughter, shot and killed deceased they would find him guilty of murder. Immediately following this instruction appears paragraph five of the charge which is as follows:

“A duel is a combat or fight engaged in by two persons with deadly weapons by agreement or prearrangement. Any person who wounds another in a duel from which such wounded person dies within three months thereafter, is guilty of murder. If you find and believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, H. S. Griffin, and the deceased, Hugh Reilly, Jr. engaged in a combat or fight with deadly weapons by agreement or prearrangement and that in such combat, if any, the defendant wounded the said Hugh Reilly, Jr. from wound the said Hugh Reilly, Jr. died within three months thereafter, then you will find the defendant guilty of murder and assess his punishment at death or by confinement in the state penitentiary for life or for any term of years not less than five.”

This charge was based upon Article 1146 of our Penal Code. We quote here Articles 1145 and 1145; they read:

“Any person who shall, within this state, fight a duel with deadly weapons, or send or accept a challenge to fight a duel with deadly weapons, either within the state or out of it, or who shall act as n *644 second, or knowingly aid or assist in any manner those thus offending, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and, upon conviction, shall be punished by confinement in the penitentiary not less than two nor more than five years.”
“If, in any duel hereafter fought in this state, either of the combatants be killed, or receive a wound from which he afterwards dies within three months, the survivor shall be deemed guilty of murder in the first degree and be punished accordingly.”

The instruction on duelling was objected to for various reasons, principally, (a) because the indictment did not charge duelling, hence the instruction was inapplicable; (b) because the charge did not clearly define the offense of duelling, and (c) because the evidence did not raise such issue. These objections raise legal questions not free from difficulty. One of them, arising in different form, was considered in Johnson v. State, 263 S. W. Rep. 924. While it would be interesting to examine into these matters, we think it not necessary to do so. Regardless of the other points, in our opinion, the one challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to raise the issue must be sustained.

We are not called upon to trace the history of the anti-duelling clauses in the Constitution and statutes of our State, nor the changes which have been made in the law and in the penalties until we find it reflected in its present form in Articles 1145 and 1146 (supra). It is well understood that the purpose of our Constitution and statutes regarding the matter was to discourage and discountenance the settlement of real or imaginary grievances (usually for reflections, real or apparent, upon one’s honor) by resorting to the old code dtiello. What that was is very clearly set out in Ward v. Commonwealth, a Kentucky case reported in 116 S. W. Rep. 786. We quote:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 611, 100 Tex. Crim. 641, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-state-texcrimapp-1925.