Gusman v. State

171 S.W. 770, 72 Tex. Crim. 258, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 632
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1913
DocketNo. 2872.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 770 (Gusman 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
Gusman v. State, 171 S.W. 770, 72 Tex. Crim. 258, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 632 (Tex. 1913).

Opinions

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, his punishment being assessed at eighteen years confinement in the penitentiary.

The evidence discloses that deceased and appellant had a fight on or beside the Santa Fe railroad track in the City of Temple at night somewhere in the neighborhood of 11 o'clock. There were two eye-witnesses, a Mexican woman and her daughter, named Acquilla. The girl states that on the night in question she was standing on the gallery and her mother was standing in the door of their residence, which was about sixty feet distant from where the fight occurred; that it was a dark night, between 10 and 11 o'clock. She recognized the defendant as one who was talking to the other man. When they were about in front of the residence they began fighting. She called her mother's attention to the fact that the defendant was hitting the other man but did not know what with, but they were fighting; that defendant threw the other man down and went to beating him. He fought him until he got him down. Before the train got there appellant wanted to put the deceased on the track, so she says, that the train might run over him, and deceased asked appellant not to put him on the track, but let him die easy. There was no light there but the train light that was coming north was close enough to throw light on the men, according to her version. She heard deceased ask for his money, and say, "Give me my money." Appellant went off and left him. She said: "I heard some people coming down the track, this man (defendant) and the other man were talking along the track, and when they got in front of the house then they started to fighting, and he (defendant) knocked him (Zabola) down and left him lying there on the track. This fellow (defendant) told him (Zabola) that he left him there forever and ever, and Zabola told him not to put him on the railroad track, but please leave him there, not to molest him, he was killed and nearly dead, and let him die easy, and not to put him on the track; and he told him to leave his money there, but he took his money and pulled right away. And when he saw this light coming in front of our house this fellow ran off right away. This man (defendant) did not say anything to Zabola when he asked him not to take his money, but just left. He took right down the fence going north, walking very fast. I saw them both *Page 260 fighting, but did not see whether Zabola hit this man or not. I did not see what the defendant hit the deceased with, but I saw the defendant have the deceased down on the railroad when he first throwed him down and got on him and beat him. In the beginning of the fight the defendant took hold of the deceased and threw him down. Had him by the shoulders, pulling him down backward, and he was behind him when he got him by the shoulders, in the beginning of the fight. He pulled him down like that and hit him against the rail, and just kept on beating him. I saw him beating him, but I do not know what with. No, sir, I did not see him stamping him with his feet; all I saw was him on top of the other man and beating him, but did not know what he was beating him with. That was a bright light in that vicinity, right in front of the train that was coming, but I don't know whether it was an electric headlight or not; it was a bright light. Just my mother and I were there at the time. My mother was right at the door, and I was a little to the side of the gallery. I was closer to the defendant and the deceased at the time the fight was going on than my mother was." The evidence further discloses that near the body of the deceased was found an open pocket-book or what the witnesses call a folding pocket-book, but no money in it. There is evidence going to show that deceased had nine dollars. This was not found on his person. There is also some evidence to the effect that deceased's feet were against one of the rails of the track and his head was against another one, and it would seem from the description of this condition of things there was an interval there between two railroad tracks, and that deceased's head was against one and his feet against the other. That is left, however, in considerable confusion, but as best we can know from this record that was the attitude of the body of deceased when found. Deceased had a couple of bruises on his head, and a considerable wound, a contused wound, on the side, and two or three of his ribs were broken. He died the following night. In the evening before his death — about five or six o'clock in the evening — he made a statement to the effect that appellant was the man who inflicted the wounds upon him. In order that no misconception may be had with reference to the body of the assaulted man, this is copied from the testimony of the witness, Tom Acquilla, father of the girl who had previously testified: "I saw the deceased, but did not have a conversation with him. When I first saw him he was laying just like that chair was the double of the track and he had his foot against the rails, right jam up to the rails but not over them, and his head this way, and his head from the other rail about that much, and his feet up jam to this rail." He declined to tell the witness who had inflicted the injuries upon him but told him he would tell him tomorrow. He seems not to have ascertained anything further from the deceased. The doctor who examined the deceased, testified, "he had injuries to his scalp, face and chest, and several broken ribs. There was a lacerated wound on the scalp about this position and a small one over the left eye, and *Page 261 several ribs were broken, it was impossible to tell how many. His skull was not broken, but there were some small bruises on the left side of his head, and some small bruises on the back of his head." A witness named Pegora testified he had a conversation with the deceased about 7 o'clock in the morning in which he told witness that he was going to die; he did not tell him how the difficulty originated; he said that Mauro Gusman was the man who killed him. "He did not tell me how Gusman beat him up or anything like that; he told me the two scars here was where he bit him with his teeth. I could hardly make out much he said. It was between ten and eleven o'clock Saturday night that he died." This is a sufficient statement of the case. Defendant fled and was arrested in New Mexico.

The indictment charged appellant killed the deceased by "unlawfully striking, beating, wounding and bruising the said E. Zabola with his hands and feet and with some instrument the nature and description of which is to the grand jurors unknown, and with an instrument of hard substance, a better description of which is to the grand jurors unknown, and by stamping him, the said E. Zabola, with his feet and by shoving, throwing, casting and bumping the body of said E. Zabola against the cross ties and rails of a railway track and against the earth and ground, against the peace and dignity of the State."

The court charged the jury in this connection: "If you believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, with a deadly weapon or instrument reasonably calculated and likely to produce death by the mode and manner of its use in a sudden transport of passion, aroused without adequate cause, and not in defense of himself against an unlawful attack, reasonably producing a rational fear or expectation of death or serious bodily injury, with the intent to kill, did unlawfully beat, bruise, wound and strike and thereby kill E. Zabola as charged in the indictment, you will find him guilty of murder in the second degree, and assess his punishment at confinement in the State penitentiary for any period that the jury may determine and state in their verdict, provided it be for not less than five years."

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Related

Blocker v. State
16 S.W.2d 253 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1929)
Lynch v. State
193 S.W. 667 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 770, 72 Tex. Crim. 258, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gusman-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.