Guyer v. State

36 S.W. 450, 37 Tex. Crim. 489, 1896 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 277
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 17, 1896
DocketNo. 1075.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 450 (Guyer 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
Guyer v. State, 36 S.W. 450, 37 Tex. Crim. 489, 1896 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 277 (Tex. 1896).

Opinion

HENDERSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of the theft of cattle, and given two years in the penitentiary, and prosecutes this appeal. There is but one bill of exceptions in the record in this case, and it raises the question as to the sufficiency of the court’s charge on accomplice testimony. The court charged the jury on the subject of accomplice’s testimony, but confined the charge to one witness by name —D. O. Love. Appellant contends that the evidence in the case equally showed that John Pace and Billie Glass were accomplices, and that the court’s charge should not have been restricted to Love, but should have embraced said two witnesses, or have been a general charge on the subject of accomplices, without naming any one, and left the question as to who were accomplices to be determined by the jury. The record in this case shows substantially, as follows: The head of cattle alleged to have been stolen was the property of one A. H. Pearce. The sheriff suspected that some persons were engaged in cattle stealing “over on the Sandy and Golden Rod,” in Wharton County, and commissioned one D. O. Love to detect such parties. Love went over in that county, and stopped at one W. B. Collingsworth’s, and stayed all night there. At the same time the defendant (A. D. Guyer) and A. O’Brien came to said house, and stayed all night. The defendant and O’Brien were ostensibly going down the river to get some corn, and Love informed Collingsworth that he was expecting defendant, and O’Brien to come over and get corn on the river. The witness, Love, states that they left Collingsworth on the morning of the 4th of *491 March—Guyer, O’Brien, and himself—all three on horseback. Defendant and witness had guns, but O’Brien had none, but had some sacks tied behind his saddle, and a hatchet in one of the sacks. Defendant told him he wanted him to help him kill a beef. After they left the house the parties separated, Guyer going out into the prairie to-run the beef into the woods, and O’Brien and witness went into the bottom, and in a short time witness heard a gun fired, and went there- and found a cow dead. That he did not know who fired the shot. The cow belonged to A. H. Pearce. O’Brien, Guyer, and witness skinned the cow, and quartered it up, and put the meat in the sacks O’Brien had on his saddle. The defendant put the hide, heart and a piece of the fat in one sack, and hid it near the road. The parties then took the meat, to the river, and the witness “went up the river a little way, and called John Pace, and had him bring his boat over, and cross the meat for us. O’Brien left Guyer and myself at the river, and went away, saying he was going to Wharton,” and Guyer and witness went over with the beef in the boat. Witness hired a wagon and team from John Pace, and defendant and witness took the beef in the wagon to Billie Glass' house, and defendant sold the beef to Glass for $12.50, and Glass gave him an order on Payne, at Wharton, for the money. “I wrote the. order, and Glass signed it.” They then took the wagon and team to-Pace, and got their horses, and came to town. Witness shows that he got $9 in money from the sheriff to aid in ferreting out that particular transaction. The sheriff, Rich, shows that he had paid the witness, D. O. Love, for ferreting out cattle stealing in that county, $140. Sheriff Rich also says that he instructed him (Love) not to lead any one into trouble, but to get in with them, if he could, and not to contrary them, but do as they wished him to do. The witness, John Pace, testified that, on the Sunday before the 4th of March, Sheriff Rich came to him, and told him, if anybody came and wanted him to put any beef across the river, “to do it and keep my mouth shut, and ! told him I would”; that when D. O. Love came to the river, and called him to bring his boat over and cross some meat for him, he took the boat over, and Mr. Love, defendant, and witness put the beef in the boat, and put it across the river; that he then hitched up his team to his-wagon, and Love and the defendant drove off with the beef in it. Love paid him $2 when he came back that evening, in the wagon,, with the team. The witness, Billie Glass, testified that Sheriff Rich-came to his house a few days before the beef was brought there by Love and the defendant, and told him there would be a young man there to sell him some beef, and that Love would come with him, and for him to buy the beef; that in a day or so after this witness got uneasy, and went to Wharton to see Rich about it, and told him that he would rather not have anything to do with it, as they were all white men, and he wanted to get out of it, and Rich told him to go ahead and buy the beef, and he would stand between him and trouble. He testified that when the parties brought the beef to him he bought it for *492 812.50, and gave defendant an order to Mr. Payne, in Wharton, for the amount. A. O’Brien testified, for the defendant: That Love came to his house about a week before the alleged theft, and remained there several days. While there he told defendant and witness, in the presence of his wife, daughter, and son Fred, that he (Love) had about 8180 in the bank, and that he intended to go into the butcher business. He also said that he had three or four fat cows down there, “and when we went over after corn, if we would help him to kill one of the cows, he would- help” defendant and witness “get our corn across the river.” That they started on the morning of the 28th of February down on the river, but found the creek up and abandoned the trip. On the 3rd of March, defendant and witness started again to the river for the corn. They went as far as W. B. Collingsworth’s, and stayed all night. D. O. Love was there. On the next morning defendant and witness were at the lot, and Love came out and said: “I want you fellows to help me kill that beef today.” Witness told him defendant might go, but that he had to go to Wharton on business. Love insisted that both should go and help him, and that he would help them to get the corn over the river. That they all got ready, and left the house together, but before leaving the house Love picked up a hatchet, and stuck it down, handle first, in his pants. “I tied the sacks I brought to get the corn in behind my saddle.” Guyer and Love both had guns. Witness had none. When they got to the edge of the bottom, Love sent the defendant out on the prairie to hunt for the cow. Love and witness went in the bottom, and struck a bunch of cattle, and Love ran a cow down the bank of the river, and into a gully that ran into the river, and shot the cow down. That Love and witness commenced skinning the cow, and, when they had nearly finished skinning it, defendant rode up, and helped to finish skinning the cow. That they then cut it up, and put it in the sacks, and Love put the hide, heart, and a piece of the fat, and the hatchet in one sack, and hid it near the road, and left it there, where it was subsequently found. That they took the balance of the meat to the river. Love went up the river, and called a man, and asked him to bring his boat over and cross the meat. Love and defendant' went over with the meat in the boat, and witness went to town. The testimony of Mrs. A. O’Brien and F. A. O’Brien, the wife and son of the former witness, corresponds with the testimony of the witness, A. O’Brien, as to what transpired at the house of said A. O’Brien on the 28th of February. The defendant, Guyer, testified in his own behalf, and his evidence corresponded with that of A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 450, 37 Tex. Crim. 489, 1896 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guyer-v-state-texcrimapp-1896.