Hammett v. State
This text of 209 S.W. 661 (Hammett 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.
Opinion
Appellant was charged in the court below with abortion. The indictment contained two counts, one charging the use of a metallic instrument, and the other the giving of drugs and medicine. The court submitted only one count; the one charging the use of a metallic instrument to effect the abortion. The jury found appellant guilty and fixed his punishment at five years confinement in the penitentiary.
Appellant asked several special charges, his special charge Ho. 1 setting forth the law of circumstantial evidence as shown by his bill of exceptions Ho. 7, but an examination of the facts in evidence satisfies, us that no error was committed in refusing this charge and refusing to charge on circumstantial 'evidence. The prosecuting witness testified fully, to the acts and conduct of both the appellant and the physician who was procured by appellant to perform the abortion upon her, and this would take the case out of the rule of circumstantial evidence.
In his special charge Ho. 2, as shown by his bill óf exceptions Ho. 8, appellant asked that the-jury be charged the law of accomplice testimony, Claiming that the prosecutrix was in law an accomplice, and that that phase of the law should be submitted to the jury. The question has been passed upon so frequently in this State that it is no longer an open one. The prosecutrix was not an accomplice. Willing-ham v. State, 33 Texas Crim. Rep., 98; Miller v. State, 37 Texas Crim. Rep., 575; . Hunter v. State, 38 Texas Crim. Rep., 61; Gray v. State, 77 Texas Crim. Rep., 221, 178 S. W. Rep., 337.
Appellant asked special charge Ho. 4, which was given by the court, and will be noticed later in this opinion.
Appellant complains by his bill of exceptions Ho. 1 of the action of the trial court in instructing the entire panel of the jury, prior to calling any cause for trial, upon certain general phases of procedure and *639 trials. We have examined the authorities cited by appellant’s counsel, and have carefully examined the remarks of the court to the'jury, and while we agree with the holdings in the cases cited, we do not find anything in the instant case that was in anywise calculated to prejudice the rights of any person accused of crime whose ease might be set for trial during that week.
Appellant’s bill of exceptions Ho. 3 complains of the action of the trial court in refusing to postpone the trial in order to enable the appellant to obtain the testimony of Dr. Earnest, who was indicted by separate indictment for the same offense. The qualification of the trial court upon this bill shows that both appellant and Dr. Earnest filed statutory affidavits, each asking that the other be tried first, and that, in accordance with the law the court had in such case put the one to> trial whom he thought best, and that one being the appellant, who had! had a trial resulting in a hung jury, and thereafter Dr. Earnest had. been tried and convicted, and this instant case was the second trial of." appellant. As explained by the court we see no injury in the court’s, action.
Appellant’s bill of exceptions Ho. 4 complains of the charge of the’ trial court on the law of principals, the contention being that same-was erroneous because it authorized the jury to find the appellant guilty as a principal if he consulted or advised the doctor, who actually performed the abortion, to commit same. It is not necessary for one to be present when an offense is actually committed in order to make him a principal. Where a criminal enterprise is launched by the active participation and presence of certain persons, and same moves on to its completion under the visible direction of some and in accordance with the plan of all, and the case be one in which it is impossible for the jury or the court to tell at what stage of its progress the forbidden thing was actually accomplished, that is, whether in the initial chapter where all who engaged in the criminal enterprise were personally present and participating, or whether at some later stage, then neither the jury nor the appellant could have been benefited by an attempt to disconnect such. continuous parts of the whole criminal undertaking by giving a charge as to principals applicable to one part of the same, and accessories as to. the other part. In this case no evidence was offered of any abandonment of the criminal accomplishment of what was undertaken and possibly finished in appellant’s presence. The statute forbids the use of any violence or means whatsoever by which an abortion is procured,, and the presence of the accused at the moment, or on the occasion of: the premature birth of the foetus, is not necessary to make him a principal. Hor is it necessary that he should he present at each one of a series of treatments in one of which, or as a result of all of which, the destruction of the life of the embryo is accomplished. In this case the criminal scheme was the appellant’s. He was a married man who had unquestionably been for a long time criminally intimate with the *640 prosecutrix, a young woman of twenty. When they both concluded that she was pregnant, he took her to Ranger, in the neighboring county of Eastland, took her to a hotel as his wife, left h'er there after spending the night with her, and came back and told her he had talked to Dr. Earnest, and took her to Dr. "Earnest’s office. There he told the physician who she was and what they were there for, and remained present while this physician used his instruments and other treatment upon the person of the prosecutrix. She remained in Ranger three or four -days, visiting the doctor twice a day, and testifies that on the occasion •of her second visit he, the doctor, told' her that she had had a baby ¡started and that he got it. The next day appellant returned to Ranger to see how the enterprise was progressing, and consulted 'with her about each successive thing that was done in connection therewith. At just what precise moment or day the desired result was accomplished is not shown by the record, and probably could not be known. It was shown, however, that appellant wrote to the doctor about the matter later, and ¡also paid him. In this state of case the complaint of the court’s charge •on principals, because it authorized the jury to find the defendant guilty as a principal if he counseled or^advised the doctor who committed the abortion, is hypercritical. It was not necessary, as stated, for one to he present at each treatment, nor to remain continuously with the other parties to the enterprise where, as in this case, it is clear that what was done was the result of what in law is denominated a conspiracy. What we have just said applies also to appellant’s bills of exception Hos. .5 and 6.
Appellant’s bill of exceptions Eo. 11 complains because he was not allowed to prove by County Attorney Bean, testifying as a witness, as io whether or not prosecutrix made certain statements contained in a ■written document purporting to be the examining trial testimony, from which the examination was being had. The trial court sustained objections to these questions, holding that the instrument itself was the best evidence of its contents. There was no error in so holding. The written instrument was later introduced in evidence by the State.
We think no error was committed in allowing prosecuting witness to ■state that on the occasion of one of her treatments for this abortion Dr. Earnest stated to her, not in the presence of the appellant, what amount of money appellant had paid him.
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209 S.W. 661, 84 Tex. Crim. 635, 4 A.L.R. 347, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammett-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.