Hasley v. State

222 S.W. 579
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 1920
DocketNo. 5836
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 579 (Hasley 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
Hasley v. State, 222 S.W. 579 (Tex. 1920).

Opinion

LATTIMORB, J.

Appellant was convicted of burglary in the district court of Mata-gorda county, and bis punishment fixed at two years’ confinement in the state penitentiary.

A motion to quash the indictment is based on the-fact that there was no other description of the house in question, save and except that it was then and there under the control of E. J. Spence. ' If it is necessary in a burglary indictment that it he alleged that the house in question is owned, occupied, and controlled, or is under the care, control, and management of any person, then the motion should have been sustained. The direct question does not seem to have been up in this state, within our knowledge. There appears nothing in our burglary statutes, other than those relating to the’burglary of a private residence, which in terms requires any averment of occupancy, ownership, or other description of the house alleged to have been burglarized, it is necessarily true, however, that an indictment for this offense must conform to the general requirement that whatever is necessary to be proved must be alleged, and also that there must be such certainty in the allegation as will put the accused on notice, and enable him to plead the judgment rendered in bar of subsequent prosecutions for the same offense, If the averment that the house in question was then and there under the control of E. J. Spence individualizes the house, and would enable the accused to plead in bar the judgment rendered, this would seem to meet the demands of the law- Examining our authorities, we find that we have upheld indictments where the description of the house was that it was “occupied and controlled by.” Pyland v. State, 33 Tex. Civ. App. 332, 26 S. W. 621. Control means to manage, to govern, to have authority over, etc. Anderson v. Stockdale, 62 Tex. 64. Control and management are synonymous. Youngs worth v. Jewell, 15 Nev. 45. In the Lamater Case, 33 Tex. Cr. R. 249, 42 8. W. 304, the trial court charged the jury that a person who is in direct control of the house, and has the exclusive management and control of the property therein, is in law the occupant of said house, and the owner of such property. In an opinion handed down by the present presiding judge of this court this charge of the lower court was upheld. In the instant case, the house in question was a mule barn, the same being a building about 150 feet long by 20 feet wide, and having a harness room at one. end, and a feed room at the other. This building was located upon the farm of a Mr. Stoddard, who seems to have had several other farms and much other business; each of said farms being intrusted to the management of a local manager, who was charged with the duty of looking after all of the affairs of the same, including the employment and discharge of men who had various duties to perform under the direction of the' local manager of the particular farm. Mr. F. J. Spence was the manager of the farm on which was located the mule barn in quesr tion, and the burglarized building was oc"cupied on the night in question actually by the harness and mules; but the same was under the control of Mr. Spence. We think a plea in bar of any subsequent prosecution would needs be upheld under these facts, and that the allegation of control of the house was all that was necessary, and that the motion to quash was properly overruled. We think the house alleged to have been burglarized was sufficiently described to identify it. What we have said will also dispose of the contention that the trial court should not have charged the jury that the offense was made out, if it showed burglary of a .house then and there under the control of E. J. Spence.

Appellant urges the insufficiency of the evidence to corroborate the accomplice, and insists that the trial court should have granted his request for an instructed verdict of not guilty. As stated, the premises alleged to have been burglarized was a mule barn, and it was shown in testimony that most of the harness was kept in the harness room at one end of said barn, but because of lack of room some of said harness was hung on pegs out in the barn. It was stated that the mule barn was open, but that every night the harness room, which had only one door, was closed, and the door fastened by a peg which fitted into a staple. It was testified that said door was so closed and fastened on the night in question. Some harness was taken from both the open shed and out of the harness room. On the morning after the alleged burglary, an examination’disclosed that 17 collars, 12 bridles, 10 lines, and 7 sets of harness were missing. A search for some evidence as to how the property was taken disclosed the fact that near a corner of the barn lot, a hack or light wagon had been hitched the night before, the indications being that the team had stood at said place for some time, the ground being much trampled. A peculiarly large track, showing no heel to the shoe, and part of the sole gone, was observed, and also another and different track was testified to at the place where the hack had been hitched. Witnesses took the trail of this hack, and followed it for several miles; there having been a very recent rain, which enabled them to easily follow the tracks. The witnesses,* following the trail, finally [581]*581came to a place where the hack stopped, which was near a pasture belonging to appellant; and, at a point a short distance away from the place where the hack stopped, most of the alleged stolen harness was found. The hack was then traced from the point where it stopped to appellant’s house, and from there to the home of one Shannon.

Albert Dadrick was placed on the stand by the state, and in his testimony stated that he went with the appellant, at appellant’s solicitation, on the night in question, and assisted him in the removal of the harness, and accompanied him from the place where the harness was stolen, along various roads, crossing the Tres Palacios river, and on up Wilson Creek bottom, where, according to Dadrick, the parties concealed the harness in a thicket, at which place he said they separated, he (Dadrick) going on to the home of some kinsman named Smith, and appellant taking the hack and team on with him. This witness said the hack and the team, which was composed of two gray mules, belonged to Shannon, and was borrowed by appellant from Shannon on the Sunday afternoon preceding the night of the burglary. This witness further testified that as he and appellant drove the hack along on the night of the burglary, at the Tres Palacios bridge, they met some men in a buggy,- and that they, he, and appellant had to back their hack off the bridge. ■I-Ie also testified that a little later his party passed Mr..Legg and Mr. Spoor. The state placed upon the stand' the witnesses Legg and Spoor, both of whom testified that on the night of the burglary, between 11 and 12 o’clock, they were passed on the road by two negro men in a hack, the team being composed of gray or grayish animals; and one of the witnesses described the animals as mules. The state also placed on the witness stand Jim and Tom Allison, who testified that they were in a buggy, and met two negroes on the bridge over the Tres Palacios; that the ne-groes were driving a hack, and that the witness helped back said hack off the bridge. One of these men remembered that the ne-groes were driving a pair of gray animals, and the other remembered that the occasion was Sunday night, January 26, 1917, which was the night of the burglary.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasley-v-state-texcrimapp-1920.