Hightower v. State

143 S.W. 1168, 65 Tex. Crim. 323, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1912
DocketNo. 1489.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 143 S.W. 1168 (Hightower 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
Hightower v. State, 143 S.W. 1168, 65 Tex. Crim. 323, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 105 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

On July 3, 1911, appellant was properly indicted for an assault with intent to commit rape upon a child under fifteen years of age, charged to have been committed on June 30, 1911. He was convicted and his penalty fixed at thirty years' in the penitentiary.

The indictment is regular and charges the offense properly and the appellant makes no objection thereto.

Under the questions raised and as the testimony is brief we will give the substance of the whole of it. By appellant’s mother, Jodies Boykin, the State proved that appellant was sixteen years old on December 8, 1910; that he had never been married. On cross-examination she said he had been a good boy and was never before arrested.

M. Brooks, the father -of the assaulted child, 'testified for the State to the effect that he lived on a farm in Kaufman County with his fam-. ily, consisting of his wife and three children; that the appellant lived on his place at the time and for several months prior to the offense, about three-quarters of a mile from his residence. He gave to the jury a plat of his buildings, and outhouses, and fields adjacent to his residence. " One of his outhouses was an automobile house. The. opening *325 to it was not towards his residence, so that anyone therein could be seen from his residence; that on the day of the assault appellant had no business in his auto house; that at the time the assault was committed on his child he was at Forney, a few miles from his residence, that lie there got an automobile and went immediately home, reaching there about thirty minutes after the assault; that the way he first heard it was, that his wife ’phoned to him at Forney; that as soon as he reached his home and was told of the assault he went to his field, not a great distance from his residence, where appellant was still plowing; that when he went up to appellant he noticed appellant was a little bit nervous before he said anything to him; that on the day and at the time the assault occurred there was no white man about his house or place; that his little daughter, the assaulted child, had never been married to anyone. It was about sixty feet from the corner of his residence to this auto house in which the assault is charged to have occurred.

Clarrissa Brooks, the assaulted party, for the State testified: That she was nine years old, had been to school in the country, was in the second grade, knew and identified the appellant. “One day not long ago, he came up to the house where I was raking off the yard and my brothers, who are younger than I, were with me; I have two brothers and one of them was helping me rake off the yard. Defendant came up there to get a single-tree. I think he drew some water; he came out to where I was first before he got his water and said ‘Come on out to $he barn’ he wanted to show me something. He did not say anything about what he wanted to show me. I went with him out to the automobile house and when we got to the automobile house he took me in it. He did not say what he was going to show me. Did not' say anything about whether it was pretty or not. The auto house hadn’t any door.' When I went in the auto house with the defendant, defendant pulled up my dress and took down my little pants and felt of me. He put his finger in my privates. Then I hit him and told him to stop; I got away from him after he let me loose. He had me in there and had hold of one of'my hands. I hit him with my hand and told him to stop and he then stopped. I did not jerk loose from defendant, he turned me loose when he got through. He said for me not to tell. He quit after I hit him and after I told him to stop. He did not quit before that. From the auto house I went out in the yard until defendant went out in the field and then I told mamma, went .in the house and told mamma right after defendant went to the field. He had never offered at any other time before to treat me that way. I did not know what he wanted when he went into the auto house with me. I do not remember how it was that I did not go clear down to the barn with him.”

On cross-examination, among other things, she testified: That she had been knowing appellant a year or two and he had been about their house a good ’deal. That' he took the single-tree in the auto house with *326 him and put it down. That this single-tree was the broken one; he carried another back to the field with him when he went. -The field was pretty close to the house; that he was working a way down in the field; she saw him when he came to the house bringing the broken single-tree and that he got another off of a plow and took that, back with him; that her mother was in the house at the time this occurred and a negro woman was on the place at the time washing, but was at her (the negro’s) house; that another negro woman was in the house cooking; that appellant told her he came to the house for a single-tree; she did not know whether he spoke to her mother or not; she did not think he spoke to the negro cook; that he drew the water from the cistern after they were at the auto house. The cistern where he drew the water was on the back gallery of the house. Her mother was in the kitchen. One end of the auto house is open, has no door, but can not be seen into from the house. When defendant started to leave, he told her not to tell and she told him that she would not. He unbuttoned two buttons of her drawers and then “I told him not to do it; he buttoned them up; he stopped when I told him to. He said he wanted to show me something when I was in the yard, but did not tell me what it was he wanted to show me. Her little brother did not go with her when she went to the auto house; she did not cry; he had hold of her hand when he was unbuttoning her drawers; she thinks he said nothing to her when he did that.

On redirect examination she testified: • “After he unbuttoned these two buttons he felt of me. My drawers did not drop down; he justyunbuttoned the front part of them and took his hand and felt of me and he took his finger and put it in my privates. I did not .jerk loose from him. He had hold of my hand and he let me loose after I hit him. We were in the back part of the automobile house behind the auto. He took me behind the auto with him, he told me to come on back there. The negro went behind the auto first, I went back there with him, following him. He left the broken single-tree in the auto house; he did not get the single-tree that he took back to the field with him out of the auto house; he got it off of a plow out in the field. When he was unbuttoning my drawers and feeling of me he was kneeling; I was standing up. Ben (appellant) is a negro.”

The State introduced George Moore who testified that he and appellant were plowing the day the assault was committed. That appellant went to the house to get a single-tree before dinner. He did not remember the exact time of day; he afterwards came back with another single-tree; he was gone about fifteen minutes; some thirty or forty minutes after that Mr. Brooks, the father af the assaulted child, came to the field where they were. Before Mr. Brooks said anything to the witness or appellant “I kind o’ noticed Ben (appellant) looked a little strange, but I didn’t know what about it. As near as I can get at it he looked like anybody that was scared, looked like they had done something, as near as I can get at it,” On cross-examination he tes *327

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 1168, 65 Tex. Crim. 323, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hightower-v-state-texcrimapp-1912.