Holcomb v. State

113 S.W. 754, 54 Tex. Crim. 486, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 409
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1908
DocketNo. 4069.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 754 (Holcomb 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
Holcomb v. State, 113 S.W. 754, 54 Tex. Crim. 486, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 409 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

DAVIDSOH, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of manslaughter, his punishment being assessed at three years and six months confinement in the penitentiary.

In substance the facts disclose that appellant and deceased lived neighbors within three or four hundred yards of each other; that their families were on very friendly and rather intimate terms, and visited each other almost daily. The day preceding the homicide at night defendant and his wife took dinner with the family of deceased, and were at the residence of the deceased on the night of the homicide in pursuance of an invitation to attend a social function at the residence of deceased, and that it was during this social gathering the homicide occurred. Prior to the homicide, for sometime, the deceased had been making remarks of a very insulting nature in regard to appellant’s wife, to the effect that he had been having carnal intercourse with her. These remarks had not been brought to the attention of appellant prior to the homicide. On the night of the homicide, shortly before it occurred, the wife of the deceased called appellant off in one of the rooms of the house and informed him of the fact that there was something wrong between her husband and his, appellant’s wife; that she had written evidence of that fact in the form of a note or letter written by deceased to appellant’s wife, or by appellant’s wife to the deceased. The record does not seem very clear which wrote the note or letter. Appellant refused to believe this, and informed the wife of the deceased that he would have to be shown evidence of this fact, and turned away and left her. After leaving the wife of deceased he went into the room north of where the dancing was in progress. The deceased came into the room where appellant was, or at least they seemed to have entered the room about the same time, the deceased having just finished dancing a set with appellant’s wife in the adjoining room. Appellant’s wife came to him while he was standing in the room a few feet away from the deceased and insisted on their going home. He declined, saying he was not in a hurry about it, that they would go after a while. She made a statement to appellant to the effect that deceased had insulted her. The deceased was sitting on the bed, noticing the fact that appellant and his wife were talking. Then came up a conversation between appellant and deceased. 'Several witnesses testified to this conversation. They did not 'altogether present it in the same language. We will take the following evidence as fairly illustrative of this conversation. One of the witnesses, while on the stand, after going over this matter a time or two, in examination and cross-examinatian, was asked by the county attorney this question: “How, I want *488 to get it clear before this jury, what was the first word that was spoken by Mrs. Holcomb, the defendant or the deceased, that you heard that began this conversation? A. Well, I can commence and tell you just like I heard it and just like they spoke it. Mr. Holcomb’s wife came up to him and said, let’s go home, and Jim said, don’t be in any hurry, it is early yet; she said something else that I can not recall right now what it was; he said, I never come here and I hain’t going away and Mr. Williams (deceased) said to him, Jim, you are welcome here. Jim said, I know it, if I had not known it, I would not have been here, and then something else was said; his wife said something else to him, and he made this remark, that he never come here and was not going away, the second time, and Ben said to him, Jim, you hain’t going to start anything here, and Jim said, no, I don’t know that I am, I could if I wanted to, and Williams (deceased) looked up at him 'and got up and •started over to him, and said, I will show you what you can do and took hold of him (appellant) and put him out of the house.” Some of this conversation between appellant, who was called Jim, 'and his wife is not narrated by this witness, but was brought out by the defendant. It shows his (appellant’s) wife, at the time deceased interfered with their conversation, or rather began his conversation with appellant, had just -told her husband of the insult by deceased to her. The deceased put appellant out of the house, kicking him, perhaps, -as many as three times as he put him out. The evidence seems to indicate that appellant did not resist. Upon reaching the door, deceased shoved appellant out and kicked him again, whereupon appellant fired at deceased, which resulted fatally. There were two shots fired, the second shot striking deceased in the right shoulder. There are quite a number of facts and circumstances in the case which show there had never been any previous difficulty between the parties, hut on the contrary the families had been on very intimate terms, which we deem unnecessary now to recapitulate. Appellant’s testimony goes further, in regard to the transaction occurring at the door at the time the shot was fired, and is to the effect that when deceased pushed him out of the door and kicked Mm, he (deceased) threw his right hand to his side as if to get a pistol,-stating that he intended to kill him, and that it was then he (appellant) fired the shot at deceased. Appellant testified that he had the utmost confidence in his wife and in her loyalty to Mm as well as in her chastity, and that the communication from Mrs. Williams, wife of deceased, worried him, and while thinking over this his wife came to Mm in a few moments with the statement that deceased had just insulted her with language wMch we deem unnecessary here to state.

The evidence, as we understand it, presents manslaughter from two standpoints and self-defense. If appellant’s mind was agitated so that it was incapable of cool reflection on account of the insulting *489 ■language, conduct, etc., that had just been communicated to him by Mrs. Williams and his wife, and this was the cause of the killing, it would be manslaughter, or if under the circumstances, the seizure of appellant by deceased and putting him out of his house and inflicting the kicks upon him infuriated his mind beyond cool reflection, and the killing occurred, it would. be manslaughter. If in addition to the ejection from the house, accompanied with the kicks and followed by a demonstration or movement to draw a pistol appellant fired, it would be self-defense. The two issues in regard to manslaughter should have been affirmatively presented to the jury. The court instructed the jury that an assault and battery causing pain or insulting words, etc., would constitute manslaughter, with the other elements being present. The charge then is fairly full in regard to insulting conduct, and the court, in further charging on the question of manslaughter, said that any other and all other circumstances, etc., might be taken into consideration in arriving at the condition of defendant’s mind, in connection with all the facts and circumstances, etc. We think upon another trial the court should affirmatively present these matters to the jury to the effect that they may understand that either provocation was sufficient to reduce to manslaughter, the sudden passion being present in appellant’s mind.

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Related

Rogers v. State
149 S.W. 127 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1912)
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149 S.W. 670 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 754, 54 Tex. Crim. 486, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-v-state-texcrimapp-1908.