Irwin v. State

43 Tex. 236
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 43 Tex. 236 (Irwin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin v. State, 43 Tex. 236 (Tex. 1875).

Opinion

Roberts, Chief Justice.

The defendant was indicted and convicted for the murder of William Fisher, of the second degree, and his punishment was assessed at five years in the penitentiary. The killing took place at the house of Mrs. Fisher, the aunt of both parties, about one hour before day, where both of the parties went to bed that night, the defendant in one of the rooms with three other young men, and the deceased on the gallery, on a pallet, with his cousin, a young man. The deceased, lying on the outside, was shot on the side next to his cousin. Eo one saw the shooting. There was no evidence of any struggle or rencounter. Eo weapons were found on the [237]*237deceased or about the pallet. Upon the report of the gun the cousin of the deceased, lying with him on the pallet, was aroused from Ms sleep, and found the deceased lying on the pallet, wounded in the side next to him. Three of the young men sleeping in the room, whose door opened into the gallery, in their alarm jumped out of a window, ran around the house, and found the deceased lying on the pallet, at the end of the gallery, wounded. Upon search being made the defendant was not found about the house or premises. His clothes and shoes were in the room where he had gone to bed, and the shot-gun that he had brought there, and which was in the room when he went to bed, was gone. He sent for his clothes during the day after the morning of the killing and the gun was returned to the person from whom it had been borrowed.

There had been a serious difficulty between these parties two or three days before the killing at a storehouse, in which the deceased stabbed the defendant with a pocketknife, and afterwards the deceased made violent threats that he would kill the defendant, which were commuicated to the defendant by several persons. The deceased was proved to be a very dangerous young man, likely to carry out his threats, and the defendant was proved to be a very peaceable young man.

There were other incidental facts proved, which need not be referred to now in order to present the points of error complained of.

The counsel for the defendant presents questions upon two grounds of defense. First, that it was not sufficiently established in proof that the defendant killed the deceased;^ and, second, if he did kill him, it was in self-defense.

Upon the first point the evidence, though circumstantial, was entirely sufficient to justify the verdict of the jury, that defendant did the killing. The only evidence offered to show any probability that there was a rencounter of any [238]*238sort when the killing took place was the evidence of two witnesses that the deceased, about 11 o’clock of that night, got up, belted on his knife, and taking his six-shooter in hand went into the room and stopped before the bed of the defendant, and on returning to his pallet said, that the damned scoundrel was not asleep, but was lying there chewing his tobacco. This showed simply an intention on the part of the deceased to discover what the defendant was doing, under an apprehension that he was in danger from him, or to discover how best he could take advantage of him, and kill him without a struggle if he found him asleep. This was several hours before the killing, and as evidence tending to show any rencounter at the time of the killing, it is not entitled to any weight, in the absence of a single fact developed in the evidence in support of such a view, but everything to the contrary.

The only substantial issue before the jury, under the evidence, was, did defendant kill the deceased. If they were satisfied that he did there was not a single fact or the vestige of a fact proved that could serve as a predicate for justifying or excusing the act of killing at the time it was done.

The court gave a very correct charge upon all the degrees of homicide, and closed by telling the jury that “ if from the evidence you have a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt you will acquit him.”

The defendant’s counsel asked the court to give several additional charges, which were extracts from opinions of courts and from elementary authors. These were refused, in which there was no error, the court having fully charged the law as applicable to the case made by the evidence, and, indeed, much more than the real issue in the case required.

There were bills of exception taken by defendant’s . counsel to the ruling of the court in excluding evidence offered by the defendant as to threats and character of deceased.

[239]*239One of the questions not allowed to be answered, upon objection by the district attorney, was as follows, to Sherman D. Dodd, witness for defendant: “ Were you present, Sunday previous to the killing charged in the indictment, when Sanders communicated to the accused threats made by the deceased to take the life of the accused?”

Further, also, “the defendant to show by witness the intensity of the deceased’s character as a dangerous man, that he was reputed to have assassinated two men, and had boasted of it to the witness John A. Maxwell, and that he was dreaded because of his reputed assassinations, of which he had boasted to Maxwell.” This was also objected to by the district attorney and excluded by the court.

The violent, dangerous character of the deceased and his repeated threats to kill defendant, and that he was informed of them before the killing, was fully proved by several witnesses already. It is unnecessary to consider why the district attorney could suffer such questions to be raised after those matters had been so fully gone into, because, had the evidence been admitted, it would have stood on a footing with the abundant evidence on those subjects that had already gone to the jury without objection, as constituting no part of a possible defense on part of defendant, considered in connection with the established facts of the case. For the evidence exhibited no act of the deceased, nor the least presumption of an act on the part of the deceased, at the "time he was killed, which the threats and his character to execute them would or could possibly give significance to. In the absence of any such act on the part of the deceased at that time, it was perfectly immaterial how desperate was his character and how violent were his threats to take the life of the defendant. Suppose what was offered and rejected had been admitted with the rest, as might well have been done, except perhaps such an investigation must stop at some point, the court must have charged the jury, as it did in effect, that such char[240]*240aeter and threats amounted to nothing unless the defendant had reason to believe that deceased was at the time he was killed attempting some act of violence, in some shape or other, towards the defendant.

It is not even pretended that there was any proof whatever of any such thing. (Paschal’s Dig., 2270; Lander v. The State, 12 Tex., 479; Johnson v. The State, 27 Tex., 767.)

In the case of Johnson v. The State, decided by this court long after the adoption of the Penal Code now in force, it was said by Justice Moore, delivering the opinion: “ The circumstances under which a party who takes the life of another may rely upon ‘threats’ as an element in his defense is clearly shown in art. 612 of the Penal Code.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Tex. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-state-tex-1875.