Jackson v. State

13 S.W. 451, 28 Tex. Ct. App. 370, 1890 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1890
DocketNo. 2859
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 13 S.W. 451 (Jackson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. State, 13 S.W. 451, 28 Tex. Ct. App. 370, 1890 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 12 (Tex. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

White, Presiding Judge.

This is the second appeal in this case. On the former appeal the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded on account of certain defects in the charge of the court, which were pointed out Jackson v. The State, ante, p. 143.

On the second trial the learned judge corrected his former charge in these particulars, and although several objections are again strenuously urged to the charge we will, without discussing them, say that in our opinion they are not well taken, and that the charge as now presented is a sufficient exposition of the law applicable to the facts. But one special instruction was asked by the defendant, in addition to the general charge, and it was given.

Appellant has been tried for and convicted of burglary. A strong criminative fact against him was the finding in his house, a few days after the burglary, one of the seamless sacks identified by the State’s witnesses as one of the sacks containing the wheat stolen from the burglarized house. The burglary was committed on the night of August 20, and the sack was found in defendant’s house on the 28th of August following, or seven days afterwards. At the time it was found defendant had been arrested and was in jail. He has never attempted to explain his possession of the sack. His wife stated that it was his, defendant’s; that he had had it for several months, and that he had brought it home filled with peaches from Edwards’s place while he was working at Edwards’s.

Had this been the only criminative or inculpatory fact against the defendant there might have been some question as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction for burglary.

“Mere possession of goods stolen without other evidence of guilt is mot to be regarded as prima facie evidence of burglary. But where [372]*372goods have been feloniously taken by means of a burglary, and they are-immediately or soon after found in the actual and exclusive possession of' a person who gives a false account or refuses to give any account of the-manner in which the goods came into his possession, proof of such possession and guilty conduct may sustain the inference not only that he stole the goods, but that he made use of the means by which access to-them was obtained. There should be some evidence of guilty conduct, besides the bare possession of the stolen property before the presumption, of burglary is superadded.to that of the larceny.” Whart. Crim. Law, 8 ed., sec. 813; Whart. Crim. Ev., 9 ed., sec. 736; 2 Am. and Eng.. Ency. of Law, p. 694.

In Georgia, and perhaps in some of the other States, it is held that, recent possession by a person who is unable to account for his possession,, raises a presumption of guilt and would authorize the jury to find a verdict of guilty. Lundy v. The State, 71 Ga., 360.

With us the rule is the same as in theft, that is, that “to warrant an inference of guilt of theft from the circumstance of possession of recently-stolen property, such possession must be personal and exclusive, must be unexplained, and must involve a distinct and conscious assertion of property by the defendant.” Field v. The State, 24 Texas Ct. App., 422, citing Willson's Crim. Stats., sec. 1299; Morgan v. The State, 25 Texas Ct. App., 513; Jackson v. The State, ante, 143. And this seems to be the rule in Alabama. White v. The State, 72 Ala., 195.

In this case defendant did not explain nor attempt to explain his possession, though his wife did or attempted to do so for him. What are the other inculpatory and criminative facts?

One Kilby, a brother-in-law of defendant, was implicated in the burglary, and the evidence of Kilby's guilt, as shown by the record, is, to our minds, overwhelming. Defendant was staying at Kilby's house. He had previously worked at Edwards's place during the harvest, and knew the-premises. At sundown on the evening of the 20th of August he was seen in an empty two horse wagon with Kilby, going in the direction of Edwards's. The next morning at sunrise Kilby and another party are at the mill where Kilby sells the stolen wheat, and takes in part pay a hundred-pound sack of flour. The purchaser does not know or identify defendant, as the man who was with Kilby, but several witnesses met Kilby and Jackson, this defendant, as they were returning from Weatherford, between 9 and 10 a. m., after the sale of the wheat, in a two horse wagon; and one testifies that he saw the sack of flour in the wagon, and that Kilby told him they were going to have biscuits, and asked him to come over and see him. These witnesses knew Jackson, this defendant, and identified him as the party with Kilby. In addition to these facts one of the seamless sacks which contained apart of the wheat stolen from the burglarized [373]*373house was, as we have seen, found at defendant’s house. This sack was fully and completely identified by the alleged owners and other witnesses for the State. W e think the evidence amply sufficient to show a conspiracy and acting together as principals by Kilby and defendant in the criminal enterprise, and to warrant the inference that defendant was a party to and guilty of the burglary.

But it is insisted that the court erred in allowing evidence to go to the jury of the finding of the sack and what transpired at the .time, the defendant not being present. This evidence was admissible and legitimate as a circumstance tending to connect defendant with the burglary, the .sack being one of the fruits of the crime. Burr, on Cir. Ev., pp. 445, 447.

For the same reason it is objected that the court erred in allowing evidence of the finding of some of the stolen sacks at the house of Kilby .several days after the commission of the burglary, when neither Kilby nor defendant were present, and the additional objection urged to this evidence is that the sacks were found after the conspiracy (if any had ever existed between defendant and Kilby) had been consummated, and that no act or fact connecting Kilby with the crime, done or ascertained after consummation of the conspiracy, could be used as evidence against or affecting this defendant. As stated above, the evidence in our opinion amply established the conspiracy and acting together of the parties in the crime. The sacks found at Kilby’s were fruits of the crime, and “ any fact or circumstance which would tend to prove the guilt of the co-defendant would also tend to prove the guilt of the defendant, and would be admissible against him.” Pierson v. The State, 18 Texas Ct. App., 524.

But again, on the trial the sack found at defendant’s house was claimed by several witnesses to be marked with the initials of Edwards’s name, viz., “N. G. E.,” and “W.’F.’r.’D.”—an abbreviation for the town of Weatherford; and the letter E on the edge of the mouth of the sack was claimed to have been worked with thread by Mrs. Edwards. Edwards testified that when he purchased the sacks in Dallas they were full of corn, and that the party from whom he purchased them marked his (Edwards’s) initials and the abbreviation of Weatherford with lampblack upon them. It was proved that after the sack was found at Jackson’s his wife, Mrs. Jackson, had washed it and almost obliterated these letters in lampblack; .and Varner, the constable, testified that when he found the sack at Jackson’s he saw the letter E in thread near the mouth, and commenced picking it out with his knife, when he was stopped by Moreland, who also testified to the same fact.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W. 451, 28 Tex. Ct. App. 370, 1890 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-state-texapp-1890.