James v. State

215 S.W. 459, 86 Tex. Crim. 107, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 351
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 1919
DocketNo. 5475.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 459 (James 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
James v. State, 215 S.W. 459, 86 Tex. Crim. 107, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 351 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

MORROW, Judge.

The appellant was convicted of murder of John Kenny. Kenny was a white man, sixty years of age, whose occupation was that of track and bridge inspector on a tram road belonging to the Kirby Lumber Company, and extending from the *108 town of Call in a northwesterly direction to Donohoo. He lived in a shack near the railroad, about eight miles from Donohoo, and some distance from Call. About four o’clock on the afternoon of October 2 his dead body, yet warm and bleeding, was found. near the tram road, about 250 yards from his place of residence. He had received a gunshot wound on the left side of his head; and there were some wounds on his face, variously described in size, but some of the witnesses suggested that they might have been made by punching his face with a single-barrel shotgun.

The evidence of guilt was wholly circumstantial. It appeared from the circumstances in evidence that immediately after the log train on the tramway passed the residence of deceased, at about three o’clock in the afternoon going in the direction of Call, he had started northwest in the direction of Donohoo on his velocipede-following his custom—and that he had been waylaid by some person who, after shooting him, took the velocipede to a point about 200 yards further northwest, took it off of the track, and secreted it in some bushes. It further appeared circumstantially that the shot which killed him was fired about ten minutes after the log train passed, and about thirty minutes before the supply train following the log train arrived. The body was discovered by the members of the crew of the supply train. Some of them remained with the body, others going with the train to Call, from whence the officers came to the scene of the homicide.

The State’s theory was that the appellant had secreted himself on the left hand side of the tramway, lay in wait for the deceased, and shot him unawares. This theory was supported by various circumstances. A witness by the name of Louie Johnson, who was a member of the crew of the log train, testified that as he was passing on that train he saw a man, whom he identified as the appellant, at a point about 50 or 100 feet from the tramway on the left hand side near a log. He described him as wearing a cap, having a single-barrel shotgun in his possession, and having with him a small red dog. The appellant was arrested on the same night at his home. He was the owner of a single-barrel shotgun, which was found at his place of residence, and there was testimony that it had been recently fired. Johnson, the State’s witness, identified a cap which was found at the premises of the appellant as one worn by him at the time he was seen near' the railroad, before the homicide, and also identified a dog which was found at appellant’s house as the one that was with him on the occasion mentioned. An inspection of the appellant’s shoes was made, and it was found that one of them had a worn place on the sole. The evidence of the State’s witnesses was contradictory as to which shoe was in this condition. The shoes were not preserved, though they were described as about a number eight. The country was dry and sandy, *109 but witnesses testified to have seen tracks along the creek, and which they claimed had been made by a person wearing a shoe with a worn sole, similar to that in the shoe of appellant, though their evidence was quite vague and somewhat contradictory and no marked peculiarity in the shoe was developed. At a point along the tramway apposite that upon which the deceased was found and about fifty feet distant, there was a bush which bore evidence of having been cut with a knife, and evidence that a dog had scratched the ground and laid down near a log at this point; and there was found some cigarette stumps and an empty tobacco can here also. Appellant when arrested was in possession of a pocket-knife, which was described as having a stain upon it, and it was claimed that this stain was such as would have resulted from cutting the bush like the one mentioned. There was a 12-gauge empty shotgun shell found somewhere in the vicinity of the homicide.

The deceased, when found, had some money in his pocket— several dollars—his watch was in his shack, and there was no evidence of robbery other than that some of the witnesses testified that he was in the habit of carrying a leather purse.

The appellant was a negro, and lived in a negro settlement about a mile and a half from the scene of the homicide, had lived there for a number of years, bore a good reputation; had had no relations, business or otherwise, with the deceased, and had no cause of enmity toward him so far as was developed in the evidence. On the contrary, these seem to have been negatived. The only suggestion of motive in this connection was the fact that a negro by the name of Westbrook had some time prior to this homicide been killed by a constable by the name of Lindsey, and that at the time he was killed Westbrook was resisting arrest, and the deceased was in company Avith the constable at the time. There is no relation betAveen Westbrook and the appellant shown; no threats made by appellant; and nothing to show that he should have or did take offense or entertain resentment against Kenny in consequence of the incident mentioned.

As defensive matter, appellant presented the theory of alibi. This he supported by a number of apparently disinterested witnesses, some of them white men all of their testimony going to show that at the time the shot was fired the appellant was at the post-office and store of a man named Wilson about a mile and a quarter distant from the scene of the homicide; that he went to the store on horseback and returned on horseback; that he was not in possession of a gun; was not followed by any dog; and that he did not wear a cap but Avore a hat. The Avitnesses supporting the theory of alibi were well acquainted with him were definite in their statements, several of them had talked to him; and if their testimony was true it went pertinently to show that the fatal shot was not and could not have been *110 fired by appellant, but that it must have been fired by another. He also presented the defensive theory that there were other persons in proximity to the homicide and that circumstances relied upon did not exclude the reasonable hypothesis that some one of these other persons may have been the assassin. In support of this theory, it was shown that the deceased had long been in the employ of the Kirby Lumber Company, that some months prior to his death he had been absent and during his absence his place was filled a part of the time by a negro by the name of Tom Johnson, who lived about three miles in a northwesterly direction from the scene of the homicide, and by another member of the Johnson family; that Eb. Johnson, a son of Tom Johnson, on the day of the homicide about an hour prior thereto, had gotten off of a train at a water tank not a great distance from the scene of the homicide; that after the homicide Eb. Johnson was arrested and was found in possession of a double barrel shotgun,’ 12-gauge, which had been recently fired. The officers who first came to the scene of the homicide arrested Eb- Johnson and took him to Call. On their return from Call, they talked with the witness, Louie Johnson, who was a brother of Eb Johnson, and after talking with him they released Eb Johnson and took the appellant in custody. There was no explanation of Eb.

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 459, 86 Tex. Crim. 107, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.