Jamison v. State

148 S.W.2d 405
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1941
DocketNo. 21233
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 405 (Jamison 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
Jamison v. State, 148 S.W.2d 405 (Tex. 1941).

Opinions

CHRISTIAN, Judge.

The offense is. murder; the punishment,, confinement in the penitentiary for fifteen years.

• The trial was had in Nacogdoches County on a change 'of venue from San Augustine County.

It was charged in the indictment, in substance, that appellant, with malice aforethought, killed George Burnaman by shooting him with a gun.

The homicide occurred on the 10th day of April, 1939, near' the home of the appellant. Appellant and deceased were farmers and were engaged in cultivating certain tracts of land on the Blount farm in San Augustine County. Shortly before the homicide they had a dispute relative to a fence deceased had constructed. It also appears that, over appellant’s objection, deceased had placed some barrels of gasoline on or near the premises of appellant. According to appellant’s version, deceased had interfered with appellant’s right to use a pasture on the Blount farm, which was part of the Blount premises. Again, a few days before the killing deceased had threatened to strike him with a mattock. It was also appellant’s version that deceased had no right to use a private road near appellant’s house.

It was the theory of the state, given support in the testimony, that appellant had bought a shotgun shell loaded with buckshot and had prepared himself to kill deceased when a convenient opportunity arose. In going to the land he was cultivating it was the habit of deceased to travel a road which passed near the appellant’s house. In entering his leased premises when traveling this road, deceased went through a gate or gap which he had to open and close. On the occasion of the homicide he had driven through this gate in his automobile, had left his car and closed the gate and had started to return to his car when appellant appeared on his front porch with a shotgun and commanded him to stop. According to appellant’s version, deceased refused to stop, and went toward his car. He testified that deceased customarily carried a rifle in his car, and he believed it was the purpose of the deceased to procure the rifle and kill him, and so believing he shot the deceased as he reached the rear of his car. It was the state’s further theory, given support in the testimony, that at the time appellant killed deceased deceased was making no demonstration and that appellant’s act in shooting him was unwarranted and unprovoked. A witness for the state, who lived in view of the home of the appellant, testified that she saw the appellant and heard the discharge of the shotgun. She ran immediately to the scene 'of the homicide, and found that deceased was dead. According to her version, he was unarmed. The wife of the appellant, who witnessed the homicide, testified that the state’s witness to whom we [407]*407have referred went to the car of the deceased and took something from it. Several witnesses for the state, who reached the scene of the killing before the body of deceased had been removed, testified that deceased was not armed and that there were no weapons in his car. The wife of deceased testified that deceased’s gun was in their home at the time of the homicide. It appears that the buckshot fired from the appellant’s gun entered the left side of the deceased. At this juncture we quote from appellant’s testimony as follows:

“At the time I got this buckshot I had heretofore been buying buckshot and keeping them for the hawks. That was the only one I had. The first time I saw Mr. Burnaman he was stopping his car. He was opening the gate while I was getting my gun. I got my gun to go out there and talk to him. When I went out on the gallery T stood about like to step out off the front door step. I believe there are six posts on that gallery and I was standing between the two posts Ipading out into the yard. As to how far it is from my door that I came out of that room until I reached the porch, it was about eight or ten feet; the gallery is eight feet, and that would make about sixteen feet that I traveled. When I got out there and looked towards Mr. Burnaman he was going towards his car, and I asked him to stop and he kept going to the car, and Mr. Burnaman was looking over his shoulder at me, kind of with his head turned; he never did stop. When I told him to stop the first time and that was his car, he looked at me this way. I threw my gun on him and the second time asked him to stop he kept going to his car. About the time I shot he was going on the other side of his car, and I believed that George Burnaman was going after his gun; I asked him to stop four times. I went out there to talk to him. That was since the racket about the fence. Mr. Burnaman did not say or do anything to me; he didn’t say a word to me. When I told him to stop the first time he kept going. I had my gun in shooting position then; no, not at the first time, but at the second time. When I asked him to stop the first time I intended to talk to him, to get at that trouble and stop it out there. When I shot him I did not have any other shells with me at that time. When I went and got my gun I didn’t have any other shells there; the shells were in the dresser drawer. I did not take them with me. The gun was loaded with this buckshot shell that I had when I went out there. If Mr. Burnaman had stopped I would have talked to him. When I shot Mr. Burnaman fell; he did not say anything. All I heard out of him, I heard him groan; then I turned around and laid my gun down and told my wife I was going to town. I went out the front gate.”

Again, we quote from the testimony of the appellant as follows: “I saw Mr. Burnaman as he closed the gate. He seen me too. When he took the first step from the gate to get back in his car I had not at that moment leveled my gun on him. I don’t know whether or not I am positive I didn’t. When I walked out of the house I had my gun in my hand and 1 asked him to stop the first time and he looked at me, and I leveled my gun on him the second time I asked him to stop. I testified on the other trial of this case — voluntarily sat and testified in my own behalf and said that when Mr. Burnaman took his first step, leaving the gate to go back toward his car that I leveled my shotgun on him and held it in a shooting position.”

We quote further from the testimony of the appellant: “I did not see him (deceased) do anything with cither hand to cause me to believe he was reaching for a pistol in his shirt or in his pocket. It is true that I did not kill him because of any demonstration he made reaching for a gun as he walked back to his car. There was nothing he did as he walked back to the car to cause me to shoot him. I didn’t shoot him because he wouldn’t stop. If he had stopped I would not have stopped him just the same. As to whether I testified before that I shot him because he wouldn’t stop, I will state that I shot him to stop him at the car. If he had stopped and talked to me I wouldn’t have shot him. Then because he refused to stop and engage in conversation with me was the reason I shot him.”

Appellant also testified in effect that his purpose in asking deceased to stop was to talk to him about their misunderstandings. He thought deceased might attack him and carried his shotgun for protection.

Appellant introduced his wife as a witness, who gave testimony substantially corroborating his version of the killing.

We have not undertaken to set out in detail all of the testimony adduced upon the trial as the statement we have made is [408]*408deemed sufficient to elucidate the questions hereinafter discussed.

The court gave an instruction covering the law of self-defense, and also charged on provoking the difficulty.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamison-v-state-texcrimapp-1941.