Jobe v. State

161 S.W. 966, 72 Tex. Crim. 163, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 603
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1913
DocketNo. 2815.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 966 (Jobe 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
Jobe v. State, 161 S.W. 966, 72 Tex. Crim. 163, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 603 (Tex. 1913).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of burglary, his punishment being assessed at two years confinement in the penitentiary.

The alleged owner of the house and property was Joe Patterson. Patterson was the owner of a saloon located on East Ninth Street in Fort Worth, and had been in that business for eight years, and was so engaged in it on the night of the loth of May when this .matter is alleged to have occurred. When he left his house at night it was in good condition and properly closed. Some of the openings were glass windows. He says that there were no breaks about the building; when he left it in the afternoon everything was all right and no breakage about it. The next morning when he came down somewhere between ten and eleven o’clock it had been broken; all the windows had been broken and a door forced open; the mirrors in the saloon were all broken. “The front of the saloon was all torn up; the doors and windows were all knocked out, or rather the windows were and the doors broken in and seemed like the locks had been knocked open with a heavy instrument of some kind, crowbar or something. There was glass and empty bottles on the floor and furniture and everything else all torn up. The furniture inside the building was torn up in there, everything broke, whisky cases, bar fixtures and everything in there; some of the bar seemed to have been turned over, that is the back bar, and it was all down there, the work-board and everything was torn up and torn to pieces. I missed about two thousand dollars worth of *164 whisky, two or three hundred dollars worth of cigars, and wine and all such as that. I found a few bottles there and boxes. I left about two or three thousand cigars and two barrels of whisky and that had never been bunged; I left between eighty and a hundred cases of whisky; I left champagne and did not find any of that. The stuff that I had left there the night before was all gone next morning; there might have been two or three boxes there.” Speaking particularly of the goods he had on hand he uses this language: “I had on hand Epworth whisky; that was in bottles; then I had some Maxwell whisky in bottles; then I handled Jersey Creme, that is in bottles; then I handled Myrtle Springs; that it is in bottles; then I had my barrel goods, Jersey Creme and Kentucky Home and all such stuff in barrels; that is the way 1 left my stuff. Then I had the John W. Brooks whisky in bottles. I think McGar handled that whisky too. McGar’s place was sixty or seventy-five feet, I guess, from my place, just across the street.” We might say here that McGar’s place was also wrecked. This witness knew nothing about who broke into his saloon of his own personal knowledge, and says, “I can not swear that this defendant had anything to do with that or not. I don’t claim that I know all the brands of whisky that are handled by the saloon men in Fort Worth; as a matter of fact they all handle different brands. I purchase from all these different wholesale houses here, some of the stuff. The furniture and stuff in there was all torn up. They broke my mirrors, all of them. They broke the big mirror back against the wall; that was broken all to pieces.” He did not see many broken bottles; but it seemed like they were all packed off and carried off. The front is glass; the doors are double doors. The glass front was all broke to pieces. The building is a two-story building; there are rooms over the saloon, being a rooming house. He says there is a private club in there and rooms; some windows in the upper part of the house were broken.

Vann Childress testified he was working on the night of this transaction at Joe Vickery’s barber shop. That Jobe worked there on the second chair. He says: “I don’t know just the date but I seen him next morning after that raid; I saw him about ten minutes to six next morning; he came into the shop there; he had four quarts of whisky and a quart of wine; he sold me one bottle; I gave him fifty cents for it; I bought a quart of Jersey Creme. I seen several bottles, one broken one, as I came from breakfast. He asked me where I went the night of the raid and I told him I went home and he says good reason you did go home; I says, yes, I thought it was; I let my conscience be my guide. He had a pocketful of cigars; he asked me was I going to stay there and I says yes; I asked him was he going to stay there and he says yes, and I says, I am going to breakfast and after I came back there from breakfast he opened a quart of wine him and his brother had been drinking. He said he had been out in that raid the night before. He never said nothing particularly to me that morning, just different men coming in that *165 they were working on and talking together and talking about the raid that night but I never paid any attention to that at all. That was the next morning after the raid. ... I went home that night of that raid. I went home because there was a gang around up' here and I did not want to get into anything and I knew about what they were going to do so I went home. I just had a suspicion what they were going to do, that they were going to do something, and I went home. I don’t know exactly where Jack got this whisky; he said he was going out in the raid. This conversation took place over at the shop where we were both working. I never saw anybody else hut Blubber at the time he gave me the wine; Blubber was in there. There was nobody present in the shop that morning when I had that conversation except me and him.” Speaking of the conversation he had with one of the attorneys, Mr. Baldwin, he says: “I told him I had been out early that morning and he came in there. I did not describe the kind of whisky he had. I don’t know that I am sore about them tearing up all these darkies’ property; I can’t pay no mind to what some other nigger done; it is none of my business.”

The witness Merrett says he saw defendant about one o’clock that night, and had a conversation with him. “Henry Vaughn and myself had been there to the jail, or here on the steps watching the crowd at the jail and we went home and stopped in over there to eat a lunch; we both room at the Scott hotel, and Grundy had some whisky; he had four quarts of whisky as I remember; that is what I seen. I remember one brand was Mitchell Spring or Myrtle Spring and the other Jersey Creme; I don’t remember the other brands. The bottles were sealed; He had some cigars in his pocket; there was about a dozen in the upper coat pocket and a can of cigars in his lower coat pocket. He didn’t say where he got this stuff. He said he had been down here and had plenty of whisky and wanted to sell some. He tried to sell some to me; he said he would take $3.50 for four quarts. I don’t remember that he mentioned what part of town he had been in. I don’t remember what he said about the raid. . . . There was nothing else said there by the defendant with reference to where he had been the night before or what he had been doing. I stated we had been over there at the court house steps watching the crowd at the jail and I just came from around there to this restaurant; there was quite a crowd around there. I was not in the crowd at the jail but I was over here and saw them going down Commerce Street; they were going in the direction of the negro raid; I understood that was on Ninth Street. When I saw them they were just starting out going like a bunch of hounds right down this street and then I was here as they came back; I was here on the steps in front of the court house when they came hack. I would say it was 10:30 or 11 that I saw them go down there.

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468 S.W.2d 64 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1971)
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247 S.W. 559 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1923)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 966, 72 Tex. Crim. 163, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jobe-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.