Johnston v. State

216 S.W. 192, 86 Tex. Crim. 276, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 408
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 26, 1919
DocketNo. 5368.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 192 (Johnston 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
Johnston v. State, 216 S.W. 192, 86 Tex. Crim. 276, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 408 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

—Appellant was convicted of murder, his punishment being assessed at twenty years confinement in the penitentiary.

The evidence is to the effect that appellant and deceased, a woman, had been living for several years in adultery, and had had a number of serious troubles; that she had on more than one occasion used a knife upon him, and once had struck him on the leg with an axe. She seems to have been, from the testimony, a woman of unusual high, temper and of decided physical courage. We deem it unnecessary to go into a detailed statement of the troubles occurring between appellant and deceased.

Shortly prior to the homicide the deceased, had taken up with another negro by the name of James Riley. This was rather displeasing to appellant. On the evening preceding the fight at night appellant claims he gave his mistress some money, or bought her a pair of shoes to attend some character of church gathering. Without his knowledge, as claimed by him, she went to a dance in the country two or three miles with James Riley. Appellant says he was not aware of that fact and thought she was at the church social. He went also to the dance. Upon reaching there he found the deceased and Riley present. Shortly afterward a difficulty occurred in which appellant stabbed Riley and killed deceased.

*278 The State’s theory of the immediate transaction was that Riley was sitting or standing near a piano in the room which was being played for the benefit of the dancers. Appellant approached Riley and engaged him in conversation, brought on a difficulty with and stabbed him; that deceased ran out of the door followed by appellant. As appellant went out upon the gallery, or just off the gallery, he encountered deceased and immediately attacked and killed her. Appellant’s theory was ’ that the deceased had a knife or went where Riley was and Riley gave her a knife which he observed, and he went over and asked Riley why he gave deceased that knife, that he knew that she intended to kill him with it; that Riley called him a liar and struck him and the fight began. His further contention is that while he and Riley were engaged in this trouble deceased ran up behind him and was striking him in the back as he thought with a knife, and that the fight continued until they passed out of the door and on to the gallery, and perhaps the ground, and that he killed deceased under those circumstances. This presents the issues of murder, manslaughter and self-defense.

Some of the language of the charge on manslaughter is made the subject of criticism in appellant’s exceptions. Among other things in the charge on manslaughter the court gave this:

“An assault and battery by the deceased, Tennessee Kitchens, and James Riley or either of them, provided the defendant believed they both were acting together and causing pain or bloodshed, provided such assault occurs at the time of the killing or so near the time that the party receiving such assault and battery would not have time to be capable of cool reflection.”

This is an excerpt from the charge and made the subject of exception. The exception specifically pointed out is to the language as follows: “provided the defendant believed they both were acting together and causing pain or bloodshed.” His proposition is that if either of them was acting alone and causing pain or bloodshed, defendant’s right of self-defense would be just as complete on the ground of manslaughter as if he believed they both were acting together. Appellant’s whole theory of the case is based upon the idea that the two, Riley and deceased, were attacking.and fighting him in the dance room near the piano. The issues are sharply drawn. The State’s theory did not present the issue of manslaughter from any angle of view as we understand this record. So it may be stated that any question of manslaughter suggested was from the testimony introduced by the defendant, to-wit: that they were both acting together, in their attack on him. The court however in quotation above criticised authorized manslaughter if either was so attacking appellant.

There is also an exception to another portion of the court’s charge on manslaughter. That phase of the charge reads as follows: ‘ ‘ That the deceased and James Riley had combined, if they had, or if the defendant believed they had, to do the defendant some bodily harm, *279 or kill him, and that Riley had given the deceased a knife to cut the defendant with.” The reason given is that “said second section would be just as complete in favor of the defendant without the necessity of Tennessee Kitchens and James Riley acting together and without defendant having to believe they were acting together, arid such defense was complete without the necessity of defendant having to believe that James Riley had given Tennessee Kitchens a knife, if defendant believed that she had a knife, whether it was given to Tennessee Kitchens by James Riley or not.” The same may be said of this as of the other, and possibly both, that they were short excerpts from the charge on manslaughter, based upon the idea that these excerpts were erroneous. As before stated, the whole theory of the defense was manslaughter and self-defense from the standpoint of an attack on him by both. If they in fact attacked appellant, or appellant believed that both of them were attacking him, he had the same right to' defend from either standpoint; but further, as to both of these exceptions, it may be stated they are but short extracts from the body of the charge, without showing the relation of the particular excerpts to the full charge as given. The rule is that the whole charge must be looked to in discussion of the question of error. We are of opinion that in the face of these exceptions that the charge is sufficient on the question about which it was given. If we look to the State’s testimony, there was no attack made on appellant by the deceased. The State’s contention, is that appellant made the attack on Riley and not Riley upon him, and such testimony is rather strong on this proposition. But from any viewpoint of the exceptions, we are of opinion there is no error shown; that the two excerpts from the charge contained in the exceptions do not fairly present their relation to the general charge. We think the general charge on manslaughter, when looked to in the face of these exceptions, presents the issue in such manner as that appellant was not injured.

There is another ground of exception stated in the bill, that is that the court did not allow appellant sufficient time to review the charge after it was written and before being read to the jury. It recites that the charge was handed appellants counsel at 11 o’clock in the evening, and they were given until 8:45 the next morning to examine the charge. This is rather too general and does not show in any manner or point out how he was injured by not being given further time. This is but a general statement without specifying the injury. We do not think this was sufficient.

Appellant moved to quash the venire, alleging various grounds. The bill of exceptions in this respect is a repetition of some of the grounds of the motion to quash, but contains no facts nor does it show what if any evidence was introduced in regard to the matter.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 192, 86 Tex. Crim. 276, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.