Kearse v. State

151 S.W. 827, 68 Tex. Crim. 633, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 670
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1912
DocketNo. 1956.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 827 (Kearse 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
Kearse v. State, 151 S.W. 827, 68 Tex. Crim. 633, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 670 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

— Appellant was convicted of rape of a girl under fifteen years of age and his penalty fixed at ten years in the penitentiary.

Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. The contention is based largely on the fact that the girl alleged to have been raped by appellant contradicted herself in her testimony, and was contradicted by the testimony of other witnesses and by some circumstances. There is hardly any contested case that comes to this court but what there are contradictions in the testimony and frequently a principal witness may contradict himself in material matters. In such eases when it is contended that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict this court cannot legally take the place of the jury and determine whether or not it will believe any witness, or witnesses, and from all of the testimony, as put down on paper and sent to this court, it would have found a different verdict from that of the jury and if so reverse the case on that account. The only question this court can determine is whether there is sufficient evidence if believed by the jury to sustain the conviction. This court passes upon that question as a question of law which is all it can legally do under such circumstances.

Our law expressly provides that the jury in all cases are the exclusive judges of the facts proved and of the weight to be given to the testimony. This court, therefore, cannot take that question from the jury without usurping authority that was never given or intended to be given to it. The jury, in a felony ease, is made up of twelve fair, disinterested, impartial, unprejudiced, unbiased and competent jurors, selected from different portions of the county, each one of whom hears all the witnesses, looks them in the face when testifying, observes their manner and the method of their examination by the respective attorneys, then hears the argument of the attorneys for each side, one side undertaking to break down the testimony of the witness and calling attention to every contradiction in the testimony of such witness and the contradiction by others of him, the other explaining such matters and seeking to sustain such witness, then hear *636 and take with them in their retirement the charge of the court; then the twelve men discuss and consider in private between themselves all such matters, and after weighing it all and all the arguments against it and in support of it, come to the conclusion that the testimony of a certain witness or witnesses, although contradicted and although there are contradictions in the testimony of such witness, that it is true and they believe it. The jury is made up of men of different ages, from young to comparatively old men, and they pursue different occupations and businesses. With all these surroundings they are much more competent to arrive at the truth than are the judges of this court who must look solely to the testimony as written down on paper. It cannot portray the manner, the looks and the deportment of the witness, nor the manner of his examination and cross-examination by the attorneys. Besides this, the presiding judge hears and sees and observes all that the jury does in the trial of the case and he then sustains the verdict of the jury. Therefore, when the evidence taken in its favorable light sustains the verdict this court can not legally set it aside.

We have carefully read and studied all the evidence in this case. It is amply sufficient, if believed by the jury as it was, to sustain the verdict. We are not authorized to set it aside. It is unnecessary to recite the evidence.

Among others, the appellant introduced the witness, Clarence Thrash, whose testimony, in some particulars, tended to break down the State’s case, as made by its evidence and, in some particulars, in favor of the defendant. On cross-examination of this witness the State by him showed, or tended to show some inconsistencies, if not contradictions, of his own testimony, damaging to the State, given in his direct examination. Then the district attorney produced the written and signed testimony of this witness before the grand jury when they were investigating the case and found the indictment herein. He admitted that that was his signed statement of his testimony before the grand jury and that he had so testified before the grand jury; that before he testified before the grand jury he was duly and properly sworn. The district attorney, who was present in the grand jury room and who wrote down this statement before it was signed by this witness, as well as one of the grand jurors, testified positively that this statement of the witness of his testimony before the grand jury was written down at the time he gave it, read over to him and signed by him. There is no doubt, and can not be, from the testimony, that this statement was signed by the witness and his testimony before the grand jury as therein written down and signed by him. This testimony, in some particulars, was in direct contradiction of some of his testimony in favor of the appellant given on this trial. The State thereupon, without any objection whatever by appellant, introduced the following portion of said statement.

“My name is Clarence Thrash. I know Essie Moore and Etta Moore. *637 Am a rural route mail carrier. Etta Moore told me she was 17 years old and asked me to hold her mail. Have been to Moore’s house two times. The first time was there was to get E. L. Moore to sign a petition to the government for a daily mail route. This was in 1911. I cannot tell what month or the day of the month. Nobody but the Moore family was there that day. I was back .there some time before any arrest was made. Nobody was there that day except the two girls. It was on Friday or Friday a week before anybody was arrested. Can’t say for certain. I went with Knox Kearse. Knox Kearse and I went there about the middle of the afternoon. Just the two girls were there. Two McCullough boys passed around there while we were there. We stayed there about twenty minutes. I tallied to both of the girls. I have had sexual intercourse with Essie Moore. I never did have intercourse with Etta Moore. (Some omitted.) At the time Knox Kearse and I were at Moore’s house as above stated, Knox Kearse went into the Moore house. I did not use my watch to tell the length of time that he was in the house. Knox Kearse was with the younger girl. We went to the house a second time to get a drink of water and Kearse went into the house with the younger girl, Etta Moore, the second time that we were that day. This day was not a regular mail day with me. Kearse and the girl remained in the house three' or four minutes. I was with Essie Moore during this time. Me and Essie had gotten to my motorcycle about 100 yards from the house when Kearse and Etta Moore came out of the house. Kearse and Etta Moore came on to the motorcycle where me and Essie were. I did not see any children at the house that day. E. L. Moore, the father of the girls, was out in the field about a half mile. I have guyed Knox Kearse and offered to bet him a dollar that he has had intercourse with Etta Moore, but he never would say whether he had or not. He would not say anything. That day Knox Kearse told me that he had been out to Moore’s before then. One night in town, when Kearse was with Lon Smith, Smith was drunk, and Kearse took him home, in an auto. Kearse afterwards told me that he had been out to Moore’s that night, in the car he took Smith home in, that night.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 827, 68 Tex. Crim. 633, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kearse-v-state-texcrimapp-1912.