Keeton v. State

128 S.W. 404, 59 Tex. Crim. 316, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 302
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1910
DocketNo. 441.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 404 (Keeton 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
Keeton v. State, 128 S.W. 404, 59 Tex. Crim. 316, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 302 (Tex. 1910).

Opinions

McCORD, Judge.

This is an appeal from a conviction for murder in the second degree, the penalty being assessed at five years confinement in the penitentiary.

On January 5, 1909, in the city of Amarillo, Potter County, the appellant, J. W. Keeton, shot and killed FT. P. Thomas, said killing occurring in the lower story of the courthouse. On the 5th day of July thereafter indictment was returned against appellant charging him with the murder of the said Thomas and on motion the venue of the case was changed to Wilbarger County, and a trial had at the September term of said court resulting in appellant’s conviction as before stated. The appellant, Keeton, was deputy sheriff and the jailer for J. E. Hughes, sheriff of Potter County. The deceased, FT. P. Thomas, was a State ranger and had been located at Amarillo for some' time. Friction and ill feeling sprang up between the sheriff’s department and the said Thomas and it may be stated that bad blood existed between them. A few days before the killing there was a man by the name of Banister in jail in Potter County who had been arrested for an offense committed in Arkansas. This prisoner had, so the appellant claimed, been delivered to the sheriff of Arkansas by the said Thomas who had induced him, the jailer, to turn Banister over to him to examine some papers. An article had been published in the paper severely arraigning the deceased for his connection with the prisoner being taken out of the custody of the appellant and turned over to the Arkansas officer. On the morning of the killing, the deceased, Thomas, appeared at the county attorney’s office in the courthouse on the lower floor and while there engaged in a conversation with a lawyer named Jackson in which Thomas was trying to secure the services of Jackson to defend him. It seems the county attorney had two offices and it was in the back, or rear office, where the deceased and Jackson had this conversation. While they were engaged in conversation Hnderwood, the county attorney, and a Mr. Biehardson left the office and went into an adjoining office. Jackson had about finished his conversation with Thomas and the witness Jackson says, he was pausing until he could find a quitting place in the conversation so that he could walk out; that Thomas was sitting down behind a table with his back to the wall and one leg thrown up on the table; that at that moment the appellant came into the room from *320 the east door which separated this room from the comity judge’s room. Appellant walked close to the end of the table; that as he did so, the deceased looked around and said: “Hello, Jim!” and Keeton replied, “Hello!” that Thomas then turned back towards the witness Jackson and just at this moment Hr. Hughes, the sheriff, stepped into the room through the door in the south part of the room that separated the two offices of the county attorney, and Hughes remarked, “Hello, Doc, when did you get back?” that Thomas replied, “Good morning, Mr. Hughes,” and said something about when he got back. Hughes said: “You gave us a double deal on that prisoner;” that Thomas replied:. “Ho, Mr. Hughes, you are mistaken about that.” As Hughes said this, Jackson' started out, going through the door through which Hughes had entered; that as he started out he heard Hughes say, “Who was it then?” that the witness did not catch Thomas’ reply, but says he had taken a step or two when he heard Keeton say, “There is not any use of telling a dirty, or damn lie about it,” and the dirty lie was repeated and a gun fired. The firing of the shot was almost simultaneous with the statement of the appellant that he, deceased, was a dirty liar; that but one shot was fired, which struck Thomas in the head, killing him almost instantly. This witness says that as he started to walk out Thomas was sitting in a chair, behind the table; that his hat was in his lap and that his hands were also in his lap; that he, the witness, had passed through the door when the shot was fired and at the time the shot was fired Hughes, the sheriff, was coming out of the room behind the witness and through the said door. As Hughes walked through the room he made the remark, “He has killed him;” that it must have been about ten seconds after the shot was fired when Hughes made this remark. This witness further states that when Keeton entered the room Thomas turned and spoke to him and then turned back to the witness to continue his conversation; that at tiat instant Hughes appeared in the room. The witness further stated that the appellant’s voice when he came in and said “hello” sounded a little more husky than natural and that as Hughes walked in he seemed to be paler than usual; that Hughes had a tremor in his voice when he spoke; had a pencil in his hand and was trembling just a little and was a little pale. The witness further stated that lie saw no difference in the appearance of Thomas; that when Hughes came in and spoke to Thomas the only move that he noticed Thomas make was that he slipped deeper into his chair, or slipped up a little and moved his hat further down on his legs; that Thomas was sitting pretty close to the table and was pretty well up on the table with his feet; that Keeton,'when he walked in "the room, had his hands in his pants pockets; that when the parties rushed into the room they found the deceased sitting back in .the chair with his hands dropped down to his side and a pistol wound right above his eye. Judge Jeeter, *321 county judge of Potter County, testified that he was in his office writing at the time the shot was fired; that the county attorney’s offices are directly west of his offices; that Keeton passed through his office shortly before the shot was fired; that he spoke to him as he passed; that he, witness, heard some talking after Keeton went into the county attorney’s office; that he could not distinguish what was said but heard the pistol fire, and when he heard the shot fired he rushed through the door out of the room in which he was at the time into his other room and put himself in a position where the vault would be between him and the shots and while there, Keeton came out by him and the witness says that Keeton was putting Ms pistol in the scabbard and that as he put the pistol in the scabbard, Keeton remarked, “I have killed that damned old Thomas;” that the appellant then passed out into the hall and the witness followed Mm and asked how it happened, but appellant made no reply. The witness further says he then returned to his office and looked into the county attorney’s office where the deceased was, but did not go into the office; that he saw the deceased sitting in a chair and that this chair was between the table and the south wall of the county attorney’s offices and was near the west end of the table and was east of the door that connected the two offices of the county attorney and was rather behind the door as it swings on its hinges; that the deceased was sitting with his face towards the north wall of the room, his head was laid back on the chair, and there was not more than a foot or foot and a half distance between the wall and the chair and Ms left hand was lying in Ms lap. The witness further states: “I just opened the door and looked in and saw his position. Then I closed the door and went back.” Hr.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 404, 59 Tex. Crim. 316, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keeton-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.