King v. State

216 S.W. 1091, 86 Tex. Crim. 407, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 449
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1919
DocketNo. 5460.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 1091 (King 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
King v. State, 216 S.W. 1091, 86 Tex. Crim. 407, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 449 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

—Appellant was indicted in Baylor county under a charge of conspiracy, in that he confederated, agreed and conspired with Beulah Owens and Gregg Breeland to kill and husband, G. L. Owens, and appellant in which Owens had fired venue to Knox County.

' The evidence discloses that G. L. Owens was the husband ,of Beulah Owens, and that Gregg Breeland was a brother of Mrs. Owens. It is further disclosed that the parties had known each other practically all their lives, and that Mrs. Owens had become infatuated with appellant, and that their relations had taken on a phase of criminal intimacy. There had been trouble between the husband, G. L. Owens, and appellant in which Owens had fired several shots at appellant on one occasion, and that they had had a difficulty in Mart, McLennan County. There was considerable evidence with reference to this difficulty pro and con as to who was the aggressor. It is not shown or claimed that the other parties had any connection with the trouble in Mart between appellant and Owens, or that they had any knowledge of it until some time after the difficulty. There was also a shooting scrape in the town of Seymour in January, 1919, between Mrs. Owens and her brother, Gregg Breeland, on one side, and her husband, G. L. Owens, on the other. All three of the parties were pretty badly shot, two of them seriously. Mrs. Owens and Breeland were indicted for assault to murder upon *409 G. L. Owens. The ease was transferred to Cottle County where, upon their trials, a verdict of acquittal was rendered. Appellant was not connected personally with the difficulty between Mrs. Owens and Breeland, on one side, and her husbad, G. L. Owens, on the other, to show by circumstances that he was placed in the relation of accomplice to that difficulty, though not present and participating. The evidence is very weak and inconclusive upon appellant’s connection with it. There is no contention that he engaged in the shooting. Prior to this last difficulty G. L. Owens had sued his wife for a divorce, asking custody of the children. This divorce suit was pending in the District Court in Baylor County, and the Parties had assembled at Seymour, the county seat, to try the case on Monday following the above shooting which occurred on Saturday. A divorce was granted, the children awarded to the husband, and Mrs. Owens then married appellant. Subseauent to her marriage and prior to appellant’s trial she died. The alleged conspiracy is shown to have occurred in Cooke County. The evidence of this is found in the testimony of Lloyd Owens, a son of G. L. and Beulah Owens. He was a boy something like eleven or twelve years of age. These parties, appellant, Mrs. Owens, Gregg Breeland and Mrs. Owens’ children, had gone from Baylor County to Cooke County and adjoining counties for the purpose of picking cotton. This seems to have been about November, 1917. Upon one occasion during this trip he says they were occupying a room in which there were two or three beds. Gregg Breeland and appellant slept in one bed and his mother in another, and the children in another. That one evening, while they were occupying this room or house, they were all in the room, and he says the children were playing, himself being one of them, Quoting now his testimony with reference to the conspiracy, he said :

“While we were living in that house I heard a conversation between my mother, Gregg Breeland and Matthew King about my father; when I heard it me and my sisters and brother were playing up in that end of the house, and they were down at this end talking. All three of them were sitting on the bed. Mamma just said they would get him out of the way, and Matthew said he would help. Gregg was talking with them and they had a right smart of a conversation there, talked about how they would get him out of the way. We picked cotton down there about two weeks, then came back to Baylor County in the wagon. My mamma, Gregg and little sisters and brother came back with me. Matthew King did not come back. He did not come back because papa came to Seymour after his mules; they got a letter from Seymour. I heard them reading the letter and talking about it; then defendant went on back to the little house, got his clothes, and mamma went down there and came back with him; they he went to town; he left about 3 o’clock that evening after they got the letter.”

*410 On cross-examination he said: "We stayed there about a week and that is when I heard the conversation, all of tuem doing the talking. I was not doing any of it. The house wasn’t very big. Two beds were in one end of the house and one at the other end. Matthew and Gregg slept in the bed at the other end. I think they were sitting on the beds, and we were playing on the bed Matthew slept on at the time of this conversation, my little sisters and brother playing on the bed with me. I didn’t play with them al] the time. I heard my mother say something about fixing somebody I heard her say, Matthew, we will get him out of our way.” Matthe' says, ‘I will help you.’ I testified at Seymour last July; in th trial I said that Mathew did say something. I did not say on t trial that my mother said she would fix him or get him out of way and that Mathew said nothing and Gregg said nothing, my testimony now, that Mathew King said he would help he him out of the way. . . . When she said ‘We will get hr of the way,’ Mathew King said he would help her; she sa' would get my papa out of the way, because I knew what s' talking about; she just said, ‘We will get him out of the way. That is all I have to say about it.”

The defendant introduced evidence to the effect that such conversation did not occur. Gregg Breeland so testified as did the defendant, Mrs. Owens, subsequently Mrs. King, had died, and was not a witness.

The case seems to present itself this way: that Matthew King and Mrs. Owens were infatuated with each other, even to the extent of criminal intimacy; that Owens, the husband of Mrs. Owens, was very much disturbed about it, to the extent of shooting at appellant on two occasions, and engaging in a serious shooting affair with his brother-in-law, Gregg Breeland, and his wife, in which he wounded them seriously. He also, previous to the last difficulty, had killed one of his wife’s brothers and a Mr. Palmer. This also grew out of troubles with and about his wife.

One of the questions presented is, taking the State’s case in its strongest light as made by Lloyd Owens, the twelve year old boy, do the facts present a case of a positive agreement, as required by the statute, to commit the crime of murder? And it may be stated that if the conspiracy was to kill, it would be included within the conspiracy to commit murder. See Branch’s Ann. P. C., Arts. 1438, 1434,1435, and 1439. It is also provided by Article 1436, Branch’s Ann. P. C., that "a threat made by two or more persons acting in concert will not be sufficient to constitute conspiracy.” It is also provided by Article 1434, supra, that the offense of conspiracy is complete, although the parties conspiring do not proceed to effect the object for which they have so unlawfully combined. To constitute the substantive and independent offense of conspiracy under the Penal Code, there must-be a positive agreement, and this to commit *411 a felony, and in this case the State charged that felony to be murder.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 1091, 86 Tex. Crim. 407, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.