Lane v. State

152 S.W. 897, 69 Tex. Crim. 65, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1913
DocketNo. 2138.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 897 (Lane 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
Lane v. State, 152 S.W. 897, 69 Tex. Crim. 65, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 43 (Tex. 1913).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of the theft of property over the value of fifty dollars, and his punishment fixed at the lowest prescribed by law.

It is unnecessary to give but a brief statement of the evidence. About August 10,1911, Mrs. Laura Best and her husband took the T. & N. 0. Railroad train at a little station just south of the county line of Angelina County. This railroad extends from Beaumont to Dallas, running through Angelina County from the south practically towards the north, Angelina County being a long county north and south. Mrs. Best had with her in her hand-bag 19 twenty-dollar bills, 2 five-dollar bills, 1 two-dollar bill, 1 one-dollar bill, and 15 cents in coin. She and her husband with their two children went from Rockland, just south of the south line of Angelina County, to a station in Angelina County north' on a north bound train on said railroad. She placed the hand-grip or satchel on the seat, and when they got out of the train forgot it and left it on the seat. She was going to visit her sister, who lived a short distance from the station where they got off, and as soon as she reached her sister’s, shortly after she got off the train, she missed the money. Her husband went back at once, wired the conductor of the train, and took other means to recover the lost satchel or grip and the money. Very soon after she got on the train the .appellant, who was the “Butch” or newsboy on the train, passed along where she had been sitting and his attention was called to the hand-bag by a lady passenger who sat on the seat just behind where Mrs. Best and her husband had been. He then took it, carried it back to his box where he kept his papers and articles of merchandise. He claims he did not immediately look into the hand-bag to see what was in it, but put it in his box. He said he knew that it was not his and he had no- right to it, and that all such articles that are left on the train should be turned over to the conductor or train auditor; that he did not do this. He says he did not immediately look into the hand-grip to see what was in it, but soon did so, and that when he did so he found the $-393.15 in it. That he took the money out of the hand-bag and put it in his pocket and threw the bag out of the window. He first testified that he did this before the train reached the town of Huntington, which is only about half way through the county on said railroad from the south to the north line thereof. He afterwards attempted' to show that he did not know when or where the train was when he did *67 this, but that it was further north, and perhaps not in Angelina County. When the train got to Nacogdoches, which is the county seat of the next county north of Angelina County, the conductor got a telegram inquiring for this grip. The telegram, as he understood, meant an .ordinary black grip such as are carried usually by travelers with articles of clothing therein, and that he did not at the time think it meant a lady’s hand-bag, satchel or grip such as- is usually carried by ladies. That as soon as he got the telegram and the train started out of Nacogdoches north he went entirely through the train hunting and inquiring and examining for such an article. That the appellant knew that he was looking for that article left by said lady; that the appellant then had the money in his pocket, but did not then tell the conductor about it, or of his having found and taken charge of the said lady’s grip and its contents. The conductor inquired of him about it, and searched in and about his box for it, but could not find it. Of course he did not, as the appellant then had the money in his pocket, and had thrown the grip out of the window. That from time to time after-wards the conductor went through the train inquiring for this handbag, when the appellant himself would inquire of the conductor whether or not he had got “any more dope on that.” The appellant repeatedly asked the conductor this after the conductor began to hunt for said grip or hand-bag, but at no time did appellant tell him that he had it- or had gotten it, but when the conductor searched his box and under the seat about his box, he denied having it.

It seems the sheriff of Angelina County wired the police or sheriff’s department at Dallas to arrest appellant for the theft of said money. The telegram did not reach Dallas in time for the officer to meet the train upon its arrival, but when he went to the station at Dallas that night the train had arrived, the passengers had dispersed and appellant had left the depot, and he could find out nothing about it that night. The next morning, shortly before a train on this same road was to go south from Dallas back to Beaumont, the sheriff went to the news agent’s department and met appellant in the room. He did not know him. He asked appellant for the news agent. Appellant pointed him out. Upon inquiry of the news agent for appellant, the news agent pointed out appellant there in the room, all three being present at the time. The sheriff told appellant that he had a telegram stating the amount of money that was in said hand-bag or grip, and to arrest him if he did not give up the money, but that if he would deliver the money, not to arrest him. The appellant denied having the money or knowing anything about it, but showed to the sheriff a telegram to himself to the effect that if he would return the money he would be rewarded therefor, and he said to the sheriff, “If I had the money I would return it for the reward,” and not only refused to give up the money, but denied having it, or any knowledge of it. The sheriff arrested him and took him off to the courthouse about a half mile distant. The sheriff kept accusing him of having the money, and telling him if he *68 would give it up he would turn him loose under his instructions. Appellant still denied having the money or knowing anything about it, but said that in order to be protected if he would let him see his mother she would put up the money for him in order to keep him from being arrested and prosecuted. The officer told him no, if he did not have the money his mother nor any one else could put it up for him, and told him he would have to take him to jail. Upon starting from the courthouse to the jail with him, appellant then told him if he would go back to the depot with him he would get and deliver the money to him. The sheriff went back with him; appellant went in behind some place in the news room, reached back in some place where he had the money hid or concealed and delivered it to the sheriff. The money so delivered by him at the time to the sheriff was the 19 tweüty-dollar bills and 2 ten-dollar bills. The sheriff told him and showed him the telegram that that was more money than Mrs. Best had. The appellant told the sheriff he had taken out the small money and put in two ten-dollar bills instead, and the sheriff turned over one of. the ten-dollar bills to him and had him get the change, and appellant turned over to the sheriff the exact amount of money, and kept the balance of the change himself. Appellant .testified that he had the two-dollar bill and the one-dollar bill in his pocket at the time, but did not deliver or turn that particular money over to the sheriff.

It seems that appellant’s main contention is that the evidence fails to show the venue of the theft in Angelina County, and he asked a peremptory charge of acquittal, which was refused. The charge does not state that it was on that ground, but appellant contends that that is the reason for asking said peremptory charge.

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Related

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191 S.W.2d 741 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1946)
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274 S.W. 580 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1925)
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202 S.W. 948 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1918)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 897, 69 Tex. Crim. 65, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.