Leggett v. State

268 S.W. 750, 99 Tex. Crim. 172, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1925
DocketNo. 8533.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 750 (Leggett 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
Leggett v. State, 268 S.W. 750, 99 Tex. Crim. 172, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 89 (Tex. 1925).

Opinion

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the district court of Cottle county of murder, and his punishment fixed at five years in the penitentiary.

Deceased was the son-in-law of appellant. The families were living in the same house and were composed respectively of appellant, his wife and three sons; that of the deceased, consisting of himself, his wife and two babies, the older of which was eighteen months old. Appellant and deceased, as far as the record discloses, had never had a particle of friction or trouble prior to the night of the homicide. It is undisputed that appellant and deceased went together from their home to the little town of Tell on the day of the homicide and came back late in the afternoon. Each man did his chores, and ate his supper. The record is without divergence of testimony up to this point.

For the state it is shown that one Ashby, who had been a deputy sheriff for a number of years, but was not such at the time, was called to appellant’s house about 8:30 on the night of the occurrence. He went to the place with another son-in-law of appellant named Galyean and the wife of the latter. Ashby said when he reached the house appellant was lying on a bed and had a bruised place or cut which was bleeding, over his eye; there was blood on the pillow, also on appellant’s cheek and other parts of his face. Ashby said, “I spoke to Mr. Leggett when I went in and he said he was the one that done the work.” I went on into another room where deceased and his wife and a young’ man named Melton were. Deceased was lying on a bed. In about thirty minutes a doctor came and witness assisted him in removing the clothes from deceased, and said that when they removed his underwear they first saw a stab in the breast of deceased. When they turned him over there were a number of stabs and cuts in the back of deceased ranging from the back of his neck down to just above his hip bone. Blood was running out of the lowest cut. There was much blood on the floor and some on the walls and door knobs and bed of the room. Alfred Leggett met witness in the house and said he wanted “to give up'' to witness, who told him that he was not then a deputy sheriff. *174 Alfred wanted witness to take him to Paducah. He said he was the one who cut Mr. Jarvis and he wanted to give up. On cross-examination of this witness he said that defendant “told me he had done the trick. I couldn’t say just what else the old gentleman did say. As to his saying anything else, will say he talked some. I couldn’t tell you just what he did say. We were talking there but as far as telling exactly what Mr. Leggett said,. I don’t know as I could tell you.” Further the witness testified as follows:

“I guess Mr. Leggett heard Alfred say that he was the one that did the work, that he was the one that cut him with a knife * * * Mr. Leggett did not speak up and say, ‘No, I did it.’ If Mr. Leggett said anything I didn’t hear it.”

Dr. Morgan was the next witness for the state, who testified that he was called to see deceased on the night of the homicide and he described the different stabs on his body. He attributed the cause of death to a stab wound in the liver, which caused such loss of blood as to produce death. He said that the wounds were stabs and were not cut out at all except one which was in the right shoulder and arm which was not very deep. The State also introduced Arthur Melton who said that he lived about 300 yards from the house of appellant, and was called by Floyd Leggett that night to come down to the house. He said Floyd came to his house and said: “Run over to the house quick. They have had a fight and Marion is bleeding to death.” Witness said that when he got to the Leggett home he went into the room where deceased and his wife were and deceased said, “They all got on me,” and his wife said, “They cut him to death over nothing. ’ ’ He details no other statement made by deceased or his wife. This witness described the blood on the floor and different parts of the room in which deceased and his wife were, and testified that he saw appellant and said, “This looks pretty bad,” and appellant said he could not account for it, could' not account for what happened, and that Alfred Leggett said he done it himself, done the cutting himself, and he showed witness a cut across the palm of his hand, saying, “See here, where the son-of-a-bitch cut me.”

For the defendant, appellant and his wife and daughter — the wife of deceased, testified- that on the night of the homicide appellant was not well and was taking medicine and laid down after supper. That deceased and his wife and children were in their room adjoining that occupied by appellant; that the eighteen-months-old child of deceased began crying violently and appellant’s wife went in and got him and brought him back to the room occupied by appellant; that the child' got quiet and its mother came in and took it back into their room. She said in her testimony that she knew her father was not well and she did not want the child to bother *175 Mm. They all testified that soon after being taken back into the room of deceased, the child again began crying violently and that deceased began to spank it, which.seemed to increase its crying. They testified that at this juncture appellant got up and went into the room of his son-in-law and wanted the child turned over to Mm, and said in a remonstrating way to deceased that the child did not know what it was being whipped for. At this juncture deceased became very angry. Mrs. Leggett, wife of appellant, said she heard deceased use some curse words and heard a lick and that she jumped up and ran to the door leading into the room of deceased and the latter had knocked Mr. Leggett down and he was on his hands and knees trying to get up, and just as she stepped to the door deceased knocked him down again with a chair. She said that her young son, Floyd, ran in at this time and took hold of appellant and dragged him out into the hall and that her other son, Alfred, who was in bed, stepped around his father and asked deceased what on earth does this mean, and that deceased used some kind of curse word and said, “I will kill you,” and started at Alfred with a butcher knife. Witness says that as they started .at each other she fainted and did not know anything for a few minutes; that when she came to she went at once into their room and appellant was on the bed with his head tied up, and that the side of his face and nose were bloody. She testified that appellant seemed unconscious until along towards daylight; that his head was very badly hurt, and that it took about three weeks for him to recover. She testified that her husband and son-in-law, deceased, had been on perfectly friendly terms during all their association and that nothing occurred to precipitate the trouble except her husband’s interference, in the whipping of the baby. Appellant testified as to what occurred when he went into the room and remonstrated with deceased for whipping the baby, and said that during the afternoon deceased had taken a drink or two of liquor and that when he spoke to him deceased cursed him and told him that he would kill him. That this was the first unkind word deceased had ever spoken to him and that he said, “Marion, we have never had any trouble, not even a short word,” and deceased picked up a chair and struck him over the eye and knocked him down and rendered him unconscious; that he knew almost nothing until about day.

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Related

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51 S.W.2d 898 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1932)
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281 S.W. 1074 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 750, 99 Tex. Crim. 172, 1925 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leggett-v-state-texcrimapp-1925.