Lewis v. State

231 S.W. 113, 89 Tex. Crim. 345, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 473
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1921
DocketNo. 6233.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 113 (Lewis 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
Lewis v. State, 231 S.W. 113, 89 Tex. Crim. 345, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 473 (Tex. 1921).

Opinion

HAWKINS,

Appellant was convicted of the murder of Clarence Mathews, and his punishment assessed at forty years’ confinement in the penitentiary.

The court declined to charge on manslaughter. Timely objections were urged because of this omission, and a special charge on the subject, presented, which was refused.

All the parties to this homicide were negroes. The trouble resulting in the killing arose over a dispute between appellant on the one hand, and- the deceased, Clarence Mathews, and his son Ewart, on the other, over the manner in which the Mathews were gathering corn. Cleveland Williams was assisting in gathering corn. He was in sight of the parties, and testified about the killing, but claims not to have heard what was said between them. Ewart Mathews was the main State’s witness. His and Williams’ testimony make a case of unprovoked murder, with no semblance of either manslaughter or self-defense, in which Clarence Mathews was killed, and Ewart Mathews shot and *348 severely wounded by appellant. Appellant was dependent almost wholly on his own testimony for the contention that the issue of manslaughter was in the case. If any evidence raised the issue, the determination of it passed from the court to the jury, under appropriate instructions. “In a doubtful case the charge on manslaughter should be given.” Pickens v. State, 86 Texas Crim. Rep., 662: McLaughlin v. State, 10 Texas Crim. App., 359; Arnwine v. State, 49 Texas Crim. Rep., 6. After all the evidence is in, if it is questionable in the court’s mind as to whether the issue of manslaughter is raised, it should be resolved in the defendant’s favor, and the matter passed to the jury.” Steen v. State, 88 Texas Crim. Rep., 256, 225 S. W. Rep., 531.

The substance of appellant’s testimony is: “that on the morning of the killing, the deceased, his son, and Williams, were in one part of defendant’s corn field, gathering corn for defendant’s landlord. That previously .there had been an agreement between defendant and the deceased as to the manner of dividing the corn. That a few days before the killing deceased and his son in gathering another portion of the corn, made a mistake in dividing the rows. That on the morning of the killing, defendant had prepared to haul a wagon load of watermelons from his home to San Marcos, and had hitched his mules to the wagon and directed his boy and a woman by the name of Tinie Saffold, to drive the wagon along the turning road through the field, toward the premises of Mr. Scheibe, where he had engaged to deliver some watermelons enroute to San Marcos. That he went in a different direction by a potato patch to get his pistol that he had dropped there the night previous and went from that place to the northwest corner of the corn field to examine where the corn had been gathered to ascertain if it had been gathered according to the previous agreement. He was a distance of about 150 yards from deceased and his son inspecting the rows and did not invite deceased and his son to assist him in making the inspection, but that deceased’s son first came to where he was and inquired of him what the trouble was; that defendant informed deceased’s son that a mistake had been made there, as had been made in the other field, but no angry words passed between them, and that in a few minutes the deceased voluntarily got from the wagon which he was driving and came over to the place where defendant and deceased’s son were examining the rows that had been gathered and those that had been left ungathered and in an insulting way addressed defendant; that one word led on to another and that deceased cursed defendant and called him a black son-of-a-bitch and attempted to strike defendant with his first; that thereupon a difficulty ensued between defendant, deceased and deceased’s son, and that defendant was assaulted by both deceased and his son; was struck with an axe handle by the son of deceased and at the very time the deceased was shot both deceased and his son were attempting to commit a battery upon defendant.” That while the assaults were being made on him he was trying to get his pistol out, but deceased fired at *349 appellant before he succeeded in getting his pistol, and that when he did secure it he shot both deceased and his son. Evidence was introduced tending to show that at the place where the difficulty started there were indications that a struggle or scuffle had occurred, corn and weeds being mashed down, and foot prints all about. The State combatted this by showing that many parties had been walking about the place before the observations were made. Appellant also testified that on a prior occasion, abortt cotton chopping time, deceased had charged him with not carrying out his contract about the crop, had cursed him and threatened an assault upon him with a monkey wrench if he did not get the money and pay a small amount he owed deceased by Saturday; that appellant got the money-, paid deceased, and that matters moved along fairly well until the trouble came up about the corn. We have given more in detail the evidence of appellant than of the State, because it is to the former we must look to determine whether manslaughter should have been submitted.

The court does not determine the weight of the testimony, nor whether it is true or false, in concluding whether to submit manslaughter. His only duty is to ascertain if any evidence raises the issue, regardless of what he may think of its cogency. “If there is evidence which, however weak or inconclusive it may seem to the court, tends to prove facts from which the jury may deduce a finding of manslaughter, it is error to fail to charge on it.” (Branch’s Criminal Law, Section 504, and a collation of authorities supporting the text quoted.") As was tersely stated by'Judge Lattimore in the Steen case, supra, “the causes named in our statute as adequate to reduce a homicide to manslaughter are well understood to be instances, and not limitations.” The jury had the right, and it was their province to believe any part of the testimony of appellant or any other witness, which to them seemed reasonable, and on the other hand, to reject all or any part to which they did not give credence. The jury evidently rejected appellant’s testimony in which he claims that deceased shot at him before he killed deceased. Having found against appellant on the issue of self-defense, they still had a right to believe that deceased and his son made an assault on appellant, and that the three of them became engaged in a fight and struggle, and from this alone, or in connection with previous abuse and assault with the monkey wrench, appellant’s mind became so inflamed from anger, rage, resentment or terror, as to render it incapable of cool reflection, and that the facts and circumstances were sufficient to produce such a state of mind in a person of ordinary temper. If they should have reached such a conclusion from the evidence, no rule is given them in the charge directing them what to do under such a finding.

We do not believe the special charge requested by appellant on manslaughter was correct. It embraced a clause telling the jury that “insulting words of the person killed towards a female relative, etc.” was “adequate cause:” We find in the record no testimony justifying such *350 a charge. If it was predicated on the evidence that deceased called appellant a “son-of-a-bitch,” it was not the law. It has been held such language, however obnoxious it may be, will not support such a charge.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 113, 89 Tex. Crim. 345, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-state-texcrimapp-1921.