Lockhart v. State

111 S.W. 1024, 53 Tex. Crim. 589, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 293
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 1908
DocketNo. 3848.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 1024 (Lockhart 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
Lockhart v. State, 111 S.W. 1024, 53 Tex. Crim. 589, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 293 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

DAVIDSOE, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was given sixteen years in the penitentiary under a conviction of murder in the second degree.

Several bills of exception were reserved to the ruling of the court admitting in evidence certain statements made by deceased twenty or thirty minutes after he was shot, some of them perhaps within less time.

1. Mrs. Ollie Branch, widow of the deceased, was permitted to state that some five minutes after the difficulty in which her husband was injured, he asked her to hold up his head, and in response to an inquiry propounded to him by her, as to whether or not he was badly hurt, stated that he was, and then further stated that he wanted her to pay some small debts he owed. This was allowed with the qualification that the matters stated in the bill were in connection with other facts tending to show deceased was conscious of impending death, and it was also admitted as res gestae. The statement of facts is also referred to by the judge in connection with this qualification. In connection with this bill, some of the other bills may be noticed, as they present practically the same questions, or at least to some extent the same questions. The witness, E. W. Wheeler, testified that he got to the deceased some twenty minutes after he was shot, and that deceased, in response to questions propounded to him by Mrs. E. W. Wheeler as to what ho was shot for, stated, “For nothing,” and that he further stated, in response to a question propounded to him by Mrs. E. W. Wheeler, if he did not try to keep him from shooting him, he stated that he tried to take the gun away from him, but the “first shot numbed him so he could not.” Objections were urged also to his testimony. The court qualifies this bill by referring to the statement of facts. Another bill recites that the witness, E. W. Wheeler, testified that some twenty minutes after deceased was shot, in answer to a question propounded to him by Mrs. Wheeler as to why he was shot, stated, “For nothing.” Another bill recites that the same witness, Wheeler, testified that some twenty minutes after deceased was shot, his wife, Mrs. Wheeler, asked him the following question: “Did you not try to keep him from shooting you,” and the deceased replied, that he tried to get the gun away from him, but that “the first shot numbed him so he could not.” The court qualifies this bill by referring to the statement of facts. Mrs. Wheeler testified, over objection, that she got to the deceased some twenty minutes after he was shot, and that deceased in response to questions propounded to him by her, as to what he was shot *592 about, stated, “For nothing,” and that he further stated in response to a question propounded to him by her, if he did not try to keep him from shooting him, that he tried to take the gun away from him, but the first shot numbed him so he could not. This is qualified by referring to the statement of facts, and further that it oe-^ curred within twenty minutes from the time the deceased was shot. The court in admitting this testimony seems to have acted upon the thought that it was dying declarations, and if not, then res gestae. Dying declarations are not admissible except with reference to the cause of the death; that is, where the death is the subject of inquiry. Extraneous matters or expressions that do not relate to the cause of the killing could not come within the rule of dying declarations. But it. will be observed, with reference to this testimony, at least to most of it, that the witness, Mrs. Wheeler, propounded a direct and leading question to the deceased, as follows: “Did you not try to keep him from shooting you?” This formal question would seem to exclude it under our statute in regard to dying declarations, as well as under the rule of res geste. We do not propose to here enter into a discussion of the statute with reference to dying declarations. It provides specially that the dying declarations must not be in reply to questions suggesting answers; and the rule as to- res gestee is that it must be the act speaking spontaneously through the mouth of the declarer, and not in answer to questions suggesting answers, or as a narration of events. These statements of the deceased were made in direct response to questions suggesting the answers that were received. It would seem from the qualification to one or more of these bills that the trial judge entertained the idea that anything that was stated by the deceased at the time would be res geste, whether it was relative to the issue or not. Res geste is admitted like other testimony, which seems to grow out of a rule of necessity, but this rule of necessity must be governed by the same rules governing the introduction of other testimony, as far as its relevancy and materiality is concerned. If statements sought to be introduced as res geste are relevant to or explanatory of some issue in the case where testimony would be admissible to explain, or admissible for any purpose, res geste would be governed by the same rule as would the admissibility of any other relevant fact. Statements of parties engaged in a trouble, or declarations or acts or matters occurring at the time of the supposed transaction are not admissible as res geste simply because they were stated at the time, but these acts and declarations when sought to be used on the trial of a party accused must have some relevancy or materiality or bearing upon the issue or issues involved in such trial. “The statement must not only accompany an act, but also tend to characterize or explain it. The mere fact that a statement accompanies an act does not make it a part of the res geste of that act if it does not characterize the act itself. A statement or declaration is not admissible as res geste merely because it accompanies an act, but the act which it accompanies and explains- must be the one which is being *593 litigated, or must be otherwise relevant to the issue. A statement which is merely narrative of a past and completed transaction is not part of the res gestae as this term is used under the verbal act rule, but it may be narrative in form and still be of the res gestae if it refers to and explains the transaction then going on. The mere fact, however, that such a statement has some relation to the act which it accompanies does not make it a part of the act.” 11 Enc. of Ev., pp. 382-3-4; and numerous cases cited in the footnotes on those pages; so numerous it is unnecessary here to collate them. With, reference to the testimony of Wheeler in which he narrates what occurred between his wife and deceased, the statement will show as follows: “Mow, your wife, had she gotten up there in the meantime? A. She got up there about that time and began questioning him, and wanted to know what lie was shot about, and he said, ‘For nothing’ as well as I can remember.” Here the defendant interposed numerous exceptions, which, being overruled, the following occurred: “Q. What was it your wife asked Ollie Branch? A. Asked him what was the cause of him shooting him. Q. What was his answer? A. He said, ‘for nothing,’ and she says was he mad at you, and he said, ‘Yes, ma’am.’ Q. Was anything else said about shots and about the shooting? A. My wife said, ‘Didn’t you try to keep him from shooting you,’ and he said he tried to take the gun away from him, but the first shot numbed him so he could not.” In regard to the expression of the witness where she makes the deceased use the statement that “He killed him for nothing,” to the answers of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 1024, 53 Tex. Crim. 589, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockhart-v-state-texcrimapp-1908.