Lozano v. State

202 S.W. 510, 83 Tex. Crim. 174, 1918 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1918
DocketNo. 4731.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 510 (Lozano 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
Lozano v. State, 202 S.W. 510, 83 Tex. Crim. 174, 1918 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 121 (Tex. 1918).

Opinion

*177 DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder, his punishment being assessed at fifteen years confinement in the penitentiary.

The record is voluminous. Many of the bills of exception will- be treated in a general way. The State’s theory of the case was that four parties, Macke, deceased; Guerra, Gonzales and Damm, were wandering around at night in the City of San Antonio, going from street to street, seeking certain parties, especially a woman. In their meanderings they came to Matamoras Street, where they discovered a fight in progress in a house supposed to be one of prostitution. Macke did not testify because he was the deceased. The other three parties testified, in substance, the same with reference to their wanderings about the streets, and their arrival at the house of the difficulty. This was between a woman and two men. These parties were strangers to defendant and the witness Pena, who figures in the case as a defense witness. Immediately after this difficulty Pena and appellant went away, as did the other four parties. Shortly after leaving the place of this difficulty the deceased and his companions traveled on one side of the street and Pena and appellant on the other side. The testimony is not clear as to which of the parties crossed the street, but they met in the street and a difficulty occurred. All parties, State’s witnesses and deceased, were strangers to Pena and appellant. As to just how the -difficulty began there is doubt. The State’s contention was that appellant, or Pena, began the difficulty. The appellant’s contention was that the difficulty was brought on by Macke and his companions. Macke charged Pena with being engaged in the difficulty between the woman and the two men at the house, and denounced him. This was denied by Pena. One word brought on another until it ended in a fight in which all six engaged. The State’s theory is that appellant stabbed Macke with his knife before Macke and his crowd struck any blows. Appellant’s theory was that Macke and his companions turned upon and assaulted him, knocked him down and struck him with rocks,-and cut him with a knife. His left hand was broken, and his right hand cut or stabbed. The testimony shows that rocks were thrown, and appellant knocked down. The testimony indicates that the meeting may have been accidental. Appellant’s testimony is to the effect that after he was knocked down and was being beaten, and after being knocked down once or twice, he got his knife from his pocket, opened it while the other parties were making assaults upon him, and used it to defend himself, but with no purpose or intent to kill.

Several bills of exception were reserved to the testimony with reference to the movements and actions of deceased and his companions prior to their reaching the scene of the fight between the woman and the two men on Matamoras Street. These bills detail the testimony of the witnesses for the State with reference to their movements going from street to street seeking various parties. We are of opinion this evidence was not admissible. Their movements would not affect the appellant.

There are bills of exception reserved to the introduction of evidence *178 with reference to the fight between the woman and the two men on Matamoras Street. As we understand the record, appellant was not connected with that fight. The State advanced the theory that Pena had something to.do with it. This fight was gone into in prolix detail, showing that the woman and one of the men were Mexicans, and the man they were fighting was a white man about nineteen or twenty years of age, and that the Mexicans were fighting him; that the officers came and arrested the woman and the white man and took them away. We are of opinion that the details of that matter were not admissible. If appellant was present he was but an onlooker and took no part in the fight. If any of this testimony was admissible with reference to the fight, it was by reason of the fact that Nacke accused Pena of participating in the fight. This accusation initiated the fatal trouble. Enough of that fight was admissible to explain Nacke’s accusation against Pena. Upon another trial the details of that trouble will not be permitted to go to the jury, and only so much of it as will serve to connect that matter with the later difficulty.

In this connection the court limited that testimony to motive for the killing on the part of appellant. We are of opinion this was error. There is nothing in the testimony, so far as we have been able to discover, that would induce the belief that the trouble between the men and the woman served any purpose to show motive on the part of appellant in killing Nacke. There were no facts occurring at the time of either fight that would indicate that appellant had any reason to have animosity toward Nacke on account of the first fight.

The court charged the jury with reference to the testimony of Pena. Pena had been indicted and acquitted for killing Nacke. He testified as a defense witness. The court charged the jury in regard to this, as follows:

“The State was also permitted by the court to elicit from the witness Andres Pena that he had been indicted, tried and acquitted for the killing of Carlos Nacke. I charge you that same was admitted by the court for the sole purpose of affecting the credibility of the witness, Andres Pena testifying in this case, and you shall consider it for no other purpose.”

This character of evidence is admissible for impeaching purposes, but the jury should not be told that it does impeach. Such charge is upon the weight of the evidence. The charge should have been so given as. to not suggest to the jury that it did affect his credibility. The jury should be left free to consider it for impeaching purposes, or as affecting his credibility. They might consider it for that purpose. The jury are the judges of the weight of the testimony and the credibility of the witnesses.

The court failed to give a charge to the effect that if the weapon used in the assault upon appellant was such as to produce a reasonable apprehension of death or serious bodily injury, they.should regard such attack as being for the purpose of killing appellant or inflicting upon him such serious bodily injury. Art. 1106, P. C. This was called for by the testimony. Appellant had been attacked by the deceased and his. *179 three • companions; had been knocked down once or twice with rocks; his left hand broken and his right hand cut. Appellant was entitled to this charge under the terms of article 1106, supra. The court did not so instruct the jury, and refused a charge specifically submitting this issue.

Appellant also requested -the following charge: “At the request of the defendant, I instruct you as a part of the law in this case, that our statute provides, 'where a homicide occurs under the influence of sudden passion but by the use of means not in their nature calculated to produce death, the person killing is not deemed guilty of homicide unless, it appear that there was an intention to kill, but the party from whose act the death resulted may be prosecuted for and convicted of any grade, of assault and battery.’

“So in this case I, therefore, charge you that should you believe from the evidence that the defendant. Jesus Lozano, killed deceased, Carlos Nacke, by striking or stabbing the said Carlos Nacke with a knife, but.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 510, 83 Tex. Crim. 174, 1918 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lozano-v-state-texcrimapp-1918.