McGill v. State

132 S.W. 941, 60 Tex. Crim. 614, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 576
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 1910
DocketNo. 740.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 941 (McGill 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
McGill v. State, 132 S.W. 941, 60 Tex. Crim. 614, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 576 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and given ten years in the penitentiary.

The evidence, in substance, is that appellant and deceased are negroes and were brothers-in-law. They attended a meeting of the Baptist Church, of which they were members, in Queen City Addition, in the city of Dallas. The meeting closed about 11 o’clock at night. Deceased was accompanied by his wife and baby. They went to the church in a buggy. Appellant and his wife went on foot. Immediately after adjournment of the meeting deceased went to and got in his buggy. Appellant and his wife, wife of deceased, carrying *616 her baby in her arms, and the witness Harroway were together in the street near where deceased was sitting in his buggy when the wife of deceased requested appellant to hold her baby while she got in the buggy. Up to this point there seems to be no divergence in the evidence. Harroway testified for the State that when the wife of deceased asked appellant to hold her baby he replied: “I am not studying your baby.” Harroway then proffered to and did take the baby udiile the wife of deceased got in the buggy. He states further that deceased then said to defendant: “Ed, you don’t have to hold the baby.” Defendant replied, “Well, you talk like you don’t like it.” Deceased then said, “I don’t like it,” and defendant said, “Well, get out of the buggy and let’s fight.” Satterwliite, who seems to have been the last man to leave the church after he put out the lights, stated that his attention was called to the words of the defendant to the deceased: “If you don’t like it, get out of the buggy and fight.” The next thing he’heard was a woman saying, “Part them, part them; don’t let them fight.” This seems to be the predicate for the charge given by the court on the theory of mutual combat. According to "defendant’s evidence he and his wife left the church, started down the sidewalk, saw deceased sitting in his buggy right by the sidewalk, deceased’s wife standing near the buggy. That when he and his wife got just about to the buggy deceased’s wife said, “Ed, take my baby,” and appellant said, “I am not studying no baby; it is late and I am going home.” Jesse Harroway then said, "I will take the baby,” and he took it, and just as the wife of deceased was getting in the buggy deceased said to his wife, “You are always getting some darn negro to hold that young ’un.” He then turned to appellant and said, “Ed, you talk like you are mad,” and appellant said, “Ho, I am not mad.” Deceased then said, “You talk like you want to fight,” and appellant said, “Ho, I don’t want to fight; I am going home.” By that time appellant had reached a point just even with the buggy when deceased reached out and struck him across the head and face, knocking a cigar out of his mouth and his hat off, and jumped right out of the buggy and began fighting appellant. Just as lie began striking appellant, after getting out of the buggy, he said, “God durn you, I will kill you.” As soon as deceased got out of the buggy he began striking appellant, who commenced backing away as rapidly as he could. Deceased continued after appellant, who backed off diagonally across the street as fast as he could with deceased fighting him. According to appellant’s testimony it was further shown that he continued to retreat about seventy-five feet to where the witness Jack Carter was located. Hone of the State witnesses saw a knife in the hands of defendant. Defendant’s witnesses testified that deceased had a knife in his hand during and after the fight. Appellant’s side of the case is supported by the testimony of M. T. McGruder, Jim McGruder, Augusta McGill and Jack Carter. It is further shown by one of the witnesses for appellant that when the parties had backed *617 across the street some seventy-five or eighty feet there Avas a separation between them, and appellant ran around behind the witness, the deceased following him Avith his knife. That appellant backed off across the street Avith deceased following him when they were finally separated. Deceased Avas cut several times with some sharp instrument supposed to have been a knife. Appellant had a cut on one of his hands, and some other indications of being struck, but not by a knife. This is a sufficient statement, Ave think, of the evidence to bring in review the questions suggested for revision.

1. The first bill of exceptions shows that the witness Farnsworth was used by the State in rebuttal, and testified he was a member of the grand jury that found the bill and was secretary of that body, and after stating that the case against appellant charged Avith the killing of a man by the name of Charles Eigsby, Avhich is the deceased’s name, was investigated by the grand jury, and that the indictment Avas returned against appellant by that body, Farnsworth was then asked by the State the folloAving question: “Tell the jury whether or not a man by the name of Jack Carter testified before the grand jury in the investigation of this case,” and over objection of appellant was permitted to answer, “Yes, a man by the name of Jack Carter did testify as a witness before the grand jury in the investigation of this case.” The bill is full enough to shoAV the environments of that particular situation of the case and discloses that a witness by the name of Jack Carter testified in behalf of appellant; that his testimony was material to appellant. The bill also sIioavs that Jack Carter testified that he Avas not before the grand jury when the case Avas under investigation, and had never testified before the grand jury with reference to the matter. Farnsworth did not undertake to identify the witness, aaJio testified in the case as having been before the grand jury, and his testimony is as above stated, •simply that a man by the name of Jack Carter testified before th'grand jury. There are many exceptions stated in the bill Avliy this testimony Avas inadmissible. The bill further recites that at this stage of the proceedings that FarnsAyorth Avas asked the folloAving question: “State whether or not the said Jack Carter, while before the grand jury at said time, testified that the first blow that Avas struck in that difficulty was struck after Eigsby got out of the buggy.” Many objections were urged to this testimony, all of which were overruled, and he was permitted to answer, “Yes, the Avitness Jack Carter, who was before the grand jury at said time, testified that the first blow that was struck in that difficulty was struck after Eigsby got out of the buggy.” As before stated, this bill of exceptions is quite lengthy, covering several pages, and all sorts of objections. are urged to the introduction of FarnsAVorth’s evidence. If Jack Carter Avas not before the grand jury, his testimony on the final trial could not be impeached by the witness FarnsAvorth as to Avliat he says a witness, avIio Avas knoAAm to the grand jury as Jack Carter, had testi *618 fied. A witness could only be contradicted on evidence that he gives. There was no attempt to show that this Jack Carter was before the grand jury. Mr. Farnsworth did not know and did not undertake to identify this Jack Carter in any way. So far as this hill is concerned, it may have been an entirely different, witness. Therefore, he could not be impeached as indicated. We are of opinion- as the matter is presented, that the evidence of Farnsworth was inadmissible to impeach the Jack Carter who testified in the case.

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Related

Claxton v. State
251 S.W. 1106 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1923)
Ross v. State
160 S.W. 379 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 941, 60 Tex. Crim. 614, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgill-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.