McLane v. State

379 S.W.2d 339, 1964 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 997
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1964
Docket36670
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 379 S.W.2d 339 (McLane 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
McLane v. State, 379 S.W.2d 339, 1964 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 997 (Tex. 1964).

Opinion

*340 DICE, Commissioner.

The conviction is for robbery by assault ; the punishment, enhanced under Art. 62, V.A.P.C., by reason of a prior conviction for an offense of like character, life imprisonment.

The state’s evidence was undisputed that on the night in question an armed bandit wearing a woman’s silk stocking over his head entered the Hickory Stick restaurant ■on North 18th Street in the city of Waco and robbed the place by assaulting the cashier, Marguerite Darden, and taking $758.12 from the cash register.

Mrs. Darden, called as a witness by the state, described in detail the robbery and positively identified the appellant as ' the man who robbed her. She stated that the stocking which appellant was wearing fit loosely over his head and had a runner in it, and that during the robbery she studied and could discern his facial features. She further testified that soon after the robber fled from the scene, some men brought a photograph into the place which she identified as a picture of the robber and that the following day she identified appellant at a police line-up as the man who committed the robbery.

Two photographs brought to the restaurant soon after the robbery were introduced in evidence by the state without objection, as state’s exhibits Nos. 1 and 2, and were shown by appellant’s own testimony to be his photographs.

Rev. Eddie Hundley, who was seated at a table in the restaurant with his family at the time of the robbery, upon being called as a witness by the state, also positively identified the appellant, at the time of the trial, as the robber. Rev. Hundley testified that at the time of the robbery he studied the facial features of the man, and after the man fled he identified one of the pictures exhibited at the scene as a picture of the man who had been in the place.

Proof was made that appellant had been previously convicted in the same court, in the year 1957, of the offense of robbery, as alleged in the indictment.

As a witness in his own behalf, appellant admitted having been previously convicted of the offense of robbery, as charged, but denied that he was in the Hickory Stick restaurant on the night in question and committed the robbery.

In his testimony, appellant described in detail his actions and movements on the night in question and the places where he went.

Several witnesses in the restaurant at the time of the robbery were called by appellant to testify. With the exception of one of them, each testified that due to their distance from the robber or to the distortion of his features by the stocking they were unable to identify appellant as the guilty party. The witness Jacob Green, an employee of the restaurant, testified that appellant looked like the man. On several occasions during questioning of the witnesses by appellant’s counsel as to appellant’s identity, a silk stocking was placed over appellant’s head and face in order that they could observe the extent of distortion of his facial features.

In his charge, the court submitted to the jury the appellant’s defense of alibi. Such defense was by the jury rejected in their verdict.

We find the evidence sufficient to support the judgment.

Appellant predicates his appeal upon four points of error.

By points Nos. 1 and 2, appellant insists that the court erred in permitting the two state’s witnesses, Marguerite Darden and Rev. Eddie Hundley, to testify that prior to identifying him in court they each identified him from a picture and in a police line-up. It is appellant’s contention that such was, in effect, bolstering and supporting the witnesses and therefore improper.

*341 An examination of the record reflects that no objection was made hy appellant to the witnesses’ testimony with reference to their having identified him at the police lineup. Nor does the record reflect that appellant made any objection to the testimony of the witness Hundley'with reference to his observing a photograph at the scene which was of the man who had been in the restaurant and committed the robbery. Over appellant’s ■ objection, Mrs. Darden was permitted by the court to testify that soon after the robbery a man came into the place with a picture and “from what I could glimpse of it, I thought they had already caught the robber * * I went over there then and asked him to let me see the picture and when I looked at the picture, I said then, ‘well, you’ve already caught him.’ That that was the man that had robbed us.”

The record reflects that the picture was ■one of two pictures brought to the scene, within five or ten minutes after the robbery, by news editor William M. Veal, Jr., of radio and television station KWTX in Waco. In the testimony, reference is made to the pictures having been brought to the scene immediately after the robbery.

Under the record it appears that the actions and spontaneous statements of Mrs. Darden at the scene shortly after the robbery were a part of the res gestae and admissible as such. Pilcher v. State, 32 Tex.Cr.R. 557, 25 S.W. 24; Tinsley v. State, 52 Tex.Cr.R. 91, 106 S.W. 347; Clements v. State, 106 Tex.Cr.R. 628, 294 S.W. 589.

Appellant’s third point of error is that the court erred in permitting the state’s witness, Ranger Perry Dickerson, upon 'being called in rebuttal by the state, to testify that he was present in the jail •cell of appellant and heard him state that he did not want to say anything when asked by the district attorney if he would '.like to make a statement.

This testimony was admitted over appellant’s objection that it constituted statements made by him while under arrest and without proper warning. While statements made by an accused under arrest and not reduced to writing after proper warning are ordinarily inadmissible, the statement made by appellant in the instant case was properly admitted by the court, under Art. 728, V.A.C.C.P., as part of a conversation which had been given in evidence by appellant.

On his direct examination, appellant testified :

“Until I was indicted * * * I thought I was going to the electric chair, because the district attorney of this county told me that If I didn’t sign a statement and clear up these cases, that my life was in jeopardy, that I was going to the electric chair.”

Since appellant testified to part of the conversation with the district attorney, the state was authorized under the statute to offer other portions of the conversation. Stickney v. State, 169 Tex.Cr.R. 533, 336 S.W.2d 133.

Appellant’s last point of error is that the court erred in refusing to grant his motion for new trial on the ground of jury misconduct. In his motion, appellant alleged that during deliberations the jury received other evidence when one of the jurors, Charles W. Ortlip, Jr., borrowed a silk stocking from a female juror and placed it over his head in order to make a demonstration so that the other jurors could determine whether the state’s witnesses Darden and Hundley could identify the person who committed the robbery while such person was wearing a lady’s silk stocking over his head.

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Bluebook (online)
379 S.W.2d 339, 1964 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclane-v-state-texcrimapp-1964.