McNeill v. State

80 S.W.2d 995, 128 Tex. Crim. 250, 1935 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1935
DocketNo. 16934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 80 S.W.2d 995 (McNeill 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
McNeill v. State, 80 S.W.2d 995, 128 Tex. Crim. 250, 1935 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 162 (Tex. 1935).

Opinions

CHRISTIAN, Judge.

The offense is murder; the punishment, confinement in the penitentiary for forty years.

The State predicates a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that pending such appeal appellant escaped from the custody of the sheriff. In view of the showing made by appellant, and the fact that he is yet in custody, we have concluded that the motion to dismiss should be overruled. See Leonard v. State, 109 S. W., 149.

[252]*252Libby McNeill, deceased, was the wife of appellant. She weighed about 130 pounds. It was uncontroverted that on the 28th of November, 1933, appellant attacked deceased with a hickory stick 4% feet long and 1 inch in diameter, weighing three or four pounds. A witness for the State testified that he was in the vicinity of appellant’s home when he “heard an awful racket coming from the direction of the house.”. He heard loud talking and recognized appellant’s voice. He heard appellant say “I will make you hear me.” He also heard cursing. We quote from his testimony: “I recognized his (appellant’s) voice. I could hear cursing but couldn’t tell much about it. Yes I heard a woman’s voice. It sounded like she was begging him to quit beating her; that he was killing her. I heard her say ‘Stop beating me.’ She said ‘Stop beating me. You are killing me.’ I heard plenty of licks — plenty of beating. * * * That commotion I heard lasted quite a long while. * * *”

The ten-year-old son of appellant and deceased identified the hickory stick to which we have referred and testified as follows:

“I have seen this stick before. I saw it at home. I have seen my father with this stick. I saw him whipping my mama with the stick. I remember when mama got sick and went to bed. I remember my papa whipping my mama about a day before she went to bed one morning. I saw him whip her. He whipped my mama with this stick about three weeks before she died. He whipped her most where he could hit her. They were in the house. It was in the morning before I went to school. He hit her several times with this stick. I can’t tell you where all he hit her. He hit her about the ribs, about there (indicating). I was in the house when this happened, as were also my little brothers and sisters. We were all in the house. When papa was whipping her she said, ‘Oh dear, stop,. stop.’ She asked him to stop. Papa didn’t say anything when lie whipped her. My mama run when papa whipped her. She did not fall down. She ran out the door and papa followed her. He did not hit her after they went out doors. After this whipping my daddy gave my mama it was about two or three days before she went to bed and got sick. She never got up after that.”

The witness testified, further, that about a week before appellant whipped deceased he (appellant) ran deceased out of the house at the point of a gun, saying to her, “G — d—you old b— I will shoot you.” Again, the witness testified that one of the scars on the head of his mother resulted from the action [253]*253of appellant in striking her with an “old wagon bow.” Deceased was confined to her bed within two days after appellant .attacked her, where she remained until her death on the 9th of December, 1933. On the date last mentioned Dr. W. M. Boguskie examined the body of deceased and performed an .autopsy. He found on the right temple a small wound about the size of a dime which had healed but was of recent origin. He found a bruise on the anterior portion of the chest on the right side. He also found other bruises about the size of a half-dollar on the chest. There was a bruise over the right lung. Making an incision, he exposed the right lung and discovered that it had been ruptured. The rupture was approximately three inches long on the anterior portion and a little more than a quarter of an inch in depth. The witness testified that deceased had had traumatic lobar pneumonia, caused by a wound. He further testified as follows: “The primary cause of her death in my opinion was the rupture of the lung, secondarily followed by pneumonia. It is my opinion that the pneumonia was produced directly by and from the wound to her lung. The wound on the lower and upper edges showed some evidences of uniting together, and that place to my mind was about twelve or fourteen days old.”

Examining the stick which it was shown appellant used in beating deceased, the witness testified as follows: “With a stick the size of this and used on the side part of a woman over the lung or in the region of the lung upon the right-hand side, in the hands of a man of the size and physical appearance of Mr. J. F. McNeill (appellant) would produce death. It could have produced such a wound on the anterior portion of the body in the hands of Mr. McNeill, or a man of his size, weight and physical condition. I believe it could have produced trauma or break in the lung applied to the anterior portion of the body over the lung or in the region of the lung. It was an unusual wound and I studied a good bit about what could have produced it, and I expect that could have, yes. I will say that wound in the lung was produced by an external force, I don’t know what external force, but it was very evidently produced by external force. This stick in the hands of a man of the size and physical condition Mr. McNeill appears to be, when used by him on a person of the kind, character and size of Mrs. McNeill would be a deadly weapon if used upon some vital portion of her body.”

The nurse who attended deceased approximately a week and who was with her when she died, was present when the [254]*254autopsy was performed. Her testimony corroborated that of Dr. Boguskie as to the lung being ruptured. Within two and one-half hours before she died, deceased said to appellant, “Oh daddy, I do beg you not to murder no one else this way.” The attending physician who first waited on deceased testified to' bruises being upon both sides. His testimony was to the further effect that deceased had pneumonia during the time he was treating her.

Appellant did not testify in his own behalf. He introduced physicians who testified that in their opinion the lung of deceased could not have been injured in the manner testified to by Dr. Boguskie in the absence of an injury to the ribs. It appears that none of the ribs were broken. Further there was testimony to the effect that appellant had some guns in the house at the time he beat deceased. When deceased became ill appellant procured a nurse and medical attendants. He prayed for the recovery of his wife.

W’e have not been favored with a brief by appellant. We take it, however, that it was his chief contention in the trial court, as shown in one of his exceptions to the charge, that the evidence was insufficient to show an intent to kill. In Walker v. State, 251 S. W., 235, which was decided prior to the repeal of the statute defining manslaughter, Judge Lattimore, speaking for the court, used language as follows: “If one, not in self-defense, and not under circumstances reducing to mansluaghter, assault another, and death ensue, and it be contended that the weapon used was not deadly, and that the intent to kill was lacking, these still are fact issues for the jury under appropriate instructions.” We are unable to reach the conclusion that appellant’s contention should be sustained. Approximately two weeks prior to attacking deceased with a stick, appellant had run her out of the house at the point of a pistol, threatening at the time to shoot her.

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709 S.W.2d 669 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1986)
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474 S.W.2d 723 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1972)
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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 995, 128 Tex. Crim. 250, 1935 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneill-v-state-texcrimapp-1935.