Messer v. State

63 S.W. 643, 43 Tex. Crim. 97, 1901 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1901
DocketNo. 2148.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 63 S.W. 643 (Messer 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
Messer v. State, 63 S.W. 643, 43 Tex. Crim. 97, 1901 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 100 (Tex. 1901).

Opinion

BBOOKS, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of twenty years.

The testimony adduced on the trial shows, substantially, that defend *106 ant had been informed by his wife that deceased had offered numerous indignities to her prior to her marriage with him, and several insults after her marriage; that upon being apprised of these insults, by the wife, appellant sought deceased, as he stated, with the view of getting deceased to desist from any further attentions towards his wife; that upon meeting deceased, whom he was seeking, and after a conversation continuing some twenty or thirty minutes, deceased offered additional insults to appellant’s wife, and attempted to secure a rock with which to assault appellant, and thereupon appellant proceeded to shoot deceased, and pursued him as he ran off, firing five shots into his body, from which wounds he died. Appellant’s wife testified to the insults above referred to, and the State .introduced testimony for the purpose of contradicting and impeaching the truthfulness of her statement.

The first assignment of error that we deem necessary to be considered is appellant’s insistence that the court erred in permitting the State to prove by Mrs. M. B. Broaddus a conversation between her and the appellant’s wife, which took place in the spring of 1900, about the month of March, after the marriage of defendant with his wife, in which conversation Mrs. Broaddus was allowed to testify as to various matters then stated. Appellant’s objection to this testimony is that the conversation testified by Mrs. Broaddus was not admissible for the purpose of contradicting the wife of appellant, but that same was separate and independent matter, whereby appellant’s wife was made to give testimony against herself through the mouth of Mrs. Broaddus. Appellant concedes, in the able brief and argument of his counsel, that this testimony is admissible for this purpose; that is, for the purpose of contradicting and showing the lack of truth in Mrs. Messer’s testimony. But the testimony of Mrs. Broaddus shows she testified to facts that would not be admissible in impeachment of appellant’s wife. The law does not permit the husband or wife to be witnesses against each other. If the husband is on trial, and his wife is a witness, and she should swear to facts injurious to him in answer to questions he propounds, he can not complain. But, where she swears to certain facts and circumstances, the cross-examination must be confined to the matter elicited in chief. Of course, everything legitimate for the purpose of testing her knowledge of the facts testified to, her bias, her prejudice, in fact any matter that legitimately goes to her discredit, is admissible on cross-examination. However, where the State leaves the matter testified to in chief, and proves independent criminative facts against the accused, this would not be a proper cross-examination of the witness. Jones v. State, 38 Texas Crim. Rep., 100-118; Gaines v. State, 38 Texas Crim. Rep., 228; Red v. State, 39 Texas Crim. Rep., 423; Merritt v. State, 39 Texas Crim. Rep., 79; Creamer v. State, 35 Texas, 174; Hoover v. State, 35 Texas Crim. Rep., 344.

Applying the foregoing rule to the testimony of Mrs. Broaddus, while it is too voluminous to review each item of her testimony, we will say it was not permissible for the State to prove by her the conversation *107 she had with the wife of appellant, wherein the wife detailed a long train of domestic infelicities and entreated on .her part to persuade appellant to join the ministry. The testimony of Mrs. Broaddus should be confined . within the rule above laid down, under the predicate laid for the impeachment and contradiction of the testimony of appellant’s wife. Only this, and nothing more, should be permitted. We merely state the foregoing as an illustration of the inadmissibility of a large part of Mrs. Broaddus’ testimony. In other words, the wife of appellant having testified to direct insults by deceased to her prior to and subsequent to her marriage to appellant, if she made any statement or statements to Mrs. Broaddus or other parties contradictory of the statements testified, upon a proper predicate being laid, she could be impeached by the introduction of the witnesses testifying to the contradiction. ' But it is never permissible to permit such witnesses to go further and prove more than these contradictions. Appellant .complains of the following portion of the court’s charge: “The evidence of the witnesses Hyde, Barker, Mrs. Broaddus, Mrs. Wood, and Mrs. Boyd, tending to contradict the evidence of Mrs. Messer, the wife of defendant, was introduced solely as going to the credibility of said Mrs. Messer as a witness, and not as any evidence of the guilt of the defendant, and you can consider it only for the purpose for which it was introduced and for no other purpose.” Appellant insists this charge is upon the weight of the evidence. • We think the charge is correct. The court also charged the jury: “In this connection you are further charged, that where a homicide committed by a husband is sought to be reduced to manslaughter by reason of insulting conduct towards the wife of the slayer, while the insulting conduct towards such female before her marriage could not be relied upon to reduce such homicide to manslaughter, yet such conduct, if known to the husband, may be looked to for the purpose of giving character to the conduct of the person killed towards such female after her marriage, and in illustrating the intent and acts and words of the person killed as they appeared to such husband at the time of the homicide.” This is a correct presentation of the law as far as this charge goes. But appellant insists that the court should have gone further and made an application of the law to the facts. In Jones v. State we said: “If, in this case, appellant believed the insulting conduct communicated by his wife actually occurred as detailed by her, then, to his mind such conduct was a reality, and the charge should have been so framed as to submit this immediate-issue to the jury. Men often act upon the most important affairs and interests in life upon mistakes of fact. They often risk honor, reputation, fortune, and life upon mistakes of fact; of course, believing at the time they are not mistaken. The guilt of the accused party, in such state of case, should not depend upon the existence or non existence of the fact itself, but upon the circumstances as they appeared to and were understood by him at the timé of his acting upon them. Such questions are matters of fact to be solved by the jury under appropriate instructions. That the *108 insulting conduct had or had not occurred would have been immaterial if she had so informed Jones, and he believed her. If the jury should believe that Mrs. Jones informed her husband of the conduct of deceased towards her, and that his passions were thereby aroused to the extent of Tendering his mind incapable of cool reflection, and that, while his mind was thus inflamed, he shot and killed Veal upon first meeting with him .after receiving such information, his offense would be of no higher .grade than manslaughter.” Jones v. State, 33 Texas Crim. Rep., 497. This phase of the law was not given in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W. 643, 43 Tex. Crim. 97, 1901 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messer-v-state-texcrimapp-1901.