Montgomery v. State

55 L.R.A. 710, 65 S.W. 537, 43 Tex. Crim. 304, 1901 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 27, 1901
DocketNo. 2391.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 55 L.R.A. 710 (Montgomery 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
Montgomery v. State, 55 L.R.A. 710, 65 S.W. 537, 43 Tex. Crim. 304, 1901 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 143 (Tex. 1901).

Opinion

BEG OKS, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of manslaughter, and his punishment assessed at three years confinement in the penitentiary.

Appellant filed a motion in arrest of judgment, insisting that the indictment was insufficient. After a careful inspection of the same, we are of opinion that it is in the usual form, and appellant’s objections are without merit. The following is, in substance, the testimony adduced upon the -trial: C. J. Davis testified^that he knew defendant, Montgomery, and deceased, Hall. Witness resided about one-fourth of a mile from the store at Bedias. The schoolhouse was within a few hundred yards of the store. There was a debating society at the schoolhouse on" the night of April 15th. After the debate closed, deceased, witness, and others were standing by the side of the house, talking, and there were also others standing near. Deceased was rolling a cigarette. Witness heard some yelling down towards the graveyard, in or near the public road, and called deceased’s attention to it. Deceased got his *305 horse, and about this time the yelling began down the road. Deceased being the constable of the precinct, immediately got on his horse, and started down the road in the direction of the yelling. After deceased had gone, passing a bunch of trees about twenty yards away, witness heard a shot fired down the road in the direction of where he had heard the yelling. Did not see deceased at .the time any of the shots were fired. After the shooting, witness went down the road, and found deceased lying on the ground near the side of the public road. Five shots were fired in all. Between the first shot and the last there was a short interval, about two or three minutes. Deceased was not armed. The killing occurred about three or four hundred yards from the schoolhouse. Dr. Weathersbee testified that he was called to see deceased, and found him lying on the ground by the side of the public road leading from Bedias to Iola. When witness reached the place, “deceased was suffering a greal deal of pain, and asked me if I thought he would live. I told him, ‘Ho.’ He said he did not think he would live. Deceased then said that at the time of the difficulty he rode up, and put his hand on the man’s shoulder, and said to him, ‘Consider yourself under arrest, brother,’ and he shot me. Deceased said he did not know the name of the man who shot him, but Dakin, who was present, knew him.” Coulson testified he was traveling down the road with defendant and several others; that when they had reached a point about 300 yards from the schoolhouse defendant shot off his pistol in the air. Witness and defendant were riding side by side along the public road. Witness did not hear any yelling in the crowd before the shooting. When defendant fired Ms pistol off in the air, he did not put it up; “and just after defendant fired the pistol a man [deceased] rode up behind us in the road, and put his right hand on defendant’s shoulder, and said, ‘Consider yourself under arrest, Bud.’ Defendant said, T God, I reckon not/ and then the shooting began. Three or four shots were fired. Defendant left at once.” Witness and the other parties remained with deceased a little while. Dakin testified: “I think deceased had defendant by the shoulder. Defendant told deceased to turn him loose, at least one time, maybe twice. Deceased did not tell defendant who he was, or that he was an officer, or that he had a warrant for him, or why he arrested him.” Defendant testified that he did not know deceased, and did not know who he was the night he was killed; did not know that he was an officer or constable of Bedias precinct.

Appellant complains of the following portions of the charge of the court: “You are instructed that our penal statutes provide, if any person shall-go into or near any public place, and shall rudely display any pistol or other deadly weapon in a manner calculated to disturb the inhabitants of such public place, he would be guilty of a misdemeanor coming within the provisions and classed by law as an offense against the public peace, and that any public road is a public place within the meaning of the law, and that a peace officer or any other person may without *306 warrant arrest any person committing such offense in his presence or within his view; also that the unlawful carrying of a pistol by a person on or about his person is also a misdemeanor, classed by law also as an offense against the public peace, and any person so guilty of unlawfully carrying a pistol may be arrested without warrant by any peace officer on his own knowledge that said person is so guilty of unlawfully carrying arms, or upon information of some credible person; and the law makes it his duty under penalty to make such arrest; and if you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was then and .there guilty of both or either of above described offenses classed as offenses against the public peace, and that the same was then and there committed in the presence or within the view of the deceased, and that the deceased then and there knew that the defendant was then and there carrying on or about his person a pistol (if he was so carrying said pistol), and attempted to make a lawful arrest of the defendant for both or either of said offenses, under the circumstances described, and that the deceased was then and there a constable and peace officer of Grimes County, and that the defendant shot and killed the deceased, not for the purpose of protecting his person from unlawful violence, nor for the purpose of preventing an illegal or supposed illegal arrest, but for the purpose of killing the deceased, or of preventing the deceased from lawfully arresting him, then he can not justify on the ground of self-defense in killing deceased (if he killed him), as done in his lawful self-defense, and he would be guilty of murder in the first degree, as you may find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of express malice as hereinbefore explained to you, or of murder in the second degree as you may find from the evidence that express malice has not been established by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt as- an existing fact, and of the existence of implied malice on the part of defendant as hereinbefore or may be hereinafter explained to you in this charge, or of manslaughter as you may find from the evidence, the existence of sudden passion aroused by an adequate cause as the same is hereinbefore or may be hereinafter explained in this charge.” “Or if you shall believe that the deceased, when he attempted to arrest the defendant (if he did so), did not know that defendant was then and there unlawfully carrying on his person a pistol, or that the offense committed against the public peace committed by defendant (if committed in rudely displaying a pistol in a public place) was not committed in the presence or sight of the deceased, then such arrest would be illegal; or if he did know that the defendant was then and there unlawfully carrying on his person a pistol, or that such rude displaying of a pistol by the defendant in a public place (if committed) was committed in the presence or in the sight of the deceased, and that the deceased, when, as an officer, he attempted to arrest the defendant (if he did so), had the time and opportunity to inform the defendant by what authority he was making such arrest, and the reasons therefor, before the defendant shot him, and did not so inform said defendant, then such arrest or attempt at *307

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 L.R.A. 710, 65 S.W. 537, 43 Tex. Crim. 304, 1901 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-state-texcrimapp-1901.