Moser v. State

179 S.W. 104, 77 Tex. Crim. 528, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 1915
DocketNo. 3647.
StatusPublished

This text of 179 S.W. 104 (Moser 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
Moser v. State, 179 S.W. 104, 77 Tex. Crim. 528, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 113 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was indicted for murder in the second degree of Morton Barnard, alleged to have been committed on or about September 14, 1912. He was convicted of manslaughter and assessed the lowest punishment.

It will be seen that this offense is alleged to have been committed prior to the Act of the Legislature doing away with the degrees of murder. The indictment is unquestionably correct under the old law and was properly preferred thereunder.

The State’s first witness, Acie Stapleton, testified: “I reside in Uvalde, Uvalde County, Texas, and have known the defendant in this case for seven or eight years, and knew the deceased, Morton Barnard. I was present on the night of the 12th day of September, 1912, at the time that Morton Barnard was shot. Along about 12 o’clock of that night I went into the Hollingsworth drug store, and Morton Barnard was in there and was talking to the Cobb boys, that is, to Walter and Henry Cobb, and they were having some kind of an argument, and I got a drink of water and went on out in front, and immediately after I got out in front of the building Walter and Henry Cobb came out and sat down on the little bench in front of the store under the window, and after they had been there a few minutes, the deceased, Morton Barnard, came out, and attempted to renew the argument, and some words passed, and Henry Cobb got up and said something about leaving, but I did not understand, exactly what he did say, and started off down the sidewalk, going west, with his back" turned towards the deceased. At that time the deceased, Morton Barnard, was standing in front of Walter Cobb, and when Henry Cobb made the statement about going awayq and started west, the deceased started down the sidewalk after him, and rushed up to him and struck at him with a knife, and Henry Cobb turned around, and the deceased backed out in the street, and the Cobb, boys approached him, and the deceased still had a knife in his hand, and he rushed up to Henry Cobb and struck at him with the knife, and then rushed up to Walter Cobb and struck him with the knife. About this time the defendant in this case, Jim Moser, and Will Watkins came up from behind, and Moser grabbed hold of the deceased from behind and jerked him down, and the deceased got up on his feet, and they got into a scuffle, and were hugging and going around and around, and I heard either Moser or Watkins say: ‘Give me the knife,’ or ‘turn the knife loose,’ or something to that effect, and I heard the deceased say, ‘I have already thrown the knife down,’ but they continued to scuffle around, and up between the wheels of a buggy that was standing there, which belonged to the Howard boys, and after they had gotten up between the buggy wheels, Jim Moser got out his pistol, and began trying to hit the deceased over the head with it, and I saw it come up and down two or three times, and finally Moser had hit the deceased over the head with the pistol and knocked him loose *530 from him, and knocked him down, practically, on his knees, and as soon as he had done this he, the defendant, stepped back, and fired point blank at the deceased, and at the time that he fired the muzzle of the pistol was not more than eighteen inches from the body of the deceased. This all happened in three or four minutes. Immediately after the shot was fired, the deceased arose to his feet, and his clothes on his left breast were on fire, and Will Watkins and I began to put out the fire, and the deceased,"Morton Barnard, said: ‘You have killed me, and you have killed a man that never did you a particle of harm in your life.’ The defendant said: ‘No, Blondy, you are not hurt,’ and the deceased was carried on into the drug store by myself and Will Watkins, and we got the doctor there. During the time of the struggle, and just before the deceased stated that he had thrown down the knife, I saw a white shining object fall on the ground. Of course, at the time, I did not know what it was, just simply saw it was a white object, and that it fell'from some of the parties engaged in the scuffle and it fell out in front of the buggy, that is, westward from the buggy, and very near the sidewalk. This all happened in Uvalde, Uvalde County, Texas, on the 12th day. of September, 1912, and the deceased died some three or four days after that, in a hotel at Uvalde, Uvalde County, Texas.”

Cross-examination: “I can say that there was1 plenty of light there for me to see all that was going on. There was the street light right across the street at Rice’s corner, and there was also some light coming from the lamps in Hollingsworth’s drug store," and I could see everything that was going on, and I say positively that I saw a white object fall towards the west of the Jraggy. I do not remember that I testified before that I saw the knife fall east .of the buggy, but, if I did, I got my directions mixed up. Yes, it is a fact that up to the time that the deceased' cut at Cobb on the sidewalk with the knife, that no one had made any assault upon him, and no one had done or said anything to him to make him mad. Yes, it is a fact that he seemed mad about something, and it is a fact that he rushed up behind Henry Cobb as he was going away from him. Yes, it is a fact that this is the first that I knew that there was going to be any fight. Yes, it is a fact that I heard one of the Cobb boys say out in the street, after the deceased had already struck at Henry, ‘Boys, somebody give me a club, he has a knife.’ Yes, it is a fact that at the time that the defendant grabbed hold of the deceased he had already cut at Henry Cobb with the knife on the sidewalk, and had already cut at Henry Cobb out in the street, and at the time he was seized hold of by the defendant, he was in the act" of cutting at Walter Cobb with the knife. Yes, the defendant in this case was deputy sheriff of Uvalde County at the time, and was also night watchman, and Will Watkins, who was with him at the time, was also deputy sheriff.”

Redirect examination: “No, I never heard either Will Watkins or the defendant in this case call upon the deceased to submit to arrest, and I never heard either one of them tell him that they were trying to *531 _ arrest him. There was nothing whatever said about an arrest—just grabbed hold of him, but at the time that the defendant jerked the deceased down, I heard someone say, ‘Look out, he has got a knife/ and then I heard someone say, ‘I have handled lots of worse men than he is many a time.’ ”

The State introduced other witnesses who testified substantially as did Stapleton. The knife of the deceased was found after the shooting about where Stapleton said he saw it dropped. It was identified, produced on the trial, and introduced in evidence.

Dr. Myrick testified that he was called to deceased immediately after the shooting and reached him very soon; that he was bleeding profusely from a gunshot wound, which entered his left side about three inches above the left nipple; the ball ranged downward and backward and its exit was in his back, left of his kidney about twelve or fourteen inches below the place of entrance. The wound was made with a large caliber pistol and it was fatal. Deceased died therefrom a few days later.

The appellant’s side of the case is fairly presented by the testimony of Will Watkins, said officer, who was with him at the time he shot deceased. He testified:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 104, 77 Tex. Crim. 528, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moser-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.