Needham v. State

233 S.W. 966, 90 Tex. Crim. 86, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1921
DocketNo. 6315.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 966 (Needham 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
Needham v. State, 233 S.W. 966, 90 Tex. Crim. 86, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 26 (Tex. 1921).

Opinions

HAWKINS, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of robbery, and his punishment assessed at five years in the penitentiary.

On the morning of December 27, 1920, about three or four o’clock, a robbery took place over a garage (or, as some described it, over Moore’s Transfer Company), where a number of parties were engaged in a poker game. That Russell Jones was the man who held the pistol on the crowd while one of his confederates secured the money from the parties present is a conceded fact.

We are met at the threshold of. our investigation with an assignment that the evidence does not meet the requirements of the law in the corroboration of Jones. Without here setting out Jones’ testimony, it may be stated that he makes out a case of conspiracy to rob, as to himself, Cornwall, Jackson, Harris and appellant. According to the agreement as detailed by Jones, Cornwall, and Harris were to enter the poker game and guard against any of the other parties present making any resistance, and aid Jones in securing the money from those present. We may say that the evidence indicates that Cornwall and Harris carried out their part. At least they were present, and Harris took the money from the parties, while Jones held the pistol on them; Cornwall in the meantime holding his hands up along with the others. Jackson was to drive the automobile and have it at a convenient and agreed place to facilitate escape from the scene after the robbery was accomplished. Jones was to go up and do the part of actually holding the poker game up, while Needham, appellant, was to remain at the *88 bottom of the stairway with a pistol to prevent anyone entering or leaving during the robbery. Jones claims that Needham was at the bottom of the stairway to do his part when he, Jones, went up the steps. When Joiies entered the door at the top of the steps he met Dick Dancaster coming out. Jones permitted him to pass, expecting, as he says, that Needham would take care of him as he went down. Something in Jones’ manner attracted Lancaster’s attention, and he lingered long enough on the landing outside the door to hear Jones command to the crowd on the inside to “put your hands up.”

From here on we will bear in mind the rule of excluding the testimony of an accomplice from consideration in ascertaining if other evidence tends to connect Needham with the robbery. After hearing Jones tell the crowd inside the room to hold up their hands Lancaster immediately went down the stairway and almost directly across the street to the Marshall cafe. No one accosted him at the bottom of the stairs, and he observed no one there or thereabout; in other words, he never saw Needham, where the latter was supposed to be. He found in the cafe Bechtold, a policeman, and Rogers, a night watchman. He told them at once that the poker game across the street was being held up. The two officers immediately went across the street and up into the room, and Lancaster walked out in front of the cafe. Within thirty seconds or a minute after the officers entered the room Lancaster heard some shots, and Bechtold came running down the stairs, at which time the shooting was still going on upstairs. About the time Bechtold reached the foot of the stairs Lancaster heard a shot which he thought came from the east, on the street, but did not see who fired the shot. The witness Lancaster says that, thinking possibly the shooting was coming out into the street, he stepped back into the doorway that went into the cafe. Bechtold ran into the cafe and directed somebody to telephone for help. The witness Lancaster then saw Rogers come down the stairs, and after him Jones. About the time he saw Jones coming down the steps Lancaster saw some one down at the end of the block; could not describe him, but merely noticed some one as they went around the corner.

Bechtold, one of the officers, never saw anybody when he and Rogers walked across the street and up the stairs after having, been told by Lancaster that a robbery was in progress. After they got up the stairs and into the hall where the robbery occurred, Jones and the officers began shooting, and Bechtold was the first one down the steps; about the time he struck the bottom of the stairway coming out of the door, a shot was fired from the east, but he does not claim to know who fired it, and never saw anybody fire the shot; later, a sign hanging over the stairway was examined, and a hole was found in the sign, which was apparently made by a bullet traveling from the east. The testimony of Rogers, the other officer, is to the same effect as Bechtold’s, that they saw no one as they went across the street and up the stairway. *89 About fifteen or twenty minutes after the robbery he saw Needham mingling with the crowd at the Marshall cafe, and making inquiry about the robbery. Rogers was slightly wounded in the shooting in the gambling hall, and when he came down the steps after the shooting he first started east, but noticed nobody at that time near the foot of the stairway. Rausheck, one of the parties who was robbed during the transaction, went down the stairs after the shooting subsided, and a little while after Jones went down, Rausheck claims to have seen a man whom he took to be Needham turning a corner of the block some distance east from the foot of the stairway; thought it was Needham 'only from his general description and his clothing; (the fact seems to have been established that upon the night in question Needham was wearing a mackinaw coat,) and this witness thought it was he from his general appearance and the character of the coat he was wearing, but was not close enough to him at that time to see the color of the coat. Rausheck went across the street to the cafe, and then up the street west with Bob Alexander, trailing blood which seemed to have been made from the wounds inflicted upon Jones. As they were following the blood trail they met Needham, who was coming towards the cafe, and who said something about blood being all over the sidewalk. Need-ham at this time was coming from the south, and going towards the Marshall cafe. It was something like twelve minutes from the time of the shooting until they met Needham. Rausheck and Alexander only went a little further and then came back to the Marshall cafe. Need-ham was there then asking about the holdup, aiid if anybody was killed, and who shot, and making general inquiries about the robbery. Bob Alexander was present at the time of the robbery, and after it was over and Jones and the. officers had gone down the steps Alexander and the other parties came down. When he got down to the foot of the stairs he saw Needham standing either on the sidewalk, or just off the edge of the sidewalk east of Moore’s garage, about thirty or forty feet from the stairway. Alexander claims that--Rausheck came down ahead of him. Rater, this witness, Rausheck, met Needham at Perkins’ Brothers corner, about a block and a half from the scene of the robbery. Alexander does not think it was over ten minutes from the Jime he came downstairs and saw appellant on the sidewalk until he met him the second time on Perkins’ Brothers corner. When Alexander came down the steps and saw Needham standing thirty or forty feet from the stairway he did not suspicion that he was implicated in the robbery, and made no report of seeing him there to the officers.

W. M. Drury testified that he was working at Simpson’s cafe, and that about the middle of the .night Needham was in his place of business and had been there for quite a while; when Cornwall, Jackson, Jones and a man he supposed was Harris came in.

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

Related

Mays v. State
1979 OK CR 27 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1979)
Dominguez v. State
262 S.W. 763 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1924)
Harris v. State
241 S.W. 175 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 966, 90 Tex. Crim. 86, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/needham-v-state-texcrimapp-1921.