Odell v. State

184 S.W. 208, 79 Tex. Crim. 209, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 1916
DocketNo. 3961.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 208 (Odell 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
Odell v. State, 184 S.W. 208, 79 Tex. Crim. 209, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 99 (Tex. 1916).

Opinions

DAVIDSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of assault to rape, his punishment being assessed at four years confinement m the penitentiary.

The State’s testimony is to the effect that the alleged assaulted girl, Emily Smith, was over fourteen years of age. Appellant and his wife were at his father’s residence, and had been for a short time, appellant working about the country at various jobs. The father and mother of the prosecutrix were in Wilbarger County, and had been for three or four weeks. The father of prosecutrix was a renter of the elder Odell, occupying a small house on the property and about 400 yards east from the residence of Mr. Odell. During the absence of her father and mother prosecutrix and her brother and sister were guests of the senior Odell. On the morning of the alleged assault, which was Sunday, appellant took a gun with a view of going wolf hunting. His course lay westward. The house where prosecutrix went, and which was the home of the father of prosecutrix, was about 400 ya-rds east of the senior Odell’s residence. The defendant’s version as to his whereabouts, proved by several witnesses, was that he was something like thirteen or fourteen hundred yards west of the house at the time of the alleged assault, at a wolf den. That he had gone with a view of catching young wolves. He was seen by the various witnesses at that point. Later he went from that point north, then east, hunting wolves. Without going into detail as to his preambulations, about 9 o’clock that morning, or half past 9 he was at the residence and spent a couple of hours with Mr. Peterson and two or three other parties, having Ms gun with Mm, presenting *211 no appearance of being agitated or excited, and from there he returned to his father’s residence, reaching there about noon.

The State’s version as given by the girl, in the main, is slightly corroborated as to one or two matters by her brother and sister, who were present at the little house where the assault is said to have occurred. The prosecutrix testified that it was her custom to go in the morning from the residence of the elder Odell to the little place where the family lived to feed the chickens, and on this particular morning it was something like 8 or 8:30 o’clock when she went to the house. As she entered the house somebody unrecognized by her threw a quilt over her head, tied it around her neck so that she could not see, threw her down, tied her wrists together with a string, and undertook to have intercourse with her; among other things, tore the left leg of her drawers from the bottom up to or near the waist band. About that time one of the children on .the outside began calling a kitten and came to the door and 'knocked, whereupon her aggressor jumped through the window; the window was a small one in the north side of the house, the door being in the east, and these two being the only apertures in the house. The panes of glass in the window seem to have been broken. Under the window there were ashes, thrown from the fireplace or stove. In these ashes were found no tracks by the parties who investigated the place after the girl had returned to the elder Odell’s home. She said the ashes were hard; the other witnesses contradicted her as to that. There were no tracks found going from the house, and the State introduced some evidence to show that the ground was hard. The brother of appellant’s wife and one or two children and the small baby of appellant had followed the prosecutrix to within seventy-five or one hundred yards of the little house where the assault is alleged to have occurred, and was there at the time trying to get a rabbit out of a hole in a tree. She made no outcry at the house, but accounts for this by reason of the quilt being over her head. She says when the party attacking her went out of the window she remarked, “Willie Odell, you will be hung for this.” That he then looked at her and she recognized him. One of the children who was with her testified that he heard that statement, but neither one of these children seemed to have seen anybody. The brother of appellant’s wife, who was trying to get the rabbit out of the hole, testifies that the girl came where he was and that her wrists were tied together by a string and that he cut the string. This witness testified that in discussing the matter with prosecutrix she stated that somebody had tried to smother her to death, but that she did not know who it was. In fact, the whole record shows that it was about ten days before her father returned, and that in talking with the people who discussed the matter with her she always stated she did not know who it was. She accounts for this by stating that these people were in some way related to appellant and she did not want to tell them because she did not know what they would do to her. The witness who was seventy-five or one hundred yards away saw nobody leaving the house. The prosecutrix further testifies that when her father *212 and mother returned she told them about the transaction, and that it was appellant who made the assault on her. They returned on Saturday, some ten days after the occurrence. On the following day or Sunday a friend and neighbor, Miss Gillett, visited prosecutrix after the return of her parents, and the matter came up for discussion between prosecutrix" and Miss Gillett. In that conversation she told Miss Gillett that she did not know who had made the assault on her. This was the day subsequent to the time she says she told her father and mother that it was appellant. She says the reason she did not tell Miss Gillett about the matter was that she was related to appellant, and she was afraid Miss Gillett would tell things prosecutrix did not say or state. There is also testimony by some ladies, to the effect that on Sunday evening after this alleged assault should have occurred Sunday morning, that they, in company with prosecutrix, went in swimming, and they saw prosecutrix undress and go in bathing, and that her ■drawers were not torn. There were no other persons than ladies present at that time.

Tuesday following the Sunday on which Miss Gillett and prosecutrix had the conversation, the father of prosecutrix filed a complaint against appellant charging him with assault to rape. On the same day the senior Odell filed sequestration proceedings against the father of prosecutrix on a debt, sequestrating some horses and other property. There is some question as to which suit was filed first, although they were both filed the same day and within a short time of each other. This brings one of the serious questions in the case. The bill is lengthy, and in view of what has been said it is unnecessary to reproduce it. The bill practically rehearses the substance of the case.1 The defendant then offered the witness Thomas H. Floyd, who- testified he was justice of the peace of precinct bio. 1, Callahan County, and defendant ■offered to prove by him and could have proved by him that on the 10th day of August, 1915„ subsequent to this alleged assault, defendant’s father filed a suit in the Justice Court for sequestration against the father of State’s witness, Emily Smith, the father’s name being D. S. Smith, and that said suit for sequestration and the writ issued, seizing two horses and a wagon of the father of prosecutrix, and the suit was then pending; and the defendant would have further proved by the witness Floyd that on the same day that said suit was filed, that said D. H.

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

Related

Broussard v. State
312 S.W.2d 664 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1958)
State v. Slane
41 P.2d 269 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1935)
Capshaw v. State
186 S.W. 209 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 208, 79 Tex. Crim. 209, 1916 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odell-v-state-texcrimapp-1916.