Oldham v. State

142 S.W. 13, 63 Tex. Crim. 527, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 467
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1911
DocketNo. 1308.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 13 (Oldham 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
Oldham v. State, 142 S.W. 13, 63 Tex. Crim. 527, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 467 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was indicted by the grand jury of *529 McLennan County, charged with murder. The court submitted the case, charging only on murder in the second degree, and manslaughter, and self-defense. The jury found appellant guilty of murder in the second degree, and assessed his punishment at ten years confinement in the State penitentiary.

1. In his first bill of exceptions, appellant complains of the following proceedings, alleging that “the State placed upon the stand a colored woman by the name of Ann Brandon,. who testified for the State, among other things, that she saw the shooting in which the deceased was killed, and that she was standing behind a little mesquite bush near the Bobinsonville road, and that she saw the deceased, Will Lee, go up the Bobinsonville road in front of the defendant’s house. And that Will Lee walked up to the front gate and said, ‘Hello. What is the matter ?’ And when he said this, he stamped somewhat, and the first thing she heard after the stamping was the report of the gun and Will Lee said, ‘0, Lord.’ And Will Lee was standing in the public road when the gun was fired, and when the gun fired, she came out from behind the mesquite bush and left there. And thereupon, on cross-examination of this witness, the defendant asked her the question: ‘If it were not a fact that on the next Sunday after this shooting occurred, she had a conversation with Mr. Fin Daugherty; and if she did not tell Mr. Daugherty on that Sunday, at her house, that when the shooting occurred, she was standing down by a tree immediately behind the deceased’s house, two or three hundred feet from the Bobinsonville road, pointing out the tree. And if she did not tell, the said Daugherty that she didn’t see or hear anything that occurred at the time the shooting occurred and could not see it?’ And the said witness, in answer to said question, stated that she had no such conversation with Mr. Daugherty on the Sunday following the shooting; and that she did not point out to Mr. Daugherty the place where she was standing. And after the State had concluded its direct testimony in this case, the defendant placed Mr. Fin Daugherty upon the stand and he stated that on the Sunday after the shooting he was at the place where the shooting occurred and he had a conversation with this woman, Ann Brandon, and that she pointed out to this witness, a tree immediately behind the residence of the deceased. And stated to this witness that she was standing there under this tree when the shooting occurred, and that she did not and could not see or hear anything that happened out in the Bobinsonville road in' front of defendant’s house at the time that Lee was shot. That this tree that she pointed out to him is 250 or 260 feet from the Bobinsonville road, and from the place where the defendant and the deceased were when the shooting occurred.

“And that thereupon while the said Fin Daugherty was on the witness stand as a witness, the defendant proposed to prove by him the following facts, which if permitted to do so, the said witness, Fin Daugherty, would have testified, to wit: That he was familiar with *530 the ground where this shooting occurred and that a person standing at the tree at the back of Lee’s house, where the State witness, Ann Brandon, told him she was standing when the shooting occurred, could not see a man standing in the road in front of defendant’s house.”

It will be seen that the appellant was permitted to contradict the witness upon every question propounded to her. She denied pointing to a certain tree and saying she was standing at it; the witness, Daugherty, says she did point out this tree. It appears as an undisputed fact in the record, that a person standing at this tree, could not see the place of the difficulty, the witness Ann Brandon stating herself in her testimony: “I don’t suppose any person on earth could stand down there by that tree and see anything that was occurring in front of defendant’s house.” This bill presents no error, especially so when we take into consideration the qualification of the court in approving it.

2. In his second bill, the appellant complains that he was not permitted to prove by the witness, W. B. Thomas, that a little girl had shown him a knife and told him she had picked it up under the bridge where appellant says deceased was standing when he shot him. The testimony of Mr. Thomas shows that this conversation took place a month after the killing; that he did not see the girl get the knife from under the bridge, hut that the little girl went into the house and brought a knife with her when she came back. He did not know where she got the knife. The statement of the little girl to Mr. Thomas, a month after the killing, was properly excluded. The little girl 'was permitted to testify, but her testimony could not be “bolstered” when there was no effort made to impeach her, by contradictory statements, reputation for truth and veracity, or otherwise.

3. The only other bill of exceptions in the record complains of the following proceedings: “Be it remembered that upon the trial of the above styled and numbered cause, the defendant requested the court, among other things, to give to the jury, as a part of the law of this case, special charge Ho. 4, which is as follows: T charge you, at the request of the defendant, as follows: If you find from the evidence in this ease that on the night of the homicide, and before the killing, the wife of the defendant informed him that the deceased, William Lee, had had carnal knowledge of her person, and that the defendant, at the first meeting of the deceased, shot and killed the deceased, and at the time he shot him, the defendant was not justified in so doing, on the ground of self-defense or the protection of his home from an unlawful or forcible intrusion, you will not find the defendant guilty of murder, but if so, he would only be guilty of manslaughter. And in this connection, you are charged that it makes no difference whether the information received was true or false, if the defendant believed it to be true and acted upon such belief at the time.’ And the court, after examining said charge as requested, refused to give said charge in the form in which it was written, but amended and added thereto the following language:

*531 “ ‘And that such information, whether it was true or not, produced in the mind of the defendant such a degree of anger, rage or resentment as is sufficient to render the mind of the defendant incapable of cool reflection/ to which addition and qualification and amendment to said charge the defendant excepts, for the reason that said amendment required the jury to find as a fact whether or not, under the circumstances stated, adequate cause existed, and as to whether or not the mind of the defendant was incapable of cool reflection under said facts, when in truth and in fact, the information received, if the facts so received by the defendant from his wife, is made by our statute ipso facto adequate cause to arouse a degree of passion in any man of ordinary temper sufficient to dethrone his reason and render him incapable of cool reflection, and whatever may have been his condition of mind as a matter of fact, the information so received and acted upon by him, if the" killing occurred upon the first meeting thereafter, would reduce the killing to the grade of manslaughter.”

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Related

Moore v. State
228 S.W. 218 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1921)
Hicks v. State
171 S.W. 755 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 13, 63 Tex. Crim. 527, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oldham-v-state-texcrimapp-1911.