Palmer v. State

160 S.W. 349, 71 Tex. Crim. 335, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 448
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1913
DocketNo. 2613.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 349 (Palmer 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
Palmer v. State, 160 S.W. 349, 71 Tex. Crim. 335, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 448 (Tex. 1913).

Opinions

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

This record is before us without bills of exception, and the matters presented are found in the motion for new trial. The charge is criticised because it instructed the jury that if they should believe that an assault was made by appellant upon John Henry Burton, the party who is alleged to have been robbed, and then and there by violence and putting in fear the said Burton did fraudulently take from the person of said person, without his consent and against the will of the said Burton, the money described, or part of it, he would be guilty of robbery, in that the law is that the assault or violence and putting in fear must put the alleged injured party in fear of life or bodily injury, hence the court erred in not properly defining the law to the jury. Another ground alleged is, the defendant having shown that Burton had taken $5 from him and that all the defendant did was to pick up $5 from the table where the parties were gambling, which Burton had taken from him, defendant, hence the court erred in not instructing the jury upon this phase of the case and informing the jury that it would not be robbery *Page 337 for the defendant to recover his own specific property by violence from the said Burton.

The court charged the jury that if appellant unlawfully made an assault upon the person of John Henry Burton, and then and there by putting in fear the said Burton of life or bodily injury, did then and there fraudulently take from the person and possession, etc., $50 in money, or did so take any sum of money with the intent to appropriate the same to the use and benefit of him, etc., he would be guilty as charged. This is correct and not subject to criticism. The court also charged the jury that if appellant did unlawfully and wilfully make an assault upon the person of Burton, and then and there by violence and putting in fear the said Burton did fraudulently take from the person and possession of the said Burton, without his consent, etc., $50 or any sum, with intent to appropriate it he would be guilty. The facts for the State show, by the witness Mosely: "He (referring to Burton) was robbed in the morning as nigh as I can come to it about 8 or 9 o'clock. I was right in the tent lying down on a cot when it happened. The first thing that attracted my attention, I was lying with my back to the boys and I heard one say, `Feel him and see if he has got a gun,' and at that time I turned over and looked, but it was not that man that was feeling of him, it was another. This man here had a pistol holding it right to the fellow that this other man was feeling of. He felt over him and said, `No, he ain't got no gun,' and when he said that this fellow, if this man is the same one — he favors him, but I couldn't swear that it is the same man. The other fellow was the one that was going through him, but this one had his gun pointing toward him. When they got through the bright one walked on out and went on down the canal. Just as soon as they got outside, this John Henry Burton reported that they had robbed him of $50; he reported it and they went to take this fellow, and they overtaken this man they called Marshall Palmer. When they started after him they started right down northeast from the camp, as nigh as I can say. I stepped outside the tent to see what they was going to do, and Marshall Palmer was way down the canal, he was walking at first, but after they started after him he struck a trot right down the side of the canal. Yes, sir; there was another fellow there, but they called the bright-looking one Marshall Palmer. This man here seems to be brighter than he was. I did not see him when they brought him to jail, but I saw him when I come here as a witness. This Burton said that they had robbed him of $50. This fellow reported to a white man that Marshall Palmer had robbed him of $50, said `He has taken $50 away from me.' No, sir; they didn't catch him they say. I don't know why they didn't catch him. I know why they say they didn't catch him, but don't know why. I did not go with them, a white man went with this John Henry Burton, but he is not the man that got killed, it was a different man that got killed. They didn't get Marshall Palmer. This happened along about the first *Page 338 of spring when I was out there; it happened in 1909, in Chambers County, State of Texas." The cross-examination followed the examination in chief and the witness stated he did not see the parties take any money from Burton and could not swear they did. He denied there was any gambling table or cot used for that purpose at the time the money was taken, and he further says he would not swear positively that this was the man, because he had never seen him previously but says he favors him. The whole testimony of this witness is to the effect that while he would not swear positively to it being defendant, yet he was reasonably certain that it was he; he says he looks like the same fellow now and he is satisfied it is he. He further states: "When I turned over I saw two men, one had a pistol and the other was searching another man; when they went out Burton said he had been robbed of $50."

The sheriff, Mr. LaFour, testified that on account of this matter he went out to the camp where these people were and where this matter is said to have occurred; that he failed to find the defendant; used diligence to find him as usual under such circumstances by trying to trace him in his flight; that he made trips to several places, and finally located him at Little Rock, Arkansas, where he was arrested. It seems that Burton was a transient fellow and they never did find him, or any of the parties who were present at the time, except the witness Mosely. He mentioned where he had located some of them or understood them to be, but failed to get them as witnesses as they were out of the State. He further states on cross-examination, that while he was attempting to arrest appellant he had two warrants, one for highway robbery and the other for murder. "I did not know John Henry Burton, did not know any of them out there, never seen them, they just come in there to do some public work. I could not swear to this jury that Marshall Palmer robbed John Henry Burton, I wasn't there, nor could I tell this jury that Marshall Palmer got $50 from Burton."

Defendant took the stand in his own behalf, and said the way the matter came up was on this wise: "This fellow was dealing a banking game, he was running a gambling house, and I bet him $5 on the deuce against the seven of hearts and he turned the seven of diamonds in the door. The seven pops out on the deck. I bet on the deuce and had the best of it and he turned the seven in the door again and he took my $5 and threw it over in his game. I said, `You don't win that because I have got two sevens out on the deck and the last seven is in the deck. He kept my $5 and threw it over in the game. I picked up the $5 and got my coat and pistol and walked on out and up the canal. Two white men rode out on horses and started to shooting at me with Winchesters, they both had Winchesters. I tried to jump across the ditch and got on the far side of the canal, and they were shooting at me and I shot back. Henry Burton run a gambling house, and we all gambled all night principally, had a regular table there, and John Henry Burton run it." There is a lot of details gone into on *Page 339 cross-examination of the defendant. Appellant stated he had known Burton in Louisiana, at Opelousas. "I come from Memphis to Little Rock. I run to Memphis because I was afraid of those men. I hadn't done nothing. I don't know who got killed out there on the canal, it was a white man.

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Related

Mauldin v. State
463 S.W.2d 10 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 349, 71 Tex. Crim. 335, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.