Parker v. State

216 S.W. 178, 86 Tex. Crim. 222, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 380
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 1919
DocketNo. 5430.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 178 (Parker 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
Parker v. State, 216 S.W. 178, 86 Tex. Crim. 222, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 380 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Van Zandt County for the murder of Warren McWilliams, and his punishment fixed at -five years in the penitentiary.

Deceased was a barber; appellant was constable of the precinct. There is abundant proof of enmity between the two men; threats of each against the other were in evidence, and many witnesses testified to strongly abusive language used by deceased concerning appellant, much of which is shown to have been communicated to him.

The immediate circumstances antecedent to the homicide, make it appear that one Downing and appellant, as claimed by the State, were out on the Sunday night preceding the killing on Wednesday, in a pasture or meadow, with a woman named Lottie Carpenter, who had been staying at the county farm, and with whom, if the State’s testimony is believed, appellant indulged in reprehensible conduct on said occasion. The county farm was supervised by Henry Blackwell, Jr., commonly called “Little Henry Blackwell.” Deceased went by the name of Happy McWilliams, and it appears that the Carpenter woman was red-headed.

Immediately after the occasion of being out with the. woman, testified to by the witness Downing, it began to be talked in the town of Canton that the constable was out at night with a red-headed woman. Several witnesses swore that the deceased made this statement to them. Romey Mathis testified that on the morning of the killing, deceased told him that they had caught old Bob (meaning appellant) out with a woman, “and he wanted me to tell everybody I saw. . . . He said he wanted to do everything except advertise it in the newspaper, and for me to tell everybody I saw in Canton. I believe he called him a ‘son of a b—! . . . When Bob (deceased) rode through town, Warren said “There goes a damned son of a h— or something like that; have heard him whistle at him and curse him.”

Andrew Haynes testified that on the morning of the killing he met deceased in the meat market, and deceased asked him if he had heard the latest, and witness replied, “What is it?” Deceased said, “W? *225 have got our constable into it. ’' Witness asked him what it was, and deceased replied that they had him tangled up with a red-headed woman, and the witness stated to deceased that he had better be careful, but deceased said they had the right man; that Henry Blackwell had just told him, and he further stated that he would advertise it in the newspaper if he could; that he was going to keep on advertising the transaction between Bob and the woman just as far as he could. There is much more of the same sort of testimony in the record, but the above illustrates the attitude of deceased toward appellant.

It was proven by the State that appellant had said that if deceased ever started at him he was going to shoot him; and that appellant said a short time before the fatal difficulty, that if deceased didn’t quit talking about him he was going to shoot him. The sheriff of the county testified that deceased was about twenty-eight years old and weighed over two hundred pounds; that appellant was fifty years old, and weighed about one hundred and thirty pounds; that on one occasion he heard appellant say that if deceased did not quit fooling with him he was going to shoot part of his anatomy off. Other witnesses testified that he told them that he was going to shoot deceased if he didn’t let him alone.

Getting down'to the immediate cause of the killing, Cyrus Walker swore that on that day appellant came to him and asked him who it was that had been telling it around that he had been out with that woman. Witness said: “I told him that was all right, and he said, “who told you?” and I said, ‘Little Henry Blackwell told the guy that told me;’ and he put his hand in his pocket and said: ‘By God, tell me!’ I said ‘Warren McWilliams told me.’ ”

It further appears from the testimony of other witnesses that appellat made search for Henry Blackwell, but failed to find him, and then went in search of deceased.

The killing occurred in a restaurant. The proprietor, who was an eyewitness, stated that deceased had come into his place of business, ordered food, and was eating, when appellant walked in and approached deceased, and said, “Hap, who says I was out with a woman Sunday night?” and Warren said, “Little Henry Blackwell”—1 believe that’s what he said—and Bob Parker said, “Whoever says it is a damned liar and a son of a b—’ and Warren said ‘Little Henry Blackwell told me about it,’ and I think Bob repeated what he had said and Warren said ‘You don’t want to be coming at me with that, and said ‘Little Henry Blackwell, told me and I’m just repeating what he said; you tell him that and he will whip you,’ and Bob said, ‘That’s more than you or any one else will do’ and by that time Warren got up and something was said about ’phoning Henry Blackwell ; Warren said something about ‘well, ’phone little Henry Blackwell ; ’ ” when Warren said that, I believe he had sat down again and *226 Bob had started out the door and he came back and said, ‘Who told Henry Blackwell this?” and Warren said “He saw you, I guess; he said he did” and Bob said, “Well, he is a damned lying son of a b—,” and Warren said, “He would whip you if you would tell him that,” and Bob says, “That’s more than you or anybody else in this town can do;” then they spoke of ’phoning little Henry Blackwell—I don’t just know what was said—and Warren told him if he would take the gun off he would show him; said he didn’t know but what he could do it anyhow. Bob ivas, at that time, on the east side of the east corner; he was back a little southeast of the north counter; he was right here (indicating with pencil); Bob was sorter southeast of the east end of the north counter—about two feet southeast; in the meantime, Warren was standing up and was walking up toward the front north counter; he was walking north and facing north. Yes, Bob was sorter east of him; he was east of him part of the time. When Warren jumped up on the north counter, it was just like a man would jump over it, this way (Witness jumps upon table and shows the jury the position of Warren McWilliams on the north countér); and Bob was standing back this way (indicating) kinder east, maybe southeast. Parker fired two shots and it seems like Warren was in the position as indicated when- the first shot was fired, the shots were fired as fast as a gun can shoot; after the shots were fired, Warren McWilliams “slid” off the counter to the north and went out the door.”

The witness Dubose, who was in the restaurant, and an eyewitness, testified as follows: “Bob Parker asked if he had told that he was out with a woman the night before; before Bob Parker asked that, Warren had not said anything to him.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 178, 86 Tex. Crim. 222, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.