Parten v. State

160 S.W.2d 935, 144 Tex. Crim. 12, 1942 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 202
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1942
DocketNo. 21765.
StatusPublished

This text of 160 S.W.2d 935 (Parten 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
Parten v. State, 160 S.W.2d 935, 144 Tex. Crim. 12, 1942 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 202 (Tex. 1942).

Opinions

DAVIDSON, Judge.

Swindling is the offense; the punishment, two years in the State penitentiary.

The State charged that appellant swindled Josie Handley out of $100.00 in money by representing to her “that they, the said *14 R. A. Parten and Bunkum Champion and Deward Reeves had on the 4th day of December, 1940, been to the State Insane Asylum at Rusk, Texas, and had made arrangements at said Asylum in Rusk, Texas, for the admittance of T. F. Handley, an insane person and the husband of the said Josie Handley, into said Asylum upon payment of a Sanitarium fee of One Hundred Dollars.” The foregoing constituted the only allegation of a representation on the part of appellant. Such representation was charged as false by the following allegation: “when in fact and in truth, the said R. A. Parten and Bunkum Champion and Deward Reeves had not been to the State Insane Asylum at Rusk, Texas, on said date and while there made arrangements for the admittance of the said T. F. Handley into said Asylum upon payment of a Sanitarium Fee of One Hundred Dollars and when, in fact and in truth no fee was to be charged at said Asylum for the admittance of an Insane Person.”

The facts, from the State’s viewpoint, show that appellant, a doctor, had, for some time prior to the alleged offense, been attending, professionally, T. F. Handley (the husband of Josie Handley), whose condition, just prior to the alleged offense, was such as to require constant attendance and nursing, as a result of which people would “come in and sit up with him from time to time at night.” Among those so attending the husband were Bunkum Champion and Deward Reeves, co-indictees with the appellant.

On the morning of the alleged offense, Champion told Mrs. Handley, the injured party, that he had that morning taken appellant to Rusk, and that appellant had there made arrangements to get her husband into the asylum at that place, provided she was willing to pay $100.00 as a sanitarium fee. To this Mrs. Handley replied that, before she would go further into the proposition, she wanted to talk with the appellant and see what arrangements had been made, and directed Champion to get the appellant and come back. Champion left, and later, on the same day, returned with appellant and Deward Reeves. Mrs. Handley then held a conversation with appellant; and as to what occurred between them is best shown by quoting from her testimony, as follows:

“At that time I talked to Dr. Parten out in the front yard and I asked him if he had been to Rusk that morning and he said he had; I then asked him if he had made arrangements to put my husband in the sanitarium and he said he had and I told him that I understood from Bunkum Champion that I *15 would have to pay $100.00 for a sanitarium fee and I asked the doctor if I had to do that and he said I did, and so I said that it would take ■ everything I had but if you are going to put him in the sanitarium where he will be treated and cared for I would be willing to sacrifice what little I had. While we were having that conversation Bunkum Champion and Deward Reeves were on the inside of the house; they went in there before I ever told them that they could take my husband and while I was trying to find out from Dr. Parten what sort of arrangements he had made they were taking my husband out of the bed. After Dr. R. A. Parten told me that the sanitarium fee would be $100.00 I delivered that amount of money to him in my front yard. I gave him five twenty dollar bills. I think he put that money in his pocket right there at the time but I dont know about that. I paid him that $100.00 because he told me that if I was willing to pay it to get my husband in that sanitarium for the sanitarium fee he could do it and I asked him, ‘Now, doctor, are you going to pay that sanitarium fee down there,’ and he said, ‘Yes,’ and I said, ‘You will take care of it for me,’ and he said, ‘Yes.’ At the time I was delivering the $100.00 in money to Dr. Parten to be used in paying the sanitarium fee at Rusk to get my husband into the asylum I certainly believed that was what I paid the money to him for and I thought he was going to do the right thing and get my husband in the sanitarium to be treated. I certainly did believe what the doctor told me to be true about the sanitarium fee being $100.00 and that it would have to be paid before my husband could get into the asylum.”

Almost immediately after the money had been paid, the three (appellant, Champion and Reeves) went into the house, got the husband, and left with him in Champion’s car. Appellant left his car at the Handley home. Later, on the same day, all three returned, when Mrs. Handley made inquiry of appellant if her husband had been placed in the asylum, to which he replied in the affirmative. She then asked if the money had been paid, and if he had gotten a receipt showing such payment. Appellant advised her that he had paid the money, but had failed to get a receipt. Mrs. Handley insisted that she wanted a receipt, and, with some reluctance, appellant signed a receipt to her, the effect of which was that Mrs. Handley had paid him $100.00 as a sanitarium fee. Before appellant left on this occasion, Mrs. Handley inquired of him if she owed him anything, to which he replied in the negative

*16 The foregoing facts are shown by the testimony in chief of Mrs. Handley. Upon cross-examination, and as touching the purpose or intent with which she delivered the money to appellant, she said: “I gave Dr. Parten the $100.00 to take to the hospital; I did not intend to give it to him but I intended for him to pay it on the sanitarium bill. I gave him the $100.00 to take to the hospital and I thought that is what he intended to do and I relied on that promise that he would take the $100.00 to the hospital.”

It was further shown that appellant carried the husband to the asylum at Rusk and tendered him for admission, and that, notwithstanding the fact that the institution was then in possession of a transcript of the proceedings showing the husband to have been duly tried and convicted as an insane person, in the County Court of Rusk County, Texas, admission of the patient was refused because he had not been presented through or by the county judge of the county. Appellant left, leaving the husband sitting in an office in the institution. Appellant did not pay the money to the asylum. No fee was necessary or required to -be paid for admission of patients therein. The husband was subsequently admitted to the institution.

Appellant, testifying as a witness in his own behalf, admitted the receipt of the money. He denied that it was given or paid to him by Mrs. Handley for the purpose and under the circumstances and conditions she claimed. To the contrary, he said that the money was paid to him for professional services he had rendered in attending the husband, and that, at the time of the payment thereof, Mrs. Handley then owed him about $109.00 for such services. He denied that he made the representations as claimed, and asserted that he acted in good faith as a physician in carrying the husband to the asylum. Two days prior thereto, the husband had been duly convicted of being a person of unsound mind. A judgment of the County Court of Rusk County, showing such conviction and ordering that he be placed in one of the state hospitals for the insane, was introduced in evidence.

As tending to corroborate the defensive theory that Mrs. .

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136 S.W.2d 865 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1940)
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95 S.W.2d 122 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1936)
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29 S.W.2d 359 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1930)
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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 935, 144 Tex. Crim. 12, 1942 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parten-v-state-texcrimapp-1942.