Patterson v. State

147 S.W.2d 784, 141 Tex. Crim. 204, 1941 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1941
DocketNo. 21369.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 784 (Patterson 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
Patterson v. State, 147 S.W.2d 784, 141 Tex. Crim. 204, 1941 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 108 (Tex. 1941).

Opinions

GRAVES, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of an assault to murder with malice upon one Carter Hays, and by the jury given a term of five years in the penitentiary.

The facts proven by the State reveal that two women, stepsisters, in company with a man named Jim Woodward, went to D. Brown’s dine, drink and dance place in San Augustine County where beer and sandwiches were sold, and were there dancing, and there consumed certain quantities of beer. While they were thus drinking appellant, who was unknown to all but one of these persons, came up and was drinking with them. That appellant became offended at some casual remark of one of the women, and upon being told by Woodward that the woman was not speaking to him, the appellant withdrew to a further place in this establishment and sent a negro waiter over after his, appellant’s, can of beer, which had been left at the first table. The women sent him not only appellant’s can of beer but also one that he had purchased for them, which extra can he immediately returned, keeping his own.

About such time, in this confused condition of affairs, as they are presented to us, a State’s witness testified that appellant, about an hour prior to the stabbing of the complaining witness Hays, told such witness that “he didn’t like Carter Hays’ damn looks.”

Soon after the trouble at the table where the women were with Jim Woodward, appellant, after dancing with one of these women, finally went back into the kitchen of this establishment, where he had been employed at a previous time, and picked up a butcher knife lying-on the kitchen table and put it down inside his trousers, and went back in the front of this place. Carter Hays knew one of these two women, and after appellant left the table where the women were sitting Hays went over to their table and sat down there and remained there quite awhile,, drinking with them. Later he got up and went over to a counter and sat down on a stool at the' bar near Estelle Atwood, one of the women first referred to herein, at which time appellant came by and struck Hays with this butcher knife, and the witness testified: “If Pat (H) Patterson said anything to me immediately beforerhe stuck that butcher knife *207 in me, I don’t remember it. That butcher knife went practically through my body.” The appellant then went back into the kitchen and put the knife back on the table; it was covered with blood, and immediately thereafter when accused of having struck Hays with said knife denied it, with accompanying oaths. The wound collapsed the right lung and caused an infection and became a dangerous wound, so the physician said, Hays remaining in a hospital about a month. It seems that Hays and appellant were not acquainted with each other.

Appellant took the witness stand and testified that in the trouble with the women Jim Woodward seemed to have taken offense at him, and when appellant was leaving the table where the women were Woodward stood up and said: “I will see you later,” and noticing a bulge about Woodward’s coat, appellant reasoned that Woodward was armed, and therefore appellant went into the kitchen and possessed himself of this butcher knife. That after carrying this knife around in the dance hall for a while, appellant testified that he approached the man Hays who, seeing appellant, said: “G - d - you, I will fix you up,” and “threw his hand back to his hip pocket,” and appellant stabbed Hays in the chest with the butcher knife. Appellant then saw that Hays did not get anything out of his hip pocket, and he put away his knife. He did not know Hays and Hays did not know him.

Appellant offers and briefs six bills of exceptions as grounds for a reversal of this cause.

Bill of exceptions No. 1 is concerned with the following question propounded to the appellant on cross-examination: “You did not attempt to leave that place or to get away from there after Jim Woodward left the booth, did you?”, which question was objected to on the ground that same was an attempt to take away from appellant his right of not being bound to retreat in order to avoid being compelled to act in his own necessary self-defense. Appellant answered “No” to the question after the trial court had overruled the objection thereto. This matter might have had some weight had appellant been charged with an assault -upon Jim Woodward, but such was not the case. He claimed to have struck another and different person, not in any way connected with Woodward, because of the fact that such other person suddenly made a threatening gesture which caused appellant to think his own person was in danger. We are impressed with the thought that no error is shown by this bill.

*208 Bill of exception No. 2 is based upon the asking of the following question to Jim Woodward by the State’s attorney:

“You would not have taken Miss Bostick to D. Brown’s place if you had known such a person as Pat Patterson was going to be there, would you?”

The objection being that the State was endeavoring to prove that the appellant’s reputation was that of a bad man, and that the appellant had not placed his reputation in issue in any manner, and was an attempt to prejudice the defendant’s cause and inflame the minds of the jury against him. At the time of such objection, the district attorney withdrew such question, and the trial court instructed the jury to disregard the same.

We are not in full accord with the fancied effect upon the minds of the jury that appellant sets forth in his objections to such question, and, in any event, we think the prompt withdrawal of the question, together with the court’s instruction, removed any error that might have arisen from the mere propounding of the question.

Bill of exceptions No. 3 complains of the latter portion of the following argument of the district attorney:

“Now, let’s look at the facts in this case. I will just review the testimony of the witness briefly. The first witness which the State offered was Vernie Bostick. She testified that she was at D. Brown’s that night that this occurred; that she had seen Carter Hays; that Carter Hays sat at the booth where she and her boy friend, Jim Woodward, and her half-sister, Estelle Atwood, who is now in the hospital suffering from an automobile .wreck and was not able to be in attendance upon this court. I only wish that she had been here. I am sure she could have told you some of the things — perhaps she could have given you testimony confirming all the other testimony offered in this case.” The portion thereof objected to being the last sentence thereof.

It was shown by the evidence that Estelle Atwood was present at the time testified to by all the witnesses both for the State and the appellant. Bill No. 4 seems to be based upon a .continuation of such an argument of the district attorney as follows:

“As I say, the evidence in this case is so preponderant, it is so great, it has proven so clearly and so conclusively beyond a reasonable doubt the guilt of this man that no other evidence is necessary, and the evidence of Estelle Atwood, had she been *209 here, would have confirmed the testimony of the other witnesses, perhaps.”

And again he said:

“She was there and saw the same thing that Vernie Bostick did, according to Vernie Bostick’s own testimony.”

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377 F. Supp. 374 (S.D. Texas, 1974)
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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 784, 141 Tex. Crim. 204, 1941 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-state-texcrimapp-1941.