Payton v. State

132 S.W. 127, 60 Tex. Crim. 475, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 535
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1910
DocketNo. 764.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 127 (Payton 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
Payton v. State, 132 S.W. 127, 60 Tex. Crim. 475, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 535 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

McCORD, Judge.

This, is an appeal from a conviction for murder in the second degree with a penalty of seven years.

An indictment was returned in the District Court of Taylor County at the February .term, 1910, charging the appellant with the murder of one S. C. Hackley, and appellant being brought to trial resulted in his conviction, as aforesaid. The evidence develops that the deceased Hackley was running a boarding-house in the town of Abilene; that he was a man some seventy years of age; that his family consisted of his wife and his stepdaughter; that the defendant was his brother-in-law, being the brother of his wife, and lived with the family of the deceased; that defendant was a man about sixty-five years of age; that he had been living with the family of deceased ten or twelve years; that on the night of the difficulty the first thing that was noticed the defendant came out of his room, which opened into the dining-room near or about the west end of the dining-room table, and this table extended east and west and was something near sixteen feet long; that this room was on the north side of the dining-room, and the defendant, after he reached near the table, placed his hand in a glass jar and took out a cracker; that the deceased was on the south side of the table about half way, and looking up stated to the defendant, “What are you looking at me so hard for?” Defendant replied, “What are you looking at me for?” That the deceased became enraged and commenced cursing defendant; that defendant cursed back and started toward the east end of the table to go out of the door, which was near the east end of the table; that deceased advanced up to the east end of the table with his sleeves *477 rolled up; that when the defendant got about the end of the table, the deceased also being at that end, having advanced from the center portion of the table, defendant fired upon him resulting in his death. It seems that the deceased usually sat at the east end of the table and did the carving, and at that end of the table there was a butcher-knife and a carving-knife. The defendant had already eaten his supper and, as he says, started out of the door for the purpose of paying a visit to a friend. The contention of the State was that the defendant was the aggressor, brought on the difficulty and that his killing of deceased was without excuse or cause and at a time when he was not in danger, either real or apparent. On the trial of the case Miss Maude Hill, who was the stepdaughter of the deceased, and the niece of the defendant, testified substantially as follows: That she was at home the night the. deceased was killed; that she had just finished her supper and gone into the kitchen, which opened in from the dining-room near the southwest corner of the table, and was there preparing a lunch to be sent to a sick lady; that her attention was attracted back to the dining-room, and she says: “I heard them quarreling.” That she then went into the dining-room and the deceased and defendant were using loud, bad language; that her uncle, the defendant, spoke so low that she could not hear him well, but that her hearing was not good. Continuing, this witness says: “About the first thing I remember was deceased says, ‘What are you looking at me for?’ As well as I remember my uncle said, ‘What are you looking at me for?’ That is all I remember hearing my uncle say at all. Deceased said, T will look where I damn please,’ and when Taylor came into the dining-room mama says, ‘Hncle Tobe, won’t you help me separate these men? There is going to be trouble here.’ He got his drink and put the cup behind the cooler and walked out of the room and shut the door. He did not enter the room any more, and T took hold of my father’s sleeve. Along before that I began begging them and appealing to them to hush. I says, ‘Papa, won’t you hush? Hncle Rube, won’t you hush?’ I says, ‘Papa, please hush,’ and they kept on talking and I took hold of papa’s sleeve. He slung me back; he says, ‘Take care; get out of my way; if he doesn’t get out of the house I will kill him.’ I went back into the kitchen and my mother came around between them, but if he ever touched my mother, however, I don’t know it, because I went back in the kitchen and was not in the dining-room any more until after my father grabbed mother and throwed her back against the door facing and she staggered around into the kitchen against the cook-table. When she staggered back against the cook-table I went back into the dining-room, and my father by that time had advanced nearly to the end of the table — to the corner of the table — and I took my left hand and placed it around his waist and - took hold of his right sleeve, and he was reaching and grasping for the end of the table and tried to pull. around the table and *478 reached toward Uncle Buhe and talking as loud as he could, and in about two minutes after I took hold of him the shots were fired; there were three shots, two of them" as fast as they could be and then another one; and when fhe third one was fired he gradually fell. The shots were all fired before he hit the floor.” The defendant took the stand and testified, among other things, as follows: “I had eaten my supper. Hackley kept boarders; it was a boarding-house; they just used one table that night; all the boarders did not eat at the same time; they eat as they came in; sometimes there was more than a table full and sometimes not. After I ate my supper I first went back around to my room on the north side. My room was located right back, it was the northeast room in the house on the ground floor. I had an engagement that night; I had an engagement to go down to Sy Campbell’s that night. ... He lived down here in the southeast part of town. ... I had started down to Mr. Campbell’s. I came out of my door on the north side to come right through the dining-room like I always come. That was my regrdar way to go whenever I go on the- south side of town or that way, I always come through the dining-room. . . . There was more than one exit to get out of the dining-room. There was a door coming in from my room on the north side and come around the end of the dining-table in the dining-room, and right here there is a door goes out on the south gallery. . . . There was also a door down at the east end of the dining-room through which you could get out, by going through the kitchen. I came into the dining-room there. Mr. Hackley was the first man I met when I came in at the dining-room door. Mrs. Hackley was down at the east end of the table, sitting at the table, eating. There was no one in there then eating supper. . . . She was sitting down in a chair. I came into the dining-room on the north side of the table and there was a jar of crackers on the table, and I just reached over and picked up a couple of crackers and commenced eating them; there was a jar of crackers sitting on that end of the table. I had been in the habit of doing that; I suppose that table was two and a half feet wide. It was just about as wide as this table here; I think it was sixteen feet long. I do not know about how large the dining-room is in which the table is located. Down at the east end of the room there is just room for —well, I suppose it is two and a half or three feet from the end of the table to the wall and it is a little more than that at the west end. When I came into the dining-room there and took that cracker and began to eat the cracker Hackley asked me what I was looking at him so hard for.

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Related

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201 S.W.2d 823 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1946)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 127, 60 Tex. Crim. 475, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payton-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.