Pettis v. State

81 S.W. 312, 47 Tex. Crim. 66, 1904 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 225
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1904
DocketNo. 2800.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 S.W. 312 (Pettis 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
Pettis v. State, 81 S.W. 312, 47 Tex. Crim. 66, 1904 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 225 (Tex. 1904).

Opinions

HENDERSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of nine years; hence this appeal.

The- evidence on the part of the State tended to show the existence of a grudge on the part of defendant against deceased extending over a period of nearly two years, and that on the occasion of the homicide deceased and one Buck Moore were engaged in fixing the line for a fence to separate a piece of land bought by Moore from defendant through one Gillchriss, they having a day or two before notified appellant that they would move the fence, and he might be present and assist if he desired. On the morning of the homicide, which occurred in March, 1902, deceased, Frank Baccus, and Buck Moore were engaged in establishing the line for the fence between appellant’s land and deceased’s land, beginning at the north end and clearing the ground and driving stobs to the south end of said line. About 8 or 9 o’clock it appears that appellant and his son Arthur and one Grider went from their home, some half-mile distant, down the lane in a westerly direction, and stopped their wagon at the south end of the line, which deceased and Moore were marking out. Appellant, his son and Grider were also engaged in removing and building a fence around appellant’s land down said lane. Appellant and his son remained at the end of the line with the wagon some time, Grider being at the upper end of the line. After being there a while one Forrester, who was on his way to Abilene, joined them. Not long after this, deceased and Moore came in view of the parties from the north end of the line they were marking out. The witness Forrester asked 'Pettis who they were, and appellant told him it was Frank Baccus and Buck Moore, deceased and Moore being then about 100 yards distant. They came on down the line, Baccus a little in advance, and having a grubbing hoe, digging holes and driving stobs with it. Moore had an ax and was clearing the way. In the meantime appellant was standing at the rear of his wagon in which he had a Winchester gun. When deceased had approached to within about thirty or forty feet of the wagon, he stopped and rested one end of his grubbing hoe on the ground, and with both hands on the handle of the grubbing hoe, looked back and across the line towards Moore, who was a short distance behind. When he did this, Pettis jerked his gun out of the wagon, and stepped in a north *69 easterly direction three or four steps, stepping across the fence they were building and the old line of fence. He had his gun in a raised position, and said, “Frank, you have just scandalized my family enough,” and with that he raised and fired at Baccus. At the discharge of the gun, the ball struck deceased in the stomach, and he staggered off in a northeast direction, about sixteen or eighteen feet, when appellant fired again, and deceased fell. Appellant made a third motion, and the witness kept hallooing to him to desist. Appellant stopped and turned towards witness, who asked him, “What in the world is the matter? What caused this?” Appellant said, “He has scandalized my family, and keeps on at it.” Appellant then turned and walked on home. Buck Moore, the other eyewitness, for the State, testified as to the events immediately connected with the shooting substantially as did the witness Forrester. He states that when deceased walked up to within thirty or forty feet of the end of the line and turned around and looked at the stakes, his grubbing hoe was down by his side. “At that time defendant pulled his winchester out of his wagon and came from the fence, and when seven or eight steps from his wagon, maybe not that far, defendant made three or four steps after he got over the old fence, then stopped, and commenced talking to Baccus. He just said to him, ‘Frank, you have disgraced my family, and you have done it on account of Buck Moore/ and says, ‘God damn you, I am going to kill you/ Baccus was then facing him, the hoe in front of him and his hands on top of the handle. Pettis, after he had made these remarks to Baccus, shot deceased. Baccus hallooed, kinder doubled up, and staggered and ran back about five or six yards northwest, then Pettis shot him again. Baccus was running at the second shot. Baccus had his right arm next to Pettis when Pettis shot the second time, and he fell. At this juncture witness left the scene.” Both of these witnesses testified that deceased made no demonstration with his hands, except to put them on the handle of the grubbing hoe; and both testify that they saw no arms on deceased.

Appellant testified on his own behalf as to the facts immediately attending the shooting; that he was there waiting to start building on the fence; that he did not know deceased and Moore were working on that line of fence at the time; that the old and new fence were five or six feet apart at that point; that he and his son Arthur and Forrester were there. When deceased and Moore were about seventy-five yards up the line, Forrester asked him why they were and he told him; that he kept watching them as they came on down the line. Baccus was in front a few steps, had a grubbing hoe on his shoulder, and Buck Moore had an ax on his shoulder coming on down; and Baccus walked on up within seven or eight steps and was watching appellant, and he stopped. “Just as he stopped he set the grubbing hoe down with one hand and whirled his head back at Buck, and right back on me.” Defendant then sprang for his gun in the hind end of the wagon. He was within about a step of it. He grabbed the gun, and as deceased *70 came up he had his hand behind him. Appellant jumped over one wire there and stepped between the fences, and threw up his gun and fired, taking no sight at all, expecting either deceased or Moore to go to shooting. Fired his gun the second time just as soon as he could work the lever. Deceased was then running in a northeasterly direction; did not know he was hit until he had run four or five steps, and began to stagger, and then fell; and appellant turned and started home. He threw the shells out of -his gun where he was standing. Appellant further stated that when Baccus came up, whirled around and looked back at Moore, and then looked at appellant, he though it was a signal of some kind. At that moment appellant got his gun, and when he did, deceased had his hand behind him. The reason he shot was because he was expecting deceased to shoot. He was within seven or eight steps of Baccus when lie fired. If he had gotten over the second fence, he Avould have been within five steps of him. This is substantially the testimony of the eyewitnesses as to the facts immediately attending the homicide.

In addition to this it may be remarked that the State introduced evidence of a former difficulty between appellant and deceased antedating the homicide about twenty-two months. This was brought about on account of some alleged scandalous talk of appellant’s wife about deceased’s wife. Deceased and Moore went to appellant in order to settle this matter, and an altercation ensued, in which appellant proved that deceased denounced his (appellant’s) wife in very vulgar and opprobious terms; and that the parties then had a difficulty in which Moore intervened and stopped them from fighting. It is also shoAvn on the part of the State that on one or two occasions after this deceased desired to make friends with appellant and offered to make acknoAvledgments. They were refused by appellant. It was also shown that subsequent to this prior difficulty appellant usually went armed, carrying either a shotgun or AA'inchester with him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.W. 312, 47 Tex. Crim. 66, 1904 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettis-v-state-texcrimapp-1904.