Phillips v. State

141 S.W.2d 371, 139 Tex. Crim. 574, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 439
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 1940
DocketNo. 20874
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 141 S.W.2d 371 (Phillips 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
Phillips v. State, 141 S.W.2d 371, 139 Tex. Crim. 574, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 439 (Tex. 1940).

Opinions

CHRISTIAN, Judge.

The offense is rape; the punishment, confinement in the penitentiary for life.

Winnie Fred Wilcox, the alleged injured party, testified, in substance, as follows: She was approximately 16 years of age at the time of the alleged offense. On the 3rd of August, 1938, Doris DeWall, Betty Lilley, Vernon Kulbeth, Fred Redding and appellant came to a point near her home in two Ford automobiles. She had not previously known Kulbeth, Redding or appellant, but was well acquainted with Doris DeWall. She had seen Betty Lilley around the school she attended but had never spoken to her. Doris DeWall introduced her to those she had not previously known. After this introduction she and Fred Redding entered one of the automobiles and drove away, following the car in which Doris DeWall, Betty Lilley, Vernon Kulbeth and appellant were riding. They proceeded to Magnolia Gardens, arriving there about 3:30 p. m. With the exception of prosecutrix, everybody ordered beer. She expressed [577]*577desire to drink a coca-cola but upon her companions becoming insistent, she ordered a bottle of beer. She drank only a few swallows, as beer always- made her sick. Eventually some one ordered wine, and, with the exception of the prosecutrix, each member of the party drank the wine. After the wine had been finished Vernon Kulbeth and Doris DeWall went for a ride in appellant’s car. After they had driven away, Fred Redding insulted prosecutrix. Upon learning that prosecutrix would not comply with his request, Redding made the same suggestion to Betty Lilley. Eventually Redding and Betty Lilley drove away in Redding’s car, leaving appellant and prosecutrix alone. She and appellant discussed her school work, she stating to him that she was assistant librarian in the San Jacinto High School. After Redding and Betty Lilley returned with the car prosecutrix expressed the desire to go home, saying that her grandmother would be worried if she stayed too long. However, she said that she would like to see Doris DeWall before they left, as Doris had invited her to ride with appellant and the other parties. Thereupon she and appellant entered the car with Redding and Betty Lilley, she sitting in appellant’s lap.

At this juncture we quote from the testimony of prosecutrix, as follows:

“We got in the car. Fred Redding was driving and Betty Lilley was sitting in the middle, and I was sitting in Leo Phillip’s lap. It was just a coupe; that’s the only thing I could do. So they turned off on a little road, You know, there’s a highway, and then you go down a long dirt road to get to Magnolia Gardens — that’s the way I remember it — and there’s a way to turn off between the highway and Magnolia Gardens; there’s a sort of little turn off in there. So I learned that Fred Redding and Betty Lilley had already been there, or knew where they (Doris and Vernon) were. Anyway, as we went down there, Fred drove too fast. There was a sort of curve, and their car was parked there. Well, he went too far around the curve, and we saw them, Vernon Kulbeth and Doris DeWall.
“Leo Phillips then started cursing Fred Redding, and told him he had gone too far, and that he knew better, and he would knock the hell out of him if he didn’t get away from there. So he backed up pretty fast, and Leo Phillips kept calling him everything he could think of. * * * Leo Phillips hit Fred Red-ding, and Fred Redding didn’t hit back. He hit him several times, and Fred just sat there. Leo sort of pushed me to the side and hit him several times, and told him to get out of the car, and he called him the same language that he had called [578]*578him previous to that, and so Fred got out of the car, and when he did, Betty slid out and ran, and when Leo got out, I slid out and ran. We each ran in a different direction. We thought the boys were fighting behind us, but they were both running after us. I started running to Doris and hollering ‘Help!’ She was the only one I knew to run to. I was about half way there — it was about a block, I think; I’m not quite sure — and it was very bumpy, uneven ground, and I didn’t get quite half way to them when something hit me; it was Leo (appellant). We were both running, and I had on high heels and the ground was very uneven, and it seem to me that he .hit me with the side of his hand; anyway, he pushed me over. Then he grabbed me up, because Fred had caught Betty and put her in the car. The car then left.”

Again, prosecutrix testified, in substance, as follows: After Betty Lilley and Fred Redding drove away Doris DeWall and Vernon Kulbeth picked up the blanket upon which they had been lying, and entered the car. Appellant pushed prosecutrix in the car and “started after Fred Redding.” Kulbeth was driving, but appellant had charge of the car. Driving at a high rate of speed, they endeavored to overtake Redding and Betty Lilley. Eventually appellant directed Kulbeth to turn off the highway, saying that he was “going to get what he came after.” After the car stopped Kulbeth and Doris DeWall got out. Kulbeth placed a blanket on the ground directly behind the car. Prosecutrix walked toward the road where she met Frank McGee. Being uneasy in the situation in which she found herself, she told McGee she was in trouble and needed his help. She told him she wanted to go home. Observing a ranch house not far away, she asked McGee to let her ride his horse. He replied that the horse was wild and he did not believe she could ride it. When the last statement was made appellant was present. She then asked McGee to let her lead the horse, and he agreed. She, McGee and appellant were proceeding toward the ranch house, she leading the horse when appellant apparently observed the house and stated to her that he wanted her to get in the car. She replied that it was her desire to stay where she was. McGee also insisted that she be permitted to stay. An argument ensued, with the result that appellant ordered Kulbeth to get a gun and blow McGee’s head off. At this juncture McGee left the scene and proceeded toward the ranch house.

Again, we quote from the testimony of prosecutrix as follows: “When the cowboy turned, I said I was going to stay [579]*579there until the sheriff came, and Leo hit me; he didn’t just exactly hit me; he shoved me, shoved me down, and then he kicked me, and then he hit me sort of on the thigh or hip or something. It left a big black bruise for about two weeks; it was kind of high up, almost to my waist, but not quite.

“He then told me to get back in that car, ‘get back in there damn quick,’ and all the time he used terrible language, ‘damn’ and ‘hell’ and those words I told you a while ago. He used them all the time, and he called me a ‘bitch’ and ‘whore’ and a ‘satchel’. I don’t know what that means, but it didn’t sound right. He just cursed right and left, and shoved me back in the car. He said he’d teach me to play around, * * * I was sort of sitting on his lap, sort of, not very much, and he started hitting me across the back of the head with both fists. He was so mad he could/die, and he was just beating on me, just like that, right round in here, in the back of my head and my shoulders. I was not struck in the face, because I had it covered up like this, with my arms.

“Doris DeWall told him not to hit me, and so did Vernon, he said, ‘Leo, cut it out; she has had enough of that.’ He said something to that effect; I don’t remember just what he did say. Both of them protested, but Vernon’s was kind of half-hearted. Leo told him to shut his damn mouth; he would ask him when he wanted something, or wanted some advice.”

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W.2d 371, 139 Tex. Crim. 574, 1940 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-state-texcrimapp-1940.