Pinkerton v. State

160 S.W. 87, 71 Tex. Crim. 195, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 401
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1913
DocketNo. 2562.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 87 (Pinkerton 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
Pinkerton v. State, 160 S.W. 87, 71 Tex. Crim. 195, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 401 (Tex. 1913).

Opinion

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

From a conviction for burglary with the lowest penalty prescribed by law fixed, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

Mr. A. A. Kerr was a merchant in the small country town of Ex Bay in said county and handled general merchandise, including most everything used in a country store. It included a stock of pocket-knives and canned oysters and salmon. On Saturday night, April 27, 1912, his store was burglarized and two boxes of pocket-knives,—one full, the other not full—and some salmon or oldsters, or both, were stolen therefrom.

On that Saturday night there was a dance some few miles north from Ex Bay and, among others who attended it, were five young men,— *197 appellant, Ed Glasgow, Dick Gordon, Sid Davidson and John Secreast. The dance ended some time between 12 o’clock midnight and 2 o’clock a. m. Said Gordon, Davidson and Secreast left the dance, going to their homes, traveling in a single horse top buggy. Glasgow and appellant left the dance riding one horse,—one behind the other, following said buggy; the horse they were riding belonged to appellant’s father. When they got in about a mile from ICerr’s store a rain came up. The parties in the buggy had the top up, the side curtains on and the storm apron in front up so as to protect them from the rain. There was considerable wind with the rain. When the rain began they had to turn the buggy around from the way they were going so as to prevent the wind from blowing the rain on them. Appellant and Glasgow reached them just at this time, got off the horse and got in the buggy with the ■ other three to keep out of the rain; they remained in the buggy some twenty or thirty minutes until the heavy part of the rain was over. They then got out of the buggy, mounted the horse as before, and started on home. The homes of all these parties were beyond Ex Bay and they had to pass by Kerr’s store in order to reach their respective homes. The place where the dance was, was off of the main road and. all these parties reached the main road, running about north and south, about one mile from Ex Bay.

Ed Glasgow testified: That directly after he and appellant started from the dance, home, appellant said to him they would not lose anything by riding in the rain. He asked him why; appellant replied, “We will rob them damn stores at Ex Bay.” He told appellant he thought it best not to do so; they said nothing to the parties in the buggy about this; that shortly before he and appellant reached said store appellant asked him if “We were going to break into the store?” and he again replied he thought it best not to do so. They then rode on up in front of the store and stopped; the store fronted east; it had a gallery clear across the front. In the center of the store in front was the door, and a window on either side ; that when they stopped the horse in front of the store appellant got down, stepped up on the gallery, and he got down, got up on the gallery and held the horse at the south end of the gallery; that appellant told him to hold the horse and watch and said he was going in the store. Appellant.then went to the north window, and went to work at it to get in the store; that he removed one of the panes of glass from the window, reached in at that, and removed the stick from over the window which prevented the window from being raised. Appellant then went in the store and remained some little timo, Glasgow remaining out, holding the horse and watching; that just before appellant went in the store the other three parties passed, going south in the road in the buggy and did not stop. Neither of them got out of the buggy. This road was a public road in about the center of about a seventy-five or eighty-foot street in front of said store, and the buggy passed no nearer the store than the road; that just after these parties passed in the buggy appellant succeeded in effecting an entrance *198 into the store, and while he did not remain long, he was in 'there several minutes. He came back out of the store through this window, approached the witness and told him, “Let’s go.” They both got on the horse again, went up the road some 400 or 500 yards from the store to a church building; that they there stopped the horse, tied him in front of the church and went into the church. Appellant there showed him four cans of oysters which they cut and ate in the church; that appellant then stated to the witness that he had also gotten some pocketknives out of the store; that after remaining in the church ten or fifteen minutes they went out, unhitched and both walked and led the horse from there to appellant’s father’s gin lot at his father’s residence'. The distance from the church to appellant’s father’s house, some of the witnesses say, is about 100 yards; said Glasgow said about 400 yards from the church; that when they got through the gin lot gate, they unsaddled and turned the horse loose, then went into appellant’s father’s house; appellant, procuring a light, went into his room, showed the witness the pocket-knives which he had gotten out of the store, and they then went to bed and slept till late the next morning when they were awakened; after they got up next morning, at appellant’s instance they took the two said boxes of pocket-knives, went some 300 or 300 yards distant from appellant’s father’s house, dug a hole in the ground on a knoll by a ravine and buried the two boxes of knives; that appellant stated that if ‘they searched his house they wouldn’t find the knives; that nothing was said at that time about dividing the knives between them; that then they went back to appellant’s father’s house, where he remained.a few minutes and without getting any breakfast there, he started to his1 home some few miles distant, walking; that in thus going to his home he passed some houses and perhaps met some parties, and among others, he thinks he saw Mr. Shelby; that the next day, Sunday, at Sunday school he spoke to appellant about the matter of going into the said store, and appellant said to him that they had been tracking us and were sure to get us, and told the witness he would have to stand pat on it. The witness replied he guessed he would. About a month later he met appellant at another dance and appellant again asked him if he was going to stay with him, and he replied he guessed he would. Again, on Wednesday or Thursday night before the witness went before the grand jury appellant again asked him if he was going to stand pat, and he made the same reply; that appellant said he would do that towards the witness.

■ He further testified: “After I was before the grand jury in this matter, I went with Mr. George Shelby to look for the knives and the place where they had been buried on the Sunday morning after the burglary, going there directly from the grand jury room. We did not find the knives but did find the hole where they had been buried. We had no trouble in locating the place where the knives had been buried,” and he then showed the place to Mr.-Shelby.

Said Gordon and Secreast both testified for the State, corroborating *199

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 87, 71 Tex. Crim. 195, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinkerton-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.