Pogue v. State

12 Tex. Ct. App. 283
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Tex. Ct. App. 283 (Pogue v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pogue v. State, 12 Tex. Ct. App. 283 (Tex. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Willson, J.

The defendant was charged with the murder of one Louis Harbowe, and upon trial was convicted of manslaughter, and his punishment assessed at two years’ confinement in the penitentiary.

This case is one of circumstantial evidence alone. There was no eye-witness to the death of the deceased. The deceased came to his death on the evening of the last day óf April, 1881, on the prairie, some sixty yards from the residence of Mrs. Katie Pogue in Franklin county. His death was- not known until the next morning, at about 8 o’clock, when his dead body was found by John [285]*285Ahern. Ahern testified that the body, when he found it, was on its side, with the hands together and the knees together, and the head on the ground. He saw blood all around where the body was, with an occasional pool of blood. The blood was dry, and looked as if it had been shed there in the night. He saw no wounds on the body; did not touch the body and saw no weapons about there. The body was thirty or forty yards from any road. A physician who examined the dead body testified that he found an incised wound under the left ear, which had been inflicted with some sharp instrument, and which liad severed the carotid artery. One or two fingers on the right hand were slightly wounded, and there were also one or two slight wounds on the arm and point of the shoulder. The character and appearance of these last mentioned wounds were not described. The physician ■stated that deceased died from hemorrhage. He gave it as his opinion that the wounds could have been self-inflicted, but that in his opinion they were inflicted by some one else; but he does not state upon what facts or .reasons he bases this opinion. He also said that he thought the wound on the neck was made by a cut from the front, backward. The foregoing embraces all the material evi-dence as to the corpus delicti. The evidence relied upon •to connect the defendant with the tragedy, and to prove him to be the perpetrator thereof, is, in substance, as follows:

Hugh Watson, a witness for the State, testified that he lived two and a half or three miles east from Mt. Vernon; that defendant lived about five miles east, and that deceased lived one and a half miles from witness. That on the evening of Harbowe’s death, the said Harbowe, the ■defendant and witness were all at Mt. Vernon. Witness went to Mt. Vernon and there met deceased, who asked him when he was going home, and where the defendant -was, saying we would all go home together. Harbowe [286]*286asked defendant when he was going home. Defendant then spoke of getting some rope, and Harbowe said that reminded him he also must get some rope for Mrs. Pogue. The deceased, defendant and witness went together to witness’s house. Deceased and defendant were both drinking heavily. While near witness’s house, deceased told defendant that the iron rod which he, defendant, had, belonged to him, deceased. The defendant then gave deceased the rod. It is about two miles from witness’s house to Mrs. Katie Pogue’s, and about the same distance to Harbowe’s. The dead body was not found on the road leading from witness’s house to defendant’s, nor. on the road leading from witness’s house to Harbowe’s, but out of the way leading to either of these places. The witness stated that if Harbowe had been going to Mrs. Pogue’s he would have gone by the place where his dead body was found. Harbowe was riding a sorrel mare belonging to Mrs. Pogue.

This witness stated on cross-examination that defendant and deceased were both drinking and had whiskey with them. They were friendly towards each other, and had always been friendly with each other, so far as he knew. Defendant and deceased spoke of killing hogs for Mrs. Pogue the next day. Harbowe wanted defendant to go with him to kill hogs, and defendant agreed to go, if witness would go, and witness agreed to go with them next day, and promised to meet them next morning. Witness went to Harbowe’s house next morning to go with him and defendant to kill hogs, but found no person at Harbowe’s house. He then saw Ahern on the prairie and went to where he was. About 9 o’clock that morning, after witness had learned of the death of Harbowe, he, witness, went to defendant’s house, and told defendant that Harbowe was dead. Defendant seemed to be surprised, and said, “ some of us must go up there.” This witness also stated that before he went to defendant’s [287]*287house on that morning he had ridden up to the dead body, and that while he was there another person had also ridden up to near the body. Witness rode direct from the dead body to defendant’s house.

J. L. Ferguson, a witness for the State, testified that, when he saw the dead body, there were three men and some ladies already there. He examined some horse tracks,—went about sixty or seventy yards from where the body lay, and found the tracks to within ten steps of the body, where they seemed to stop. About twenty steps from the body the tracks indicated that the riders were struggling; the smaller track seemed to jump, and the larger track went around to the west and then turned east. Witness said he knew defendant’s, horse, and also Mrs. Pogue’s mare that deceased was riding the night he came to his death, and that he supposed the horse would make the larger track.

Mrs. Katie Pogue, witness for the State, testified that, on the day of Harbowe’s death he started to Mt. Vernon riding a sorrel pony belonging to her son. She asked him to bring her a rope from Mt. Vernon, which she had bought and left there. On the next morning she found the rope on the horn of the saddle. The saddle was on the yard fence, but she did not know who placed it there. Witness was at home on the night of Harbowe’s death. The dead body, she says, was found about 100 yards from her house. A while after dusk, witness states, she heard some one coming from the south toward her house. She could hear but one voice talking loud. She recognized it as the voice of Louis Harbowe, but did not recognize any other voice. . She heard Harbowe say: “ Bill Stephens is a d—d hog-thief; you know that, G-us Pogue.” She heard no reply to this. She also heard Harbowe say, “ Pll kick you,” but did not know to whom he directed this remark, or whether it was before or after the remark about Bill Stephens. She saw an animal [288]*288which she took to be her pony, without a rider, trot off towards the lot gate. Her pony was up next morning. She saw no one ride off, but she heard some one riding away, apparently going east. It was a dark, starlight night. She could not tell how many persons rode off; knew defendant’s voice; had known it a longtime; thinks she would have recognized his voice if it had been him that was talking to Harbowe, but she did not recognize the voice that responded to Harbowe that night. She could not say that it was or was not defendant’s. This witness was the sister-in-law of defendant.

Cora Harbowe, a witness for the State, and daughter of deceased, testified that she was at Mr. Prather’s on the night of her father’s death. Prather’s is about one quarter of a mile from where the dead body was found. Defendant on that night rode up to Prather’s and hallooed, and asked where Prather was. He said he had got lost over there. He then rode off and in fifteen or twenty minutes came back. Mr. Ahern took a lamp out, and defendant would not let Ahern see him; he kept turning his horse around. He said he was going to Louis Harbowe’s -or Hugh Watson’s and stay all night.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tex. Ct. App. 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pogue-v-state-texapp-1882.