Preston v. State

8 Tex. Ct. App. 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Tex. Ct. App. 30 (Preston 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
Preston v. State, 8 Tex. Ct. App. 30 (Tex. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Clark, J.

From a second conviction for the murder of Selena England the defendant James Preston has again appealed to this court, and asks that a new trial be awarded him. Upon his former appeal, the judgment of conviction was declared invalid because of a refusal of the court below to grant him a continuance on account of the absence of material witnesses in his behalf, and because upon his trial illegal evidence was admitted against him over his objection. 4 Texas Ct. App. 186. Numerous errors are again assigned and discussed in his behalf upon this appeal; but, upon examination, many of them are found unsupported by the record, and others still not supported by the law. It is not necessary that we discuss all of them, and such as are not noticed may be dismissed with the remark that they are not well founded, or are so immaterial as not to require more extended notice.

Even before the revision of the Code there was no distinction between capital felonies and. other criminal cases in the manner of swearing the jury and the form of the oath proper to be taken, the act of May 4, 1846 (Pose. Dig., art. 3990), having been superseded by the adoption of the original Codes in 1856. Tickle v. The State, 6 Texas Ct. App. 623; Clampitt v. The State, 3 Texas Ct. App. 638.

The court was not required, even though the same was demanded by the defendant on trial, to alter the form of its judgment-entry in order that the exact oath administered to the jury should be set out in hcec verba; and its refusal so to do did not deprive the appellant of any right, for the whole proceeding, including the very words of the oath, is made to appear in a bill of exceptions as fully and completely as if incorporated in the judgment-entry.

[33]*33Nor, after a very critical examination of the numerous bills of exception relating to the admission of testimony over appellant’s objection, are we prepared to say that there was any departure from the law in these rulings, nor that they are not fully sustained and sanctioned by repeated adjudication of this and other courts. As has often been said, in cases of this character the mind seeks to explore all possible sources of information and demands the introduction in evidence of every fact, no matter how unimportant in itself, which may tend in the slightest to elucidate the mystery surrounding the transaction and to make manifest the guilt or innocence of the accused on trial. It may be said, not inappropriately, that in cases like this, when a foul assassination has occurred and the circumstances attending and surrounding it are shrouded in mystery, the command of the law is, “ Turn on the light.” In such cases the rules of evidence are not to be disregarded nor set at naught to subserve a special exigency, but from necessity and in the interest of public policy and public justice it is always permissible to array in evidence facts and incidents remote and even unimportant in themselves, and which, in cases depending upon direct and positive testimony, would be generally regarded as irrelevant.

The acts and declarations of appellant’s co-defendant, Krebs, as well as the occurrences which took place at Krebs’s house after the homicides and the arrest of both, were, in so far as the acts are concerned, independent evidence ; and the declarations of Krebs’s wife were concomitant with the search made of his house, and so inseparably connected therewith as to make their segregation almost impracticable. Besides, these declarations were carefully guarded and restricted in the charge of the court to the single issue of her impeachment, and the jury were expressly forbidden to consider them for any purpose save this ; and they were further cautioned that they could not consider the acts, declarations, or deeds of Krebs as incul[34]*34patory facts against the appellant unless he was present and sanctioned them, or unless a conspiracy between them was established by the evidence.

The repeated statements of Mrs. England, the deceased, as to the circumstances attending the murder, come clearly within the rules of dying declarations, and the evidence fails to show, with any degree of certainty and satisfaction, the existence of any authentic written statement which would preclude the admission of oral testimony as to what these declarations were. Whart. on Horn., sect. 766.

The only point presented by the record which seems to call for special consideration and discussion is the sufficiency of the evidence, and to this we have addressed ourselves with earnest care, realizing the full responsibility of our solution both to the law on the one hand and the citizen on the other. We have undertaken to divest ourselves entirely of that sense of horror which must come over every mind not utterly lost to the impulses of a common humanity, when brought face to face with the horrid transaction which forms the basis of this prosecution, and, gleaning from the record before us all the inculpatory facts which may point to this appellant as a guilty participant in this deed most diabolical, to view them from the stand-point of human intelligence, and answer the question, “Is the appellant proven guilty under the rules of law? ”

These inculpatory facts may be classified into two separate divisions : first, such facts as show the guilt of Krebs, the co-defendant of appellant, and connect appellant with him; and second, independent facts which may tend to show that the homicide was perpetrated by parties at Krebs’s house, including appellant.

No candid mind can review and contemplate the evidence submitted in the record before us without reaching a conclusion beyond a reasonable doubt that Ben Krebs was present at the assassination of the England family, and a guilty participant therein to the extent of murdering with [35]*35his own hands two helpless and inoffensive women. Apart from the outcries of Susie Taylor when pursued and mortally wounded by the relentless assassin, and which with her dying breath fixed the identity of Krebs, furnishing another illustration of that decree of an inscrutable Providence which hath ordained that “ murder will out,” her stricken and dying mother, under a like dispensation, was permitted to drag her dying body, in the dead watches of the night, to the friendly refuge of a neighbor’s house, distant one-half mile from the scene of the assassination, and there recount its circumstances and fix the identity of at least one of its perpetrators. Nor was this all; her frail existence was protracted sufficiently long to enable the officers of the law and outraged citizens to carry her back to her desolate home, there to recount again the horrid details, and to face Krebs and charge him as the murderer. In all these statements made by her previous to her death, there is “ neither variableness nor shadow of turning” as to Krebs. She did not recognize the other two assassins distinctly, but Krebs she saw and recognized beyond doubt, and him she reiterates on each occasion as a guilty party. When brought into her dying presence, he answers her charge by saying that it must be her imagination ; and then she gives in detail her means of information, and how it was impossible for her to mistake him. His voice as it uttered its horrid curses, his beard, his hat, and her immediate proximity to him, —so close that she could have put her hand upon him, — are all stated with vivid recollection and exactness, and convey to the mind at once a profound impression of the honesty and certainty of her convictions.

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Related

People v. Robinson
1 Park. Cr. 649 (Court Of Oyer And Terminer New York, 1854)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Tex. Ct. App. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-state-texapp-1880.