Rainer v. State

148 S.W. 735, 67 Tex. Crim. 87, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 388
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1912
DocketNo. 1872.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 735 (Rainer 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
Rainer v. State, 148 S.W. 735, 67 Tex. Crim. 87, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 388 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree, and his punishment assessed at death.

1. The most serious question in the case, and the only one presented, in appellant’s brief, and which is very ably presented, is the one as to whether certain statements made by defendant after his arrest are res gestae. It appears that appellant and his wife had separated on several occasions. At the last separation, when she went to her brother’s, she. carried a cow, some meat and perhaps other things. Appellant had gone and gotten these things and carried them back home. He says he'went to this house on the night of the homicide by invitation of the deceased. This is denied by the State’s witnesses. It is conclusively shown when he went he carried a shotgun with him, and before going to the house he placed the gun in a closet at the rear of the house. After doing so he knocked at the back door, and being refused admittance he went to the front door and was admitted. Trouble arose, and he justifies his conduct by testifying to an assault on him by the fourteen year old son of deceased, he being appellant’s stepson, in which he saj^s his wife participated. The State’s testimony would show that he assaulted his wife, and Hollie Scott says he was beating her, and she jerked loose and ran in the house, closing the door. He went away. Witnesses say that in talking to them he threatened' to kill both his wife and her son that night. He says he went to her brother to get him to control the boy. The brother says appellant said nothing to him about the boy. He returned to Bosier’s house where his wife was staying and tried to get in, but was refused admittance. Tom Allen was there, and -when they would not let him in, appellant tried to get Tom to knock and get the door open so he could rush in. This Tom refused to do. Appellant then said he was going to get his gun. He made threats to "this witness, Jessie Adams and Eliza Davis that night about what he was going to do. He later went to the closet, got his gun, returned to the house, demanded admittance, and when refused, knocked out a panel of the door, shoved his gun in the opening, fired and killed his wife. He -says, while testifying as a witness, he did not intend to kill his wife, but intended to shoot his stepson. After the shooting he started down the street and met James Hamilton near the scene, who says appellant *89 remarked to him, “Come and go' back with me, I shot in the house there and I think I shot Francis.” Francis was his wife. Hamilton says he told him if he would give him the gun he would go with him, otherwise he would not, when appellant gave him the gun. They went back to Bosier’s house, and appellant called his stepson; getting no reply Hamilton remarked to appellant that they were afraid of him, when the stepson said, “Yes, I am afraid,” when Hamilton told him he had the gun. The boy opened the door and run out, when appellant went in, and when he came back out said he was going to give up, and wanted the gun. Hamilton refused to give it to him, when appellant said he wanted to see Hathan Ferrell and tell him what to do with the stock. That he started with him, when appellant said he traveled too slow, and went on and came back and went in the house where'his wife was again, and when he came out, said: “Yes, she was sure dead and he was satisfied.” They then started to the officer, ¿ppellant saying he was going to give up. Appellant again remarked that Hamilton walked too slow, and appellant' hurried on. Sheriff Freeland says it is between a half and three quarters of a mile from the house where the killing occurred to the point where appellant came to him and surrendered. He immediately turned him over to Jailer Bobinson, and Mr. Bobinson testified that when he opened the jail door and told appellant to go in, appellant said: “Mr. Bobinson, I want you and Mr. Freeland to go down and see if she is dead, and if she is come back and tell me, and if she is dead I will be satisfied—let the mob come in the morning.” Chas. Cavanaugh was present and testified that appellant asked Mr. Bobinson and Mr. Freeland to go over to the house and see if his wife was dead and said, “if she is I am satisfied, and you can let the mob come in the morning.” This was shown to have been some fifteen or twenty minutes after the killing took place.

Appellant earnestly insists that this testimony is not admissible, and as he testified on the trial that lie shot at and intended to kill his stepson, which if true, as he did not kill him, but killed his wife, a person not intended, he would only be guilty of murder in the second degree, and this statement was material and very damaging, for it tended to show that he shot at and intended to kill his "wife, which would make him guilty of murder in the first degree. It is also urged that without this testimony the jury would not be authorized to so find under the evidence. Without discussing that feature, we will consider whether or not the testimony of Cavanaugh and Bobinson was properly admitted, for there can be no question of its damaging nature, and if inadmissible the case should be reversed. In his brief appellant cites us to many authorities, and we have carefully reviewed them all. Among them is section 262 of Wharton on Criminal Evidence wherein that learned author says:

“Bes gestae are event's speaking for themselves through the instinctive words and acts of participants, not the words and acts of *90 participants when relating the events. . . . Nor are there any limits of time within which the res gestae can be arbitrarily confined. They vary in fact with each particular case. . . . They need not be coincident as to time if they are generated by an excited feeling which extends without break or let down from the moment of the event they illustrate. In other words, they must stand in immediate casual relation to the act, and become part either of the action immediately producing it, or of action which it immediately produces. Incidents which are thus immediately and unconsciously associated with an act, whether such incidents are doings or declarations, become in this way evidence of the character of the act.” (Whart. Crim. Ev., 8 ed., secs. 262 and 263.) Again he says, “but we must remember that continuousness can not always be measured by time.” (Id., sec. 264.) And again, “instinctiveness is the requisite, and when this obtains the declarations are admissible.” (Id., sec. 691.)

To the citation referred to by appellant we have added some excerpts from other sections of the work of the same author.

We. are also referred by appellant to the case of Lewis v. State, 29 Texas Crim. App., 204, wherein Judge Willson, speaking for this court, said: “In order to constitute declarations a part of the res gestae it is not necessary that they were precisely coincident in point of time with the principal fact. If they sprang out of the principal fact, tend t'o explain ■ it, were voluntary and spontaneous, and made at a time so near it as to preclude the idea of deliberate design, they may be regarded as contemporaneous, and are admissible in evidence.”

We are also referred by appellant to the cases of Bronson v. State, 59 Texas Crim. Rep., 17, 127 S. W. Rep., 175; Ingram v. State, 43 S. W. Rep., 518; Fulcher v. State, 28 Texas Crim. App., 465; Stagner v. State, 9 Texas Crim. App., 456, and other cases, in which the rule announced by Mr. Wharton and Lewis v. State, above quoted from, is approved and applied to the facts in those cases. In the case of McGee v. State, 31 Texas Crim.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 735, 67 Tex. Crim. 87, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rainer-v-state-texcrimapp-1912.