Redmond v. State

180 S.W. 272, 78 Tex. Crim. 201, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 234
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 1915
DocketNo. 3683.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 272 (Redmond 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
Redmond v. State, 180 S.W. 272, 78 Tex. Crim. 201, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 234 (Tex. 1915).

Opinions

Appellant was convicted of wilfully deserting his wife, his punishment being assessed at a fine of $250 and sixty days imprisonment in the county jail.

The Acts of the Thirty-third Legislature at page 189 uses this language with reference to wife desertion: "An offense under this Act shall be held to have been committed in the county in which such wife, child or children may have been at the time such abandonment occurred, or in the county in which such wife, child or children shall have resided for six months next preceding the filing of the complaint, information or indictment." *Page 203

The unquestioned and undisputed evidence shows that defendant and his wife were married in Panama and came to Corpus Christi, where Dr. Henry Redmond and family resided, reaching there about the middle of August, 1914. For reasons not necessary now to discuss she desired to go to Pennsylvania, where her mother and relatives resided. To this her husband was opposed. Finally, however, at her earnest solicitation he did agree, and she left Corpus Christi going to Pennsylvania along about the middle of September to engage in some character of work, if not as a trained nurse, closely connected with it. She says she and her husband were on the friendliest terms and he was very lover-like in his attentions. In December he was at Baltimore attending a medical college with a view of obtaining his diploma as a practitioner in the profession. She went to Baltimore and spent a few days with him and they purposed leaving there about the middle of the month. In going to the depot they seemed to have anticipated the schedule time of the train. While about the depot she says her husband disappeared. She waited until about 2 o'clock the same night and took the train to Philadelphia. That shortly afterward from New York her husband communicated with her. About the 20th of January, 1915, she came to Corpus Christi. That she had wired her husband to meet her at the train, which he failed to do. She went to the hotel and called him up next day. He did not obey her summons. This was about the 21st of January. The grand jury returned this bill of indictment on the 24th of February, 1915. Testifying in relation to the fact of desertion she says her husband deserted her at Baltimore, Md., and that the charge in the indictment that he deserted her in Corpus Christi was a mistake. That he did not do so but deserted her in Baltimore, Maryland. After she left Corpus Christi she was not in Nueces County until January 20 or 21, 1915.

Referring to the statute quoted, it will be seen that a desertion, if a desertion at all, occurred a long time before the expiration of six months, and in fact was only within thirty-five days after her arrival at Corpus Christi or upon reaching Texas. So from any viewpoint this indictment could not be sustained. He did not desert her in Texas, and if this indictment could be sustained from any standpoint, she would have to live in Nueces County six months prior to the prosecution. As the writer understands this record and the facts if such was a desertion it was on her part and not his. There is evidence to the effect that her intention when she left her husband in September may have been a permanent separation on her part. The evidence goes to show that her husband had nothing and was dependent upon his father for a support, and after they reached Corpus Christi in August until she left in September they were supported by the father, Dr. Redmond. At the time appellant did not even have his license to practice medicine. This she makes evident as does her mother-in-law, Mrs. Henry Redmond. Her return to Corpus Christi seemed based on collecting $2480 she claimed he should pay her. So from any viewpoint this indictment can not be sustained. *Page 204

There are some other questions in the case that possibly it might be well enough to notice in a general way. Application for continuance was overruled. Inasmuch as that question can not arise upon another trial as here presented, its discussion is pretermitted.

There are quite a number of bills of exception set out in the record which are not intended to be treated specifically, but in a general way Mrs. Lawrence Redmond, wife of the defendant, was the principal State's witness, and testified to such things as the State deemed of importance, and among other things she was permitted to state, over objection of appellant, that she "knocked at the door" of the residence of defendant's parents on January 21, 1915. A Mexican came to the door. She was permitted to answer this question: "What did the Mexican say to you?" Appellant was not present and knew nothing about it, and various objections were based upon this matter. In reply to the question she testified that when she knocked at the door of the residence of appellant's parents a Mexican came to the door and told her the defendant's father said she could not see him, the defendant. This testimony was clearly not admissible. It occurred between this witness and the Mexican. The Mexican's statement that appellant's father said she could not see the defendant was a matter occurring between third parties and was inadmissible unless defendant was connected with it. The court was then asked to instruct the jury to disregard and ignore the testimony, which was refused. This the court should have done. The whole matter was erroneous.

There are several questions arising out of the visit of the prosecuting witness to the residence of appellant's father, which are unnecessary to discuss inasmuch as that matter and visit and connected circumstances are not admissible. The other questions will not arise again for that reason.

There is another question asked of the witness on cross-examination: "Do you love him (meaning the defendant)? It was expected to be shown by this testimony that she did not. This was offered as a circumstance to show that the prosecuting witness actually deserted defendant instead of defendant deserting her. We think this, taken in connection with some of the other matters in the bills of exception, should have gone to the jury. It is shown elsewhere she presented to defendant in February some ten days or more before the filing of the indictment a bill for over $2400, setting out various items which she thought defendant ought to pay her. One was for $600 that she said her trousseau cost and various other matters; $60 expenses to Corpus Christi; $60 for her return trip, and $1200 "expenses one year, pending time for divorce to be entered, with expenses, attorney's fees, costs," etc., and the next bill shows that the defendant asked her on cross-examination if this bill had been paid would you have taken this matter before the grand jury? They expected for her to state in reply that if prosecuting witness had received the money called for by the bill, in the aggregate sum of $2480, she would never have instituted criminal prosecution against the defendant. We think these matters ought to have *Page 205 gone before the jury as they were germane to the question of desertion, especially in the light of the testimony of the prosecuting witness as drawn out by the State. It also tended strongly to show her return to Corpus Christi was for money rather than a renewal of her marital relations with defendant.

Another bill was to the effect that appellant wanted to prove on cross-examination that she having testified that desertion occurred in Maryland and not in Nueces County, why she did not institute the proceedings against him in Maryland. She was not permitted to answer this question. These things are all so connected up that it occurs to us that matter ought to have been investigated inasmuch as the State put these matters before the jury.

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Related

Goldman v. State
95 S.W.2d 423 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Monzingo v. State
275 S.W. 1008 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 272, 78 Tex. Crim. 201, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.