Reed v. State

168 S.W. 541, 74 Tex. Crim. 242, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 318
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1914
DocketNo. 3149.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 541 (Reed 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
Reed v. State, 168 S.W. 541, 74 Tex. Crim. 242, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 318 (Tex. 1914).

Opinions

*244 PBEHDEBGAST, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder and his punishment assessed at eight years.

This is the second appeal in this case. In the first trial he was convicted of the same offense 'and his punishment assessed at ten years. The former appeal is reported in 72 Texas Crim. Rep., 1, 161 S. W. Rep., 97, from which a general idea of the case may be had.

Appellant and deceased were young men living in the same community. About a month before the homicide someone had killed appellant’s dog. He believed deceased, or deceased’s fáther had killed it. Hot long before the homicide appellant met Mr. A. C. Brown, father of the deceased, at church, called him off to one side and asked him if he had killed his dog. Mr. Brown replied, “Ho, I have not killed anybody’s dog.” Appellant said, “I believe you killed my dog.” Mr. Brown kept telling him that he had not. Then appellant said, “You or Oliver (deceased) one did, and I can whip the God damn son-of-a-bitch that done it.” The parties then partially separated. Appellant repeated, at least three times, the last statement just above quoted, and at the time put, or had his hand, in his pocket.

Hot long after this appellant, on horseback, met the deceased who was in a wagon in the public road. It appears that neither was seeking the other. The meeting occurred in just such a place as neighbors using the same road might meet at any time. Appellant testified that when he saw deceased and that they were going to meet, he dropped behind his two companions and as he met deceased he stopped and said to him, “Did you kill my dog?” He replied, “What have you got to say about-it?” Appellant said, “It just takes a son-of-a-bitch to do it.” And then, he says, deceased threw down, or wrapped up his lines and said, “I won’t take that, get off of your horse.” He thereupon got off his horse, pulled off his glove at the time and after he got on the ground the deceased struck him with the whip handle; that he got up only partially into the wagon of the deceased and cut him several times with his knife; that deceased started to pick up some piece of iron or something else in the back part of the wagon,—he didn’t know what it was, and fearing the deceased would strike him and injure him therewith, he cut deceased in self-defense.

The evidence shows that deceased was cut several times. It seems,— three cuts on his shoulder and back, and another in the left side in the region of the heart. The doctor said while he didn’t know the depth of anv of the wounds, not having probed them, that if the one in the back below the shoulder blade and the one in the left side were deep enough, either, or both would be fatal. One or the other, or both were fatal because deceased died therefrom within a very short time.

Appellant said he never got entirely in the wagon of the deceased; that he only put one foot over the side of the bed. Mrs. Garrett, who lived some fifty or sixty yards from where the stabbing occurred, swore that while she did not see the fight, her attention not being directed towards it at the time, that she did see appellant jump out of the wagon and that *245 he was entirely in the wagon at the time he jumped out and that at the time, the deceased was standing holding his lines with both hands. John Brown, the brother of deceased, who at the time of the fight was traveling the same road, meeting the deceased and was some 200 or 300 yards from him at the time the fight occurred, said there was no obstruction between him and the parties; that when the deceased and appellant stopped, appellant got off of his horse and climbed in the wagon and they went to fighting he was so far away at the time, however, he could not tell what appellant had in his hand, but he swore that appellant got entirely in the wagon and the fight occurred while he was entirely in the wagon, about the middle of it; that after the fight was over appellant jumped out of the wagon and deceased’s brother started, on. The deceased at no time got out of his wagon, nor did he attempt to do so. John Brown further testified that there was a piece of iron in the back part of the wagon bed, but that the deceased made no move to go back in the wagon, but remained in the front part where he was when he stopped; that appellant, when he first got down off his horse, made no stop but went right on into the wagon. He also swore that there was no blow passed between deceased and appellant that he could tell, before appellant got in the wagon, and that deceased did not strike the appellant before appellant got in the wagon, that he could tell.

After appellant cut deceased he hurriedly got on his horse, leaving his glove and he and his companions rode away towards the town of Carbon, a few miles distant. After getting off some distance he sent one of his companions back for his glove. He then rode on towards Carbon, in a lope part of the way. As soon as he reached Carbon he saw Mr. D. S. Campbell and told him about the difficulty. Mr. Campbell says: “He told me that he had a racket with Ollie Brown (deceased). He said that they had had a fight out there and that he had cut. Ollie with a knife. I says wasn’t you big enough to lick him or whip him without a knife? He said that he had been aggravated with that outfit long enough. I believe he said that it made him mad. He said he had been aggravated with that outfit, or that darned outfit or damned outfit, something that way. He said the reason that he cut him was, that he had been aggravated by that damned outfit long enough.” All this occurred very soon after the difficulty and before Mr. Campbell, the appellant or any of the others at Carbon, knew that deceased was dead. They heard it very soon afterwards. As soon as appellant heard it, he fled to escape arrest, but gave up that night. Appellant denied that he said to Mr. Campbell what Mr. Campbell testified he did.

Immediately after the difficulty the deceased attempted to drive home to his father’s. His brother John met him almost immediately after the difficulty, asked what was the matter, deceased told him appellant had' cut him and John got in the wagon to drive deceased to their father’s, which he did. As soon as he got in the wagon, deceased fell over from the wounds. John put something under his head and drove in an ordi *246 nary trot over an ordinary -clayed road to their father’s, a mile and a quarter distant. Deceased died before reaching his home.

' Wc deem it unnecessary to make any further statement of the case.

Omitting the usual head of the style and number of this cause and the court, and the usual “Be it remembered,” we quote in full one of appellant’s bills:

“At the time that the court administered the oath to the regular panel of the jury for the week, and tested them as to their qualifications as jurors, which panel was to try all cases for the week, and in the presence of the following jurors, towit: (giving the names of sixteen), seven of whom were later chosen as jurors in the John Eeed case, the court made the following remarks to the said regular jurors for the week, towit:

“The court: (a) In the trial of every case in the District Court it is frequently necessary, during the trial for the court to retire the jury during the argument of counsel on the admissibility of testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 541, 74 Tex. Crim. 242, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-state-texcrimapp-1914.