Rivera v. State

8 S.W.2d 129, 110 Tex. Crim. 298, 1928 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 568
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 1928
DocketNo. 11186.
StatusPublished

This text of 8 S.W.2d 129 (Rivera 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
Rivera v. State, 8 S.W.2d 129, 110 Tex. Crim. 298, 1928 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 568 (Tex. 1928).

Opinion

HAWKINS, Judge.

The offense is murder; punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of five years.

(1) Appellant’s brother, Guadalupe Rivera, shot and killed Henley Williams, it being claimed by the state that appellant was guilty as a principal. Some time before his death, Williams had shot and killed one Madraza. On his trial he defended upon the ground that the relations of Madraza with the wife of Williams were unduly intimate. As a result of the trial Williams was convicted of manslaughter with a suspended sentence. His wife did not admit the relations with Madraza and did not testify upon the

i *300 trial of Williams but instituted suit for a divorce. After killing Madraza, Williams resided at a hotel while his wife and two children remained at the family home in Brownsville. After the verdict, Williams sought to live with his wife, which she opposed, and obtained an injunction restraining him from taking their children out of the county. The injunction was not served though Williams became aware of its existence. The children, it seems, were taken to Gilmer, Texas, but were brought back to their home a short time (before the tragedy occurred. Fearing violence from Williams, Mrs. Williams, with the aid of her attorney, employed appellant and his brother to guard her home. Williams came to the home in an automobile and received two pistol wounds at the hands of Guadalupe Rivera, who claimed that he acted in self-defense. In his dying declaration Williams stated that he offered or used no violence, but simply endeavored to enter his home, when he was fired upon by appellant’s brother. A brief synopsis of the facts will be found in the case of Ex parte Rivera, 285 S. W. Rep. 327, in which appellant’s brother by habeas corpus sought bond in regard to this transaction. A detailed statement of the evidence is not deemed expedient owing to the voluminous record, nor is it regarded as necessary to illustrate the issues and the questions of law involved in this appeal.

(2) The deceased made a dying declaration in the presence of the witnesses A. S. Lanier, J. C. George and Josephine Vaughan. Lanier reduced the statement to writing and signed it for deceased in the presence of the witnesses George and Vaughan. The written statement was introduced in evidence and reads as follows :

“Friday morning I drove from Dallas to Trinton in my car to T. C. Scales house thinking my wife had taken the children there. He told me my children was not there nor had been there. I then told him I was coming to Brownsville to see if my children was here. He said he was leaving Trinton for Brownsville Saturday morning by train. I was driving by auto. He evidently got in here about 8:45 this morning. I reached here about 4:30 this afternoon. ' Mr. Scales my father in law, was sitting on the front porch of Mr. Rosenthals house when I drove up. Someone inside my house closed the front door putting the night latch on. I then went around to the rear and someone was closing the three 1?ack doors, the back screen was already fastened, and I tried to break it open. About that time 2 Mexican men, who were concealed in my orchard, jumped the fence and came up to me. One of them shot me in the stomach. I assumed he thought I was a burglar trying to break into my own *301 house. I said 'Man, what are you doing, I. am trying to break into my own house.’ He said nothing but shot me again. No one knew that I was coming to Brownsville except my wife and Mr. Scales. My wife did not know that I was coming to Brownsville unless Mr. Scales told her.”

The witness George testified that he had another conversation with the deceased in which the latter said:

'T am done for. I am all in. I am killed, or they got me. * * * I want to see my children before I die.”

Deceased then told witness he had taken his children from Brownsville to Gilmer; that he had left for the day and when he returned they were gone; that he went to Trenton, the home of his father-in-law Scales and inquired for his children. Failing to find them, he went to Brownsville; that as he approached his home, he saw Mr. Scales on the front porch of the house across the street; that he drove into tifie yard and some one closed the door, and as he was trying to open the screen door, two Mexicans came up; that as they approached him he turned toward them and one of them shot him in the stomach; that he fell on his back and threw up his hands and said, “Man, why are you shooting me? This is my house;” that the Mexican then shot him again. The deceased said he had no arms.

(3) Bill number two reflects complaint that the witness George, after signing the written statement as a witness, was permitted to give his recollection of the declaration of deceased, and bill number five relates to the testimony of the same witness, being a specific complaint of the receipt in evidence of the declaration imputed to the deceased that he wanted to see his children before he died. It is to be noted that the written declaration introduced contains no statement that the deceased was conscious of impending death. The declaration imputed to deceased by the witness George that he wanted to see his children before he died seems to have been appropriate as a predicate for the receipt in evidence of the dying declaration.

(4) Bills numbers seven and eighteen relate to the refusal to receive the testimony of the witness Scales relative to some conversations with the wife of the deceased, who was a daughter of the witness, in which she related to him that she had called upon the sheriff of Cameron County and told him she was in danger from her husband; that she feared that he would do harm to herself and the children and that she asked the sheriff for protection; that the sheriff replied by telling her that he would serve the injunction papers; that upon the refusal of the sheriff to extend her protection, *302 she went to a lawyer, and through him secured appellant and his brother to protect her and the children. Robertson, the sheriff, testified that he was called over the telephone by Mrs. Williams and asked if he had served the injunction. When informed that Williams had not been served, she told the sheriff that her husband was coming home and should be served; that the sheriff replied that he would serve the papers. He said further: '

“Relative to her fears, she told me she wanted me to come out to her home and I refused to come. I told her I would see her in the office, but don’t recall she mentioned any fears. I told her I would talk to her if she would come to the office. * * * She did not state to me that she wanted me to place a guard at her home.”

It is appellant’s position that in view of the contradiction between the witness and the sheriff, the hearsay statement to her father was admissible as corroborating or supporting testimony. This is not believed sound.

(5) Bill number seven preserves complaint of the refusal to receive in evidence a part of the testimony of Mrs. Z. A. Rosenthal given upon the examining trial. The recitals in the bill are too meager to give any information touching the setting. If we comprehend it, however, appellant introduced a part of the testimony of Mrs.

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Related

Ex Parte Rivera
285 S.W. 327 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 129, 110 Tex. Crim. 298, 1928 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivera-v-state-texcrimapp-1928.