Roberson v. State

203 S.W. 349, 83 Tex. Crim. 238, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 416
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 1917
DocketNo. 4436.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 349 (Roberson 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
Roberson v. State, 203 S.W. 349, 83 Tex. Crim. 238, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 416 (Tex. 1917).

Opinions

MORROW, Judge.

Appellant shot and killed H. F. Boykin, wa£ indicted for murder, convicted of manslaughter, and the penalty fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for five years, hence this appeal.

Appellant was foreman of a cattle ranch situated in Mexico known as the T. O. ranch. Boykin owned a pasture near Sierra Blanca, in El Paso County. Mr. Leonard Pence, owner of the T. O. ranch, had arranged with Boykin to pasture cattle. Appellant and other employes, in charge of seventy odd head of these cattle, stopped at Sierra Blanch -over night en route to the pasture. The cattle were placed in one of the subdivisions of the railroad stock pens. In another subdivision there were cattle for shipment in charge of a witness named Cross'. Boykin resided at Sierra Blanca and his pasture was some twenty-five miles distant therefrom. Early in the morning appellant on going to the stock pens found deceased there; a quarrel between them ensued; and the homicide followed. Prior to the arrival of appellant, Boberson, at the stock pens, Cross and some of his-employes reached them. There was a defect in the fence and some of the cattle during the loading got from one of the subdivisions into the other. There was evidence thai appellant had been informed that the people in the vicinity of Sierra .Blanca were hostile to him and would probably do him harm and that ■deceased had threatened to kill him. Appellant’s account of the dif¿ fficulty as taken from his testimony was, in substance, as follows:

When he approached he saw that something was disturbing the cattle; and when he got near he saw Cross and deceased in the pen. Asking what they were, doing, deceased (whom appellant did not know) said it was none of his damn business, cursed him and said, “We Sierra BlancE; people know who you are; you are a damn cowardly son,rof-a-bitch,” arid started toward appellant making a demonstration as to draw a weapon. Appellant, as he claims, then dismounted and drew his Winchester, but discovering that deceased drew a knife, he put up his Winchester and started to enter the gate, hut thinking of what he had heard the Sierra Blanca people were going to do, he says: “I decided to stay away from those people. In pursuance of that idea, did not finish opening the gate; got on my horse and rode away to where the pack mules were) out towards the end of the wing just north of the gate, and took the mules back around the wing on west side, so they would not stampede the cattle.” He claimed that when he left deceased was still cursing *241 him, and that when he was riding around the wing deceased climbed up on the west string of the fence, and when appellant came near deceased was on top of the fence with his knife in his hand and began to curse appellant again. Appellant says: “Then I asked him not to curse me and call me 'a son-of-a-bitch. He was standing on the fence and he reached out with his knife and I struck him on the hand with the rope, and tried to knock the rope out of his hand when he grabbed it with his left hand and threw it inside the corral. He still had his knife in his right hand, and I struck at his hand with my pistol but did not hit it.” Appellant claimed that when he asked deceased not to call him a son-of-a-bitch, deceased claimed that he, appellant, had called him one, and that appellant denied it then, and that Dumont called to appellant and said, “Lot us get away,” and appellant answered, “All right,” and rode around to the gate,.and while doing so deceased got down off the fence, and when appellant got around to the gate deceased was in the pen and picked up appellant’s rope. Appellant says, “I asked him to put his' damn knife up and give me my rope, and when my head was turned aside he threw the rope over the fence. He had his knife in his left hand, and when I missed the rope'and asked him to give it to me, he replied that Tie did not have my damn rope.’ Cross then handed me the rope and I took it in my right hand and started to coil it up. Deceased had been drawing closer and closer to me and as I started to fold the rope up, he started to rush me. I started to strike him with the rope and threw it at him, threw the whole rope at him. He rushed at me with the knife raised in his right hand, and struck my horse, just in front of his ribs, and then he reached up at my body. I pulled my pistol with my right hand, the horse reared and jumped and I shot back oyer my right shoulder.’’

Tom Cross claimed that when loading his cattle some of them got mixed with appellant’s and that deceased, at his request, was assisting in separating them when appellant rode up to the pens and said, “What in the hell are you doing there ?” deceased replying, “Counting the cattle.” Appellant told him to get out of there; deceased refused and appellant said, “You will, you son-of-a-bitch.” Deceased replied, “You call me a son-of-a-bitch, you are a son-of-a-bitch”; that appellant jumped on his horse and started to untie the gate; deceased walked toward the gate and appellant took his Winchester out of the scabbard and pointed it through a panel of the gate, and deceased told him he was a damn coward; that he did not have anything, and'that appellant put his Winchester back in the scabbard and said, “I can clean you without anything,” and then rode around the wing about ninety feet long, and came hack to the west string of fence (on which deceased had climbed), and told deceased to take back the son-of-a-bitch he called him. Deceased replied, “You called me one first, you take back the' one you called me and I will take back the one I called you.’’ Deceased was then sitting on the fence and appellant was on his horse; and appellant hit deceased on the shoulders with the rope. Deceased snatched the rope with both hands and threw it over in the big pen. Roberson then said to deceased, *242 "God damn you, hand me that rope,” and Boykin said he would not do any such a damn thing. Cross then got the rope and handed it to Eoberson and he dropped it over his saddle and hit Boykin on the hand with his pistol. Boykin then jumped down in the big pen and walked toward the middle gate. Eoberson' rode around the wing to the front gate (which someone opened), rode in the pen, swung the rope over his head and hit Boykin over the head with it, knocking him down, and when he got up he started for Eoberson, when Eoberson drew his pistol (which he had put back in the scabbard after hitting Boykin on the hand with it), and shot deceased. This witness claimed that deceased had a pocketknife in his hand at some time during the controversy, but that he did not see him have it while he was on the fence nor after he got down in the pen.

Elmer Horton, Will Horton, and I. Horton claimed to have seen the trouble from the time Boykin climbed on the fence and they relate' the facts, in substance, like Cross related them, except that one or more of them testified that they saw a knife in Boykin’s hand at the time ho ran at Roberson. For pxample, Elmer Horton said, in substance:. "After Boykin stepped off the fence into the north pen Roberson rode back around the wing on his horse at a trot, opened the gate and rode back into the lot. Boykin was standing in the north pen, toward the second gate, about twenty feet from the middle gate, which leads from the north to the south pen. He was just standing there when Roberson rode into the north pen. When.

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W. 349, 83 Tex. Crim. 238, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberson-v-state-texcrimapp-1917.