Ross v. State

160 S.W. 379, 71 Tex. Crim. 493, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 502
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1913
DocketNo. 2556.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 379 (Ross 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
Ross v. State, 160 S.W. 379, 71 Tex. Crim. 493, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 502 (Tex. 1913).

Opinions

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

Appellant was convicted for unlawfully selling intoxicating liquors in Montague County, after prohibition was in force therein, and his penalty fixed at two years in the penitentiary.

One ground of his motion for new trial is that the verdict is insufficient in that the only testimony against him is that of J. H. W. J ones, whose testimony is insufficient in that it shows him to be wholly unreliable and unworthy of belief and that he is a biased witness with no stability or reliability, his statement being wholly unreliable and contradictory and unworthy of credit.

Said Jones, for the State, testified that he lived two and a half miles west of Bowie and knew appellant well; that on Friday November 15, .1912, he bought a pint of whisky from appellant and paid him $1 therefor. This occurred in a little house where appellant was, in a part of the Burns Hotel in Bowie, Montague County, Texas; that he could not say for certain where appellant got the whisky from at the time, but he thinks he got it out of a box or trunk, or something. His testimony as to his purchase from appellant' of this bottle of whisky at this time and place was clear, positive and pointed.

He was then subjected to quite a long and severe cross-examination. He showed that when he bought this bottle of whisky on this Friday *495 he took it home with him that evening; that before, or about daylight the next morning, Saturday, he hauled a bale of seed cotton from his home to the gin in Bowie, and that his object in leaving his home as early as he did was to reach the gin in advance of others so as to get his cotton ginned as early as he could; that he took this bottle of whisky with him that he had purchased from appellant the day before, and in going to town with the cotton he took a drink out of the bottle of whisky; that he continued to drink out of this bottle until 3 or 4 o’clock in the evening, when, as he expressed it, he got “gloriousty drunk” on that whisky in the town of Bowie; that he was prosecuted for getting drunk on this occasion and paid a fine therefor. In the course of this cross-examination, and about his getting drunk on this occasion, he testified that it didn’t take much whisky to get him drunk. “There were two parties that each drank a dram out of the bottle, but I don’t remember who they were. It is true that my memory is not as good as it once was; my memory is bad. As to whether it is not a fact that I can not hardly trust my memory to these things, will say that sometimes there are things that come up,—things that don’t concern me to amount to anything, that I won’t recollect thirty minutes afterwards,—it depends on what they are. How I told you I was drunk that day,—at times I didn’t know anything, but at times I did. It is true that I didn’t know what I was doing part of the time that day.”

In his further cross-examination it was developed that, sometime along in the evening of that Saturday after he got drunk and while he was drunk, the officers got after him and undertook to then find out from him where and from whom he had gotten the whisky which made him drunk. He tried to keep the officers from finding out these facts. Late in this Saturday evening he again went into appellant’s place and then and there got another pint of whisky from appellant; that immediately after he did this and was leaving appellant’s place the officer saw him, found this bottle of whisky on him and the officer took it and then tasted it. The officer then accused him of buying this bottle of whisky from appellant and asked him if he did not buy it from appellant. He denied buying it from appellant. It is manifest from the evidence that this was one of appellant’s schemes to throw the officers off and prevent them from believing or charging that he had sold this whisky to the witness, the object being to induce the witness when the officers were pressing him, to testify that he did not buy this bottle of whisky from appellant; for either that day or the Monday following, it appears that they had him before an officer to induce him to tell whether or not he bought that bottle of whisky, and the witness, by his own statement, positively denied to them that he had bought that bottle of whisky from appellant, but that appellant gave it to him or loaned it to him; and he adroitly, or otherwise, limited the investigation of himself at that time to that bottle of whisky, and he claims that the officer did not then ask him about the bottle of whisky that he did actually buy from appellant the day before, Friday. The evidence *496 further develops that appellant was arrested that night, Saturday night, charged with this offense. It is further shown that the next night, Sunday night, some one sent a livery team from the town of Bowie to this witness’ home, two and a half miles in the country, and had him, that night, Sunday night, brought from his residence back to Bowie, and that he was taken to the livery stable whence this conveyance then took him, and in effect he ‘was turned over to the liveryman, C. B. Downs, who was one of appellant’s two witnesses. There is no intimation any one representing the State sent for him. The circumstances repel that. Dowms testified that some one, he claimed not to know who it was, just before Jones was delivered to him at his livery stable, ’phoned him that a party was expected there and as soon as he came to telephone the fact to Mr. H. F. Weldonj one of appellant’s' attorneys; and that when Jones arrived he, Downs, did telephone his arrival to appellant’s said attorney, and at once steered him to this attorney’s office and either went with him, just preceded him, or just followed him to said office. Jones testified that when they got him in this attorney’s office that Sunday night, that Mr. Weldon asked him if he bought a pint of whisky from appellant on Saturday the 16th, and wanted to know if he paid, for or bought that particular pint of whisky; that he told Weldon that he did not buy, nor pay for that pint of whisky, and that Weldon thereupon made out an affidavit to that effect which he signed and swore to before Weldon. An affidavit was then produced and the witness, after examining it, admitted that that was his signature thereto. The affidavit is, after the State and County: “Before me, the'undersigned authority, on this day personally appeared J. H. W.

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537 S.W.2d 728 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1976)
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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 379, 71 Tex. Crim. 493, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.