Runnels v. State

77 S.W. 458, 45 Tex. Crim. 446, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 201
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1903
DocketNo. 2880.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 458 (Runnels 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
Runnels v. State, 77 S.W. 458, 45 Tex. Crim. 446, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 201 (Tex. 1903).

Opinion

HENDEBSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of mingling a noxious potion with a certain drink, with intent to kill or injure persons to the grand jurors unknown. His punishment was fixed at two years confinement in the penitentiary.

Appellant contends there is no law sufficiently defining this offense. The prosecution was brought under article 647, Penal Code, which says: “If any person shall mingle or cause to be mingled any other noxious potion or substance with any drink, food or medicine, with intent to kill or injure any other person, or shall willfully poison any spring, * * * he shall be punished,” etc. His contention is that there is something material omitted from the article, inasmuch as the phrase “any other noxious potion or substance,” evidently refers to something preceding. And appellant shows in this connection, that as the statute formerly stood, which was article 2198, Paschal’s Digest, being article 537 of the Penal Code as enacted in 1858, it.read, “If any person shall mingle any poison, or any other noxious potion or substance with any drink,” etc.; that the omission of the preceding portion of said article by the codifiers of 1879 rendered the expression “any other noxious potion or substance” unintelligible, and_ the article as it now stands does not define any. offense. In this connection he further contends that we can not reject the word “other” in said article, so as to define an "offense, as. this would be judicial legislation, which is not authorized. In Braun v. State, 40 Texas Crim. Rep., 286, it was held that, although the codifiers had failed to bring forward in the new code certain provisions of an original act, yet the court in considering an article brought forward could look back to the original act to construe the same, and ascertain its meaning with reference to another provision of the code in the same chapter. In that connection the court, quoting from Black on Intepretation of Laws, pp. 368-9, said: “When the language of the code or revision as it stands would lead to absurdity or highly improbable results, it may be compared with the language of the original statute to ascertain if the phraseology has not been changed by mistake or inadvertence.” So, without holding that we can interpolate or bring forward a portion of an article that .formerly existed *448 as a part thereof after the same has been left off for so many years, so as to constitute it a part of the article in question, we hold, in accordance with the principle indorsed in Braun’s case, that we can look back to the original statute in order to determine whether the same was left off by mistake or inadvertence, and to aid in construing and interpreting the present act. However, the present act must stand on its own language as defining an offense; and if, as it appears it does not constitute an offense, then a prosecution thereunder can not be maintained. How, whether or not we reject the word “other” as it now appears in article 647, Penal Code, we hold that it does define an offense. However, it may become a question as to whether or not noxious potion or substance means or refers to any character of poison, inasmuch as we have no antecedent term in the statute; and so that, so far as an offense is concerned, we must depend wholly upon what is a noxious potion or substance. If noxious potion or substance embraces poisons, then it comes within the statute. And by way of interpreting what the article may mean in this respect, as stated before, we look back to see what was contained in the original act, to wit, “poison or other noxious potion or substance”—thus treating “noxious potion or substance” as some character of poison. We make these remarks because accurately speaking there may be some distinction between a poison and a noxious potion or substance. That is, poison has been defined “As any substance which when applied to the body externally, or in any way introduced into the system without acting mechanically, but by its own inherent qualities, is capable of destroying life.” See 2 Beck’s Med. Jur. Wharton & Stille define poison, “As a substance having an inherent deleterious property which renders it, when -taken into the system, capable of destroying life:” And in this connection they say, “Questions may arise as to the applicability of the term to substances which destroy life by mechanical "means, such as powdered glass, etc.” (See sec. 493.) While “noxious” means “hurtful, harmful, baneful, pernicious, destructive,” etc. (Webster’s Dictionary.) And potion means, “draught, used as a liquid, medicine or dose.” (See Webster.) So we take it that “potion” as used-in the statute applies to some hurtful or baneful liquid; and “noxious substance” would mean some solid of a hurtful or baneful character. So that “noxious potion” or substance is a broader term than poison. A poison would not include powdered glass, or boiling water, while “noxious potion” or substance would not only embrace poisons, but the latter. See People v. Van Deleer, 53 Cal., 149. Accordingly we hold that the statutes defines the offense charged against' appellant.

Appellant assigns as error the action of the court permitting the district attorney to ask witness John Burrows, “When you went to Perkins Bros.’ for syrup and things, did you find it necessary to prowl around in their back room?” It appears from bill number 2 presenting this matter, that the witness answered the question in the negative, after *449 objection made but before the court could rule upon the oojection. The court explains this by stating that there was no motion made to have the answer of the witness withdrawn from the jury. We think the question was sufficiently presented; and if, as stated in the bill, while the court was meditating as to his ruling the witness answered the question, the court of his own motion should have excluded it.

By the third bill he calls in question the action of the court permitting the witness Rafe Stripling to testify for the State, that just prior to the day this offense was alleged to have been committed, he saw appellant in the nighttime rise up back of.the drugstore (the place where the offense was alleged to have been subsequently committed), and some twenty-five or thirty feet from said store, and walk towards witness; that he asked witness how he was getting along; witness asked him how he felt; and appellant said he was kinder tired, and said he was up the night before with the Woodmen Circle, and took in about $7.50; and appellant then asked witness if he stayed open, and he told him ho. He then walked on up to the platform, came in the store, stayed a minute or two, then went on up toward the prescription case, and then went on to the front, and then on out at the front door. We fail to see any connection between this testimony and the alleged offense. Evidently it was intended to show that appellant for some cause was lurking around the back of the store at night for some purpose; and was calculated to cast suspicion on him; that he was either intending a burglary of the store or some other offense. Indeed, if we look to the statement of facts, we find that appellant was driven to an explanation in his testimony as to the reason for his being at the back of the store on that occasion. If this incident was shown to be a part of the transaction, or if it had been shown that the offense was committed by means of burglary on that night, or soon thereafter, and the case was depending wholly on circumstantial evidence, it might be admissible.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 458, 45 Tex. Crim. 446, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/runnels-v-state-texcrimapp-1903.