Sanderson, Jr. v. State

3 S.W.2d 453, 109 Tex. Crim. 142, 1928 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 29, 1928
DocketNo. 10756.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 453 (Sanderson, Jr. 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
Sanderson, Jr. v. State, 3 S.W.2d 453, 109 Tex. Crim. 142, 1928 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 160 (Tex. 1928).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

Offense murder, penalty five years in the penitentiary.

Appellant killed his father. He is the eldest of three children and was eighteen years old at the time of the tragedy. He claims to have killed in defense of himself and mother. The mother of appellant had on the day of the tragedy filed suit for divorce against deceased. The evidence indicates that prior to this she had had a very unhappy married life due to the drunken habits of the deceased. He had, according to her testimony, manufactured intoxicants in the home and when under their influence had made many brutal assaults upon her. On the day of the homicide, returning to the home after citation in the divorce suit had been served upon him, he again assaulted his wife and appellant’s mother, bruising her and cutting a gash over her eye, and bloodying her face. Appellant had many times intervened to protect his mother and on this occasion his little brother came for him and he returned from his work to her home, observing at that time the effects of the brutal assault which had just been made upon her by his father. In a little while the deceased returned to the house and again began drinking and, according to the testimony of the family, threatened to kill both appellant and his mother and was about to assault them with a bottle when appellant shot and killed deceased. Officers and witnesses arriving immediately after the homicide observed the bruised and bloody face of appellant’s mother, and found near the body of deceased in a nearby sink a bottle of beer, partly empty. There was taken from the house by the sheriff of the county at this time 155 full bottles of beer. After the killing appellant immediately started towards town and meeting Berry Bishop, the constable, stated to him. “I have killed Dad.” He was taken into custody and to the courthouse a short distance away where he continued in a highly nervous and excited condition; was crying and shaking, as one witness described “like a dog that had been poisoned.” This witness further said he was then not in condition to talk. He *144 was in such a condition that the constable went for a physician and upon his return thirty or forty minutes later the appellant made a further statement to the witness Bishop, which was excluded by the court, and is made the subject of appellant’s bill of exception No. 1.

The witness Bishop, had been placed upon the stand by the state and the statement of appellant proven against him, above quoted. On cross-examination the appellant offered to prove that upon the return of state’s witness, Bishop, to the courthouse the appellant stated to him:

“My little brother, Jack, came to the garage just a little while before I killed Dad and told me Dad was killing mother. I went home as fast as I could and Dad had left. I saw my mother’s face bleeding. I saw a cut over her eye and she told me Dad had knocked her down two or three times in the hall and had threatened to kill her before night. Mother and I went over to my uncle’s house but they were not at home. When we came back to the house Dad was drinking a bottle of beer and was mad, and I saw from the look on his face that he was going to do something. He reached over into the kitchen sink and picked up something, I think it was a beer bottle, and said ‘G— d— you, I will kill you both,’ and I know he meant what he said, and I thought he was going to do something and I thought he was going to kill me and my mother both and I shot.”

The facts and circumstances recited in the bill, we think, show that this was but a continuation of the former conversation had between witness Bishop and the appellant. It was at least explanatory thereof.

Art. 728, C. C. P., reads as follows:

“When part of an act, declaration or conversation or writing is given in evidence by one party, the whole on the same subject may be inquired into by the other, as, when a letter is read, all letters on the same subject between the same parties may be given. When a detailed act, declaration, conversation or writing is given in evidence, any other act, declaration or writing which is necessary to make it fully understood or to explain the same may also be given in evidence.”

This statute is an enlargement of the common law rule which limited such proof to what was said at the time of making a confession or admission.

In the case of Pratt v. State, 53 Tex. Crim. Rep. 281, Justice Ramsey, speaking for the court, fully analyzes the authorities on this subject and in his usual clear and terse style announced the following rule:

*145 “The true criterion and test for determining the admissibility of such statements is: Are they necessary to make any other act or declaration of a defendant, which has been proved by the prosecution fully understood, or do they explain same? Wood v. State, 28 Tex. Crim. App. 61. We think this is the true criterion and the true test, and that measured by this test as applied to this case, the proposed testimony was admissible. The declarations and statements of appellant offered in evidence by the state went to the extent only that they would find Lide dead, and that he had shot him. In this testimony so introduced by the state there was an unequivocal admission that he had killed Lide, without explanation or undertaking to account for the circumstances under which the killing was done. In the conversation and statement sought to be proved appellant undertook to give and did give the explanation, reasons, grounds and circumstances of the killing. This testimony was explanatory of the killing and contained appellant’s justification for the homicide.”

Measured by this rule and the above article of the statute, we think the proffered testimony admissible and its exclusion error. This evidence was also admissible, we think as res gestae.

Complaint is made of the cross-examination of appellant while testifying as a witness for himself during which he was asked about the cash being short in a meat market in which he worked for his father and in which appellant claimed that his uncle probably got the money. During this examination he was asked:

“You never did look him (meaning his uncle) in the eye and say he got that money?”

And further:

“You never did arrest him for it?”

“And along about that time you bought a watch for a lady friend of yours and paid $75.00 for it?”

To which he answered:

“Yes, I did.”

The time of this occurrence is not asked about by the state and it does not appear from the evidence that it had any relation to the killing. If the facts on another trial are sufficient to show that this transaction in any way tended to prove malice or motive on the part of appellant for the killing, it would be admissible even though it involved proof of an extraneous crime for which no indictment had been returned. Branch’s P. C., Sec. 166. Proof of extraneous offenses which go to prove one *146 of the main issues on the trial forms an exception to the well known rule inhibiting evidence of acts which have not eventuated in an indictment for a felony or misdemeanor involving moral turpitude.

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451 S.W.2d 508 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1970)
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287 S.W.2d 642 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1956)
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213 S.W.2d 830 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1948)
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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 453, 109 Tex. Crim. 142, 1928 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanderson-jr-v-state-texcrimapp-1928.