Satterwhite v. State

177 S.W. 959, 77 Tex. Crim. 130, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1915
DocketNo. 3570.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 177 S.W. 959 (Satterwhite 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
Satterwhite v. State, 177 S.W. 959, 77 Tex. Crim. 130, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 24 (Tex. 1915).

Opinions

Appellant was convicted of murder. The indictment charges deceased to be named Walter Dobson. The punishment was twenty-five years in the penitentiary.

The statement of facts is quite lengthy, and purely circumstantial. Appellant was working as night engineer of the ice and light plant in Kerrville at time of alleged homicide, which occurred supposedly on the night of the 11th of July, 1914. On the 15th appellant was arrested. The deceased had spent some time in Kerrville prior to the homicide and had gone away. On the night of the 10th of July deceased came to Kerrville, accompanied by two parties from San Antonio. The evidence indicates that he came to Kerrville to marry Miss Carrie Butler. The day following his arrival at Kerrville he went to see the girl, the testimony indicates, three times, morning, afternoon and night. About 10 o'clock Saturday night he left her house and went to the home of Jake Reinhardt, where he was rooming, and stated that he was going to the ice plant. He was very despondent and crying, and said he had not found what he expected to find, referring to the girl, and that he might not come back that night. He went to the ice plant about 11 o'clock. At this time appellant, Polly and Holsworth, the owner of the plant, were present. Shortly after Holsworth left. After Holsworth left appellant went to the home of Will Reno, a blacksmith, who lived near appellant, and got the keys to the shop, and returned to the ice plant with a bottle of whisky. This whisky he had placed in the shop the afternoon before, same having been given to him by Ress when he paid his bill at the saloon on that afternoon. It was his custom to leave whisky at this shop because he did not want his wife or mother to know he used it. After taking the bottle of whisky to the shop the evidence of Polly, the only evidence in the record on this phase of the case, shows that appellant, Dobson and Polly took about three drinks, and about 2:20 o'clock in the morning of the 12th Polly says he went to bed, leaving appellant and Dobson at the plant. He further testifies that about 3:40 o'clock appellant waked him up where he was sleeping in the laundry some hundred feet from the plant and talked with him while he was putting on his clothes. Polly asked appellant *Page 132 where his friend was. He replied that he drank his whisky and left a little while prior to the conversation. Some conversation came up between the parties as to a stickpin that deceased was wearing, which, it seems, was a Mexican topaz, appellant stating that deceased had won it in a poker game. Appellant had on the same clothes that he had on when Polly went to bed, and there was no blood on these clothes, and no signs of a struggle about the plant; in fact, no evidence of any crime having been committed about the ice plant. Appellant went home early the next morning and went to sleep as usual. The record also shows at no time before or after the finding of the dead body did appellant show any fear or apprehension or any disturbance of mind. Monday afternoon the body of Dobson was found at the oil tank, 210 yards in direct line away from the ice plant, and much further than the usual traveled route. There is a cedar yard where cedar timber is stacked between the plant and the tank. The tank is by the side of the railroad track, and there are no lights near that place. The skull of deceased was crushed or caved in on top and an irregular piece of skull something like two inches in diameter driven into the skull. On the side of the head were two wounds, one of which cut through the top of the ear and fractured the skull. These seem, however, not to have been fatal. The face and head were swollen and discolored, and the evidence showed that the wounds producing these swellings and discoloration occurred at least thirty minutes before death ensued, and that the blow on the head produced instant death. There was a great deal of blood on the body and hand, coat and vest of the dead man. He had a watch and chain and five cents in money. He had been seen with some currency bills on the afternoon of Saturday by one of the Butler girls. On the following Tuesday a hammer belonging to John Williams was brought to Huntington, who had taken great interest in the investigation of the case. Williams was an enemy of the deceased, and was day engineer at the plant. Williams testified that this hammer he used to drive spikes in poles. It was also used some about the plant to break coal. There was no evidence as to where the hammer was Saturday night or at any time until Tuesday. There was no blood on the hammer, but Huntington said he scraped a small speck of substance from the face of the hammer which, under the microscope, the doctors said they believed to be animal matter — fatty substance. Two people ate their lunches in the plant at night and two in the daytime. A chisel was also picked up somewhere about the plant, which seems to have been a broken one. As we recall this part of the testimony, the chisel is shown to have had the usual place for inserting a wooden handle, but this cavity was unoccupied by a wooden handle, and just on the inside of this was a speck which one of the witnesses said he thought was blood, but it was not analyzed. It was a dark substance and may as well have been paint or crude oil. Two men came to Kerrville with deceased from San Antonio, and the following day moved to the same place where deceased roomed to room; that deceased had selected a place in the yard to sleep under the trees. They requested *Page 133 to sleep in the yard and did so sleep. The evidence shows deceased and the two San Antonio men who came with him met in a saloon in San Antonio. They seem to have been strangers at that time. There was a great many strange Mexicans in the town of Kerrville at the time, two families of Mexicans lived in box cars just across the track from where the body was found. There is evidence also that about 3 o'clock or between 3 and 4 in the morning and the time the State claims the homicide occurred, two men were seen and heard running hurriedly from the direction of where deceased's body was subsequently found. They were seen within one hundred yards or such matter of this spot. This may be a sufficient statement as a predicate for discussion of the questions.

There are two or three bills of exception reserved to the refusal of the court to permit the defendant to prove that from the 3rd of July to and including the 10th, burglaries for the purpose of theft or robberies, as some of the witnesses term it, had occurred in Kerrville, a town of about twenty-five hundred inhabitants. Among other houses, the residence of the district judge, Hon. R.H. Burney, was burglarized and property taken therefrom. Who these parties were was not known. Without going into a detailed statement of this evidence as shown, these bills of exception show that it could have been proved by these witnesses, including the district judge, that these various houses had been burglarized and property taken and by unknown parties. We are of opinion this testimony should have been admitted. This being a case purely of circumstantial evidence, and the State relying upon the testimony already indicated to connect the defendant with the homicide, which mainly grew out of the fact that he had been the last party seen with deceased before his dead body was found Monday afternoon, this testimony should have been admitted. The State introduced statements of the defendant showing deceased had left the ice plant in good health and no harm had been done him up to that time, and that he had never seen him afterward. It was permissible to show by the same character of testimony upon which the State relied, that some other party may have killed the deceased.

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Satterwhite v. State
181 S.W. 462 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 959, 77 Tex. Crim. 130, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/satterwhite-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.