Schrimscher v. State

37 S.W. 864, 36 Tex. Crim. 461, 1896 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1896
DocketNo. 1413.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 864 (Schrimscher 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
Schrimscher v. State, 37 S.W. 864, 36 Tex. Crim. 461, 1896 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 193 (Tex. 1896).

Opinions

*462 HURT, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of an assault with intent to murder, and his punishment assessed at two years in the penitentiary, and he prosecutes this appeal. A number of errors are assigned, but, as a disposition of the case turns upon an error assigned in the charge of the court, we will only notice that particular phase of the case in which the appellant insists that the court made an error in failing to give him a charge on aggravated assault. In order to present this question, we will summarize the facts of the case. The difficulty occurred in the town of Yoakum, in Lavaca County. On the morning of said day, Schrimscher went to the office of Gano Eads, and presented an account in favor of Bulwer Bros., against said Eads. Eads looked at the account, and told the defendant that he could not pay it. The defendant told him that Bulwer Bros, told him they would sue him if he did not. Eads then told him to tell the damn son-of-a-bitch that lie would not pay them. Defendant said he did not want to carry the message to Bulwer Bros. Eads then told him he had nothing against him, but, as he had brought the message from them, he wanted him to deliver his message to them, but that he did not intend to hurt his feelings. The defendant then left, and went to the store- of Bulwer Bros., and reported the matter to them. About 12 O’clock of said day, Eads started home to his dinner in company with one Jack Lawrence, who lived in the same direction. Their route was across the railroad track, and in the vicinity of one Henry Long’s butcher shop. At this point they passed the defendant, Schrimscher, who was standing near the track. Before they passed him, Lawrence said to defendant, “What are you doing here?” He said, “Nothing.” After they had passed him a few feet, he spoke to Eads, and told him to stop; he wanted to show him something. Eads stopped, and the defendant took a book out of his pocket, and began turning over the leaves as if he was looking' for something. While he was doing this, one Dunn came up from the rear of Eads, with a large walking stick, and raised it as if to strike Eads. Lawrence, thinking he was in jest, told him “to hit him,” and Dunn struck Eads over the head. The piece of beef he had in his right hand fell out, and Eads fell on his hands and knees. He attempted to draw his pistol with his right hand. Dunn grabbed it, and Eads pulled his pistol with his left hand, and attempted to shoot Dunn, but Dunn struck him again, and pushed the pistol down, and it fired between his legs. Dunn continued to strike him with the stick, and the pistol was discharged the second time. In the meantime he was knocked flat, and the pistol fell from his hand. At this juncture, and about the time Eads fired the second shot, the defendant shot at Eads lying on the ground; shooting at him twice or more. One Bill Sills then ran up, and caught the defendant, and told him- not to shoot any more, as he had killed Eads. One of the shots of the defendant went through Eads’ coat and vest. Eads was beat up pretty badly by Pat Dunn with the stick, and when the difficulty ended was very bloody, and in a dazed condition. It is in evidence that Pat Dunn was a brother-in-law of *463 Bulwer Bros., and that he was a much larger man than Eads. Also that Schrimscher had asked permission on that morning of a constable to serve a citation on a negro, who lived several miles from town, and had been deputized for that purpose by the constable. He testified, however, that he did not need the pistol to serve the citation. It was also in evidence that Dunn and Schrimscher, the defendant, had been at Long’s butcher shop for some time before the dinner hour. This was off of their route home from their- places of business, but was the ordinary traveled route of Gano Eads from his ordinary place of business to his home. Defendant himself testified that he delivered the message of Eads to Bulwer Bros., and they then gave him a letter to show to Eads, which was a letter that Eads had previously written to Bulwer Bros., and that he was trying to find said letter at the time Dunn struck Eads; that he thought it was in the book, but, as he was looking for it, Pat Dunn struck Eads, and he fell, and drew his pistol and fired; that he (defendant) drew his pistol and shot; that he did not want to kill Eads, and did not try to kill him; that he shot to stop the difficulty; that he shot to keep Eads from killing Dunn-, and that he shot to keep Eads from killing him (defendant), but did not see Eads shoot at him. It was also elicited from this witness that Pat Dunn was present when he told Bulwer Bros, what Eads had said. On this statement of facts, the court charged, in effect, that if defendant and Dunn conspired to assault Eads, and that, in case said Eads should resist and defend himself, they intended to shoot and kill him, and that Dunn brought on the conflict by assaulting said Eads with a deadly weapon, and felled him to the ground, and that defendant, Schrimscher, then and there shot at said Eads with intent to take his life, he would be guilty of an assault with intent to murder. The court further charged the jury that, if they believed from the evidence that the defendant, Schrimscher, Dunn and Eads accidentally met, that the said Dunn provoked a difficulty with said Eads by unlawfully assaulting him with a stick, with intention to kill or do him serious bodily injury, and that defendant (Schrimscher) was present, and knew such fact, and voluntarily, with such knowledge, took part in said conflict, and shot at said Eads with intent to kill him, then he would be guilty of an assault with intent to murder. The latter charge of the court, after defining the general principles of self-defense, instructed the jury as follows: “How, if you believe from the evidence that defendant was ignorant of the fact that Dunn provoked a difficulty with said Eads by assaulting him with the intention of killing him or doing him serious bodily injury, and you further believe that said Schrimscher took part in said conflict to prevent the said Eads from killing the said Dunn, or inflicting serious bodily injury upon him, and that, at the time he shot at said Eads, said Eads was in the very act of making such an unlawful and violent attack upon said Dunn as might result in the death of said Dunn, or serious bodily injury to him, then yon will acquit him.”

It is very doubtful whether this latter charge was called for by any *464 testimony in the case. Appellant evidently knew that Dunn provoked the difficulty. There was no question as to this fact. It is objected that the charge should have submitted aggravated assault and battery. This is the question in the case. Upon the State’s theory that there was a conspiracy between Dunn and appellant, if this be true, aggravated assault and battery is not in the case. Let us suppose, however, that there was no conspiracy, that the assault made by Dunn was not contemplated by appellant. We then have this state of case: A. and B. are in conversation with one another. C. strikes B. with a stick, and fells him to the ground. A. is aware of all the facts attending the assault and battery. C. continues the blows after B. is down. B. draws a pistol, and attempts to shoot C., while being thus assaulted. A. shoots and kills B. Would he be guilty of murder or manslaughter? Now, to present it in another form: C. is making an unlawful and violent attack upon B. with a stick. B. draws a pistol while being thus attacked, and attempts to kill C. A. shoots and kills B.

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Related

Barfield v. State
43 S.W.2d 106 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1931)
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154 S.W. 994 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 864, 36 Tex. Crim. 461, 1896 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrimscher-v-state-texcrimapp-1896.