Seebold v. State

232 S.W. 328, 89 Tex. Crim. 563, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1921
DocketNo. 6184.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 328 (Seebold 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
Seebold v. State, 232 S.W. 328, 89 Tex. Crim. 563, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 562 (Tex. 1921).

Opinions

*565 HAWKINS, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of the theft of an automobile, and his punishment assessed at three years’ confinement in the penitentiary.

William Tucker, who was the station agent for the T. & P. Railroad at Mingus, in Palo Pinto County, left his automobile near the station on the night of June 9, 1919, and discovered his loss about 11:45 o’clock the same night. Immediately upon discovering that the car was gone he sent various messages to the surrounding towns, and especially, one to Millsap, in Parker County, about thirty miles east of Mingus, describing the car with minuteness; the information that the car was gone, and the description of it, came to W. J. Lewis, an officer at Mill-sap, and he immediately began a watch for the car. About one-thirty o’clock in the morning the appellant drove up in front of the garage in Millsap, and Lewis, after examining the car and satisfying himself that it was the car from Mingus, arrested him. The owner was notified, and reached Millsap a little after daylight, identified the car beyond question, and the same was turned over to him by the officer.

Appellant filed a motion to quash the indictment. There is no merit in any of the objections he urged to it. He complains that in one place in the indictment the pleader uses the words “the same” William Tucker, instead of the word “said;” and in another place the word which should be “said” is written “samd.” The two words complained of could be entirely eliminated from the indictment, and still a complete offense be charged; and permitting them to remain in no wise renders the indictment bad.

While the officer, W. J. Lewis, was testifying, he was asked upon cross-examination, to tell, what, if any statement, the appellant made to him at the time he arrested him with the car. Objection was made by counsel for the State that it was self-serving, and that the statement was not made by appellant on first being arrested. When this question arose the trial judge proceeded with the utmost care, and we desire here to commend the practice adopted by him in this instance. He had the jury withdrawn, and the entire matter developed in order that he might rule intelligently upon it. During this examination the witness Lewis testified, that he told defendant he would have to detain him and the car both, and that appellant replied, “Allright, I think you are mistaken in the man.” When he asked his permission to look at the car, he said: “All right, Help yourself.” Nothing else was said by defendant at that time. The car was rolled into the garage, and the officer had the owner of the car' at Mingus communicated with, advising that the car had been found, and for him to come over and identify and get it. About an hour after appellant’s arrest, after he had made the statement heretofore recited, the appellant got up from where he had been sitting and went over to where the officer was, squatted down beside him, and then made the following statement: “I would not say the car is not a stolen car, but I know I did not steal it. I realize what I am into, alright, without anybody telling me, but I did not steal the *566 car. The car may have been stolen, for what I know. I was taking it to Fort Worth for another party.” Upon being asked by the officer how he came in possession of the car, he replied; “Well, I had got.a man to take me to Fort Worth that night; I had to get to Fort Worth early next morning, and got a man to take me in a car, and we met this man in this car, and he and the man I was with got to talking to each other, and said something about taking me to Fort Worth, and he says; ‘Well, if that is all, why not let him take my car, and we will go back. I do not care to go for two or three days, and just all that it will cost him is to drive my car through to a garage in Fort Worth. ’ ” Upon being asked who the men were, appellant replied that he did not know.

It was the statement last above mentioned, which occurred about an hour after his arrest, that was excluded upon objection by the county attorney, and it is to the exclusion of that testimony that appellant reserved his bill of exceptions. The court admitted the statement made at the time of the arrest, viz; that appellant told the officer that he thought he had the wrong man, but declined to admit the subsequent statement, and appended to the bill of exceptions his following reasons. “The constable arrested the defendant, and took him and the car into his custody, telling defendant at the time he would have to detain him and the car, the defendant replied, ‘All right, but I think you are mistaken in the man.’ This was all that was said by defendant at the time he was arrested. The car was rolled into the garage. The defendant sat down on a seat inside the garage and the constable sat outside near the side door. Nothing more was said for about an hour when the defendant got up and came to where the constable was, sat down near him and voluntarily made the statement and explanation, the exclusion of which by the court is complained of in this bill. I thought the defendant’s possession was challenged when he was arrested and the car taken from him and he advised that the car was charged to have been stolen, and that his explanation, to be admissible, should have been made then. The voluntary statement made by him an hour after-wards, after the lapse of ample time to fabricate an explanation, I did not deem to be res gestae, or to come within the rule admitting statements explaining the possession of recently stolen property made when the possession was first challenged, but thought said testimony hearsay and self-serving.”

' Counsel for appellant in his brief cites a number of authorities, to which we will refer. In Shackelford v. State, 43 Texas, 141, the court simply holds the explanation admissible, and gives no circumstances under which it was made, except that it appears to have been: “After the accused was overtaken by his pursuers,” but how long after is not shown. Perry v. State, 41 Texas, 486, simply announces that, “Appellant, when found in possession of the stolen property, at once explained the nature and purpose of his possession, and gave the names of the persons who claimed to own it, and by whom he had been hired.” *567 In Windham v. State, 19 Texas Crim. App., 422, it is simply recited that when defendant’s right to the stolen property was first challenged, that the explanation was made. Miller v. State, 18 Texas Crim. App., 34, only announces the general rule as to explanations, and throws no light on the subject whatever. In Castellow v. State, 15 Texas Crim. App., 552, it appears that a man by the name of Murphy and a man by the name of Newhaus had each lost a cow. The defendant learned that a witness, Godez, had been making some inquiry about the Newhaus cow, and sent for the witness and told him the cow he had necked to an ox had been left in his pasture by a drover because she was lame, and requested Godez to tell Newhaus, if the cow was his, to come and prove it and take her, that he, the defendant, had no claim to her. About twelve days after this Murphy found this cow necked to the ox, and claimed the cow as his, and the defendant made a statement to Murphy and the sheriff at that time with reference to the possession of the cow, and this statement with reference to the Murphy claim, offered by the defendant, was excluded.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 328, 89 Tex. Crim. 563, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seebold-v-state-texcrimapp-1921.