Sharp v. State

197 S.W. 201, 81 Tex. Crim. 256, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1917
DocketNo. 4348.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 201 (Sharp 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
Sharp v. State, 197 S.W. 201, 81 Tex. Crim. 256, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 114 (Tex. 1917).

Opinions

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was given the death penalty under a charge of murder for the killing of John Cain, a police officer of the City of Houston.

The State’s case may be, substantially, stated as follows: Cain was a policeman, on duty in his allotted beat on the night of the. homicide. About 3:30 or a few minutes later, in the early morning, a policeman was heard to exclaim: “Stop, I am an officer,” and almost immediately a shot was fired. One or two policemen hearing the exclamation and shot went to the scene, and found deceased, one of them testified, “shot through and through.” He was shot in the front, the ball emerging from the back. His statement at the time was that he was shot by a negro whom he described as being yellow and wearing a mustache. The district attorney introduced a confession taken by himself from the defendant while a prisoner under burglary convictions in the penitentiary at Huntsville. It seems the district attorney went to Huntsville in company with two or three of the constabulary or policemen uf Houston and talked with the defendant twice, and leaving him with the statement that if he wanted to talk with him later he could send for him. Some time later he did send for him, as testified by the district attorney, and made a statement to him in writing. He says the statement was voluntarily made after due caution. There was no one present at the time except he and the defendant. Shortly after this statement was made he and appellant went to another part of the penitentiary building,' and the parties whom he had taken with him from Houston and three others witnessed the statement. Two of them were police officers, and under the statute would not be recgonized as attesting witnesses. Neither would the policemen from Houston be so recognized. Mr. Teague stated he was warden of the penitentiary and witnessed it, and Mr. Binford, it seems, would hardly be classed in the category of peace officers. They testified they would not sign as attesting witnesses until it had been read over to the defendant, who had previously signed it only in the presence of the district attorney. It was then read in their presence to defendant and attested by them. It does not show when read in their presence it was explained to defendant, but they say it was read to him in their presence. In that statement appellant is made to use the following language, as directly pertinent to the issues:

“About August 1, 1911, I caught a freight train to Conroe and stayed up there a couple of days at a negro friend of mine named Collins. A preacher named Johnson saw me there during that time. I carried a grip from Houston with me and bought another one at a road camp where I stopped for a day. When I left camp I went up in the town *258 of Conroe and stayed around there until train time and then caught the train for Houston. I had the two grips with me and I had a pistol in my pocket. „ I saw the negro porter on the train whom I knew but. I do not remember his name. When the train was into Houston in the Fifth ward, I got my grips, and when the train stopped for the LaPorte tracks just before they got to Buffalo bayou I got off and started hack toward Hance Street. I was going along the track when I saw a police officer and I stopped in the shadow of a building until I thought- he was gone, and then I started on again, and when I got a little farther I saw the officer coming toward the track along HanceStreet, so that I would have just about met him. I was carrying both grips in my left hand as my right hand is crippled and was at that time, so I switched the two grips quickly to my right hand, and pulled my pistol with my left out of my left hip pocket and began running as fast as I could north right in the center of the tracks. The officer-called to me twice to stop and I saw that he had his gun in his hand* so as I ran I turned and fired at him once. My gun was a double action gun but I cocked it before I fired. I saw him fall to the ground just after I fired, and I knew I had hit him as I heard him say something about being shot but I do not remember his exact words. I did not stop but kept running as hard as I could."

This is just an excerpt from the confession, and is quoted simply because it bears directly upon the tragedy at the time it occurred-Appellant took the stand and said with reference to the confession, that the first two times they asked him to make a confession or tell about it he denied knowing anything about it. He denied having anything to do with the killing, or his presence at the time and place, and the reason that he finally, on the third conversation, made the confession was because the district attorney had informed him of his official capacity, and that he had power to do with him pretty much as he pleased,, and that if he would make the confession he would see that it would go easy with him, which he understood meant he was only to be sent to the penitentiary, and as he was already in the penitentiary for fifty-eight years on cumulative sentences for burglary, it would not amount to any serious matter. In other words, he testified that his confession was false, and that he made it under the promises of the district attorney excluding the idea that he would be hanged, which the district attorney and some of the officers said would occur if he did not make the confession. Without quoting at any length, this is the sum and substance of his testimony on that particular line.

This confession seems to have been thought necessary for the State, otherwise this trip to Huntsville by' these officers and the means of securing the confession would not have been pursued. The police officer had not identified the defendant except by a description to the effect that he was a yellow negro with a mustache, and, as the writer recollects the record, this is not undertaken to be verified by any evidence other than the statement of the policemen, and all this occurred about. *259 3:30 or 3:40 o’clock in the morning. The State introduced another witness who testified, substantially, that he saw a party get off the train at the crossing of the LaPorte road with a couple of grips in his’hand and start up the railway walking. One or more of the train officers, or crew testified that a negro got on at Conroe with a couple of grips, and got off at the LaPorte road crossing. So the substantially and concrete result of the State’s testimony was intended to show that appellant had been to Montgomery County two or three days and had returned to Houston, where he lived and had married. The proof shows he lived in Houston Heights. He got off .the train at the point designated and started walking back up the track with the grips in his hand when the police officer hailed him, and he ran, pursued by the policeman with a pistol in his hand, and defendant after running a while turned and fired one shot and continued running. It is the settled law of Texas that where the State puts in a confession, some of which is exculpatory, the State is bound by the confession, unless it disproves the exculpatory testimony. In Menefee v. State, 67 Texas Crim. Rep., 201, 148 S. W. Rep., 138, and Winkler v. State, 58 Texas Crim. Rep., 564, the rule is announced that where the State introduces a confession, it is bound by such confession until disproved.

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214 S.W. 335 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 201, 81 Tex. Crim. 256, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-state-texcrimapp-1917.