Shell v. State

240 S.W. 546, 91 Tex. Crim. 563, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 288
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1922
DocketNo. 6821.
StatusPublished

This text of 240 S.W. 546 (Shell 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
Shell v. State, 240 S.W. 546, 91 Tex. Crim. 563, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 288 (Tex. 1922).

Opinion

HAWKINS, Judge.

—Appellant is under conviction for the murder of his step-daughter, the jury having assessed his penalty at death.

The facts reveal that deceased was a young woman about twenty-three or twenty-four years of age whose mother appellant had married at a time when deceased was quite a small child. ' As she grew into young womanhood, and about seven or eight years before the killing, appellant seems to have become infatuated with her, or at lease possessed of an unholy desire to have improper relation with her. and had continually importuned her to this effect. She had persistently refused his advances and finally married one Simmons. Appellant encouraged this marriage with the idea that if married she would then consent to his (appellant’s) sexual embraces. He was disappointed in this expectation. After deceased and her husband lived together for a time they separated and deceased came back to the home of appellant and her mother to live. His advances were renewed and met with the same rebuff as formerly. The killing occurred about daylight. On the day and night preceding he had again made improper proposals to deceased, and had been told by her that she intended to leave the house. She had written a letter to her husband in which she stated that she was going to leave home the next day, and that her father ‘.‘was leading her a dog’s life.” Appellant saw her writing and the first two pages of the letter (being that part containing the expression above referred to) was taken by appellant from-the suit case of deceased. On the morning of the killing about daylight appellant went to the bed where deceased was sleeping with her mother and with a razor cut her throat from ear to ear, severing the jugular vein. He then attempted to take his own life by cutting his own throat with the same instrument. It is not necessary to set out in detail the evidence. Many of the facts related appear from appellant’s confession introduced against him. The details are harrowing and disclose one of those unfortunate and inexplainable conditions which sometimes arise.

Appellant complains in his bill of exception No. 2 because the *565 court admitted a confession made by him, urging as his objections that the same was in question and answer form, and showed upon its face that it was not a voluntary statement of confession as contemplated by the law. The bill does not set out the confession, and we might dismiss the subject upon the insufficiency of the bill, but because the extreme penalty of the law was inflicted we have gone to the statement of facts and examined the confession as it there appears. It consists of four entire pages, single spaced, typewritten matter. In the confession are some question, but only where it was apparently necessary for the attorney taking the same to make the interrogation in order to make plain to whom appellant was referring, or to clear up some involved statement. The mere fact that a confession is made in reply to'questions does not vitiate it. Section 67, page 42, Branch’s Ann. P. C. But that objection does not apply to the confession in the instant ease. It relates the circumstances leading up to the killing and incident thereto, and appears to us to be the statement of appellant telling in his own way the facts as best he could. There is nothing to indicate that the confession was not voluntary. Instead of being subject to the criticism directed at it we desire to commend it as being nearly in line with what we conceive a confession ought to be than those we generally are called upon to review. It is apparent from its face that the district attorney (Mr. K. W. Stephenson) was not in the least undertaking to impose upon or take an unfair advantage of appellant. The confession, instead of being couched in the verbiage of the taker as is too frequently the case, shows that the language is that of appellant himself, even as to grammatical construction and disconnected and confused statements.

Appellant’s son, a young man about eighteen years of age, testified that the killing occurred about daylight; that the confusion following awakened him, and that within a few minutes after the killing he talked to his father who was telling hipa (witness) what the devil could do for people, and to always fear the devil and women, and that appellant told him (witness) “she was going to have me killed, and here is a letter,” and banded to witness one sheet of a letter. This was identified by the witness and offered in evidence by the State. It was a sheet of letter paper written on both sides, the page being numbered one and two, and was as follows:

“Mr. W. F. Simmons:
Dear Darling:-
“I will rite you a few lines to let you know — yet living but that is all I don’t think will live long I dont think you are doing me rite Sweetheart you wont send me in of cothes Sweetheart how can you have the hart to keep ever thing pore little girl hais got well darling you don know what a time that I am having darling I havnt got now home or master poir little girl havnt got now none to cair *566 milling for me I am going to leve to mair in may to go am on the mersy of the world papa is tring to lead me a dog life. I can stay at home in more So I gess I will go to the dogs right But I am going to hold on long as I can The way look dime somtime and nore little girl—.”

The confession of appellant discloses that after he made an improper advance to deceased upon the day before the killing she wrote a letter; that later on he searched through her suit case and got that portion of the letter which he afterwards turned over to his son. In his confession he refers to that statement in the letter where the deceased said, “Papa is trying to lead me a dog life.” After the tiling witness searched the suit case and found what is contended by appellant to be the other portion of the letter, consisting of pages three, four, five, six, seven and eight. Appellant offered in evidence that portion of the letter found in deceased’s suit case, and which is as follows:

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Related

Corpus v. State
102 S.W. 1152 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 546, 91 Tex. Crim. 563, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-v-state-texcrimapp-1922.