Speer v. State

4 Tex. Ct. App. 474
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Tex. Ct. App. 474 (Speer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Speer v. State, 4 Tex. Ct. App. 474 (Tex. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Winkler, J.

The appellant was indicted and tried for the murder of one J. S. Pledger, alleged to have been committed in the county of McLennan, on July 14, 1875. On the trial below the jury found the accused guilty of murder in the first degree, and he was so adjudged by the court, the punishment being affixed by the verdict and judgment at death by hanging.

The most important inquiry presented by the record, and in the brief and oral argument of the counsel for the appellant, and concerning which the only bill of exceptions was reserved on the trial, arises out of the ruling of the court admitting in evidence to the jury certain confessions made by the accused to the witness Autry, and testified to by him on this trial, under the circumstances under which the confession was made and the condition in which the accused was placed at the time, as disclosed by the witness.

The confession was made in answer to a question propounded to the accused, and under the following circumstances, as detailed substantially in the bill of exceptions, and set out at length in the statement of facts. The witness had heard of the killing, and that the defendant had done the killing, or was accused of it. On the night of the day on which the homicide was committed, and at about nine ■ or ten o’clock, while the witness Autry was in his house, situated about one mile from Mudtown, and about three or four miles from where the defendant lived, the witness heard some one whistle near the house, and requested one McIntosh, who was then living at the house of the witness, to go out and see who it was that had whistled. McIntosh went out, and returned and said that it was the defendant, calling his name, who said he wanted to see the witness, Autry; and here the witness details what followed, in this language: “I and McIntosh went out to where Speer was, and I said, ‘ Johnnie, what do you want? ’ and defendant, John Speer, said, ‘ I want something to eat, and [477]*477some water.’ I said to Johnnie, ‘ You had better surrender ; a great many men are hunting for you.’ I reached out my hand and took Johnnie’s gun; it was a double-barrel shot-gun ; he released the gun as soon as I took hold of the gun. I turned round and took the gun in the house, and Speer, defendant, followed me in the house. McIntosh also went into the house, in advance of me. John. Speer, the defendant, told me that he had been to Mudtown to give himself up, but saw such a number of persons there that he was afraid to give himself up, fearing he might be injured. When I went into my house, after going out to see Speer, I put the gun under my bed, in the same room we went into ; I did not notice whether the gun was loaded or not. “ After I put the gun under the bed, I got my horse and rode over to Rash Harris’ house, about a mile distant. I came back. When I left my house I left defendant, Speer, and McIntosh in the same room together. I was not armed, and McIntosh was not armed, during any of the time we were with Speer, the defendant, nor at any other time that night. After I got back home from Harris’ house, McIntosh and Speer, defendant, started to Mudtown ; they went on foot. I started on toward Mudtown and passed them, defendant and McIntosh, about a hundred yards from my house. The purpose of going to Mudtown was for defendant, Speer, to give himself up to some persons at Mudtown. I was not an officer of any kind, and McIntosh was not an officer, nor was Harris an officer. I knew Speer, defendant, well, and he knew me well; Ave were friendly. As I passed defendant, Speer, and McIntosh, on their way to Mudtown, I said to defendant, ‘ Johnnie, did you kill old man Pledger? ’ Johnnie said to me, ‘ Yes.’ I asked him, ‘ Why did you do it, Johnnie? ’ and Johnnie said, 61 had to do it.’ I then passed them and went on to Mudtown, and the next time I saw Johnnie, defendant, he was lying down behind a house, near a well, at Mudtown, and was [478]*478then taken into custody by some persons there.” In answer to a question put to the witness, Autry, as to what he said to McIntosh when they started out of the house where Speer, the defendant, was, the. witness said, “ I said, let’s go and arrest him.”

During the examination of the witness Autry, the bill of exceptions states, “ a witness, Autry, was sworn for the State, by whom it was proposed to prove certain statements made by defendant to him, Autry, and the defendant, by his counsel, interposed, stating that it would appear that at the time of such statements the defendant was in arrest, whereupon the witness was examined, and stated,” etc.; and following with the testimony of the witness, as taken above from the statement of facts.

We here quote, again, from the bill of exceptions:

“ When witness passed defendant and McIntosh, en route to Mudtown, he asked defendant, ‘ Did you kill old man Pledger?’ to which defendant replied, ‘Yes.’ Witness asked, ‘Why did you do it?’ to which he replied, ‘I had to do it.’ To the answers to these two last questions defendant objected, claiming that defendant was in arrest at the time; which objection was overruled by the court, because it appeared that defendant made said statements voluntarily, and it did not appear that at the time the defendant was under restraint or in custody, and said testimony was admitted; and the question of restraint or custody at the time of said answers was, nevertheless, submitted to the jury by the charge ; to which ruling of the court, admitting said evidence, defendant then and there excepted,” etc.

Whilst it will be seen that, by the bill of exceptions, it was the admission of the testimony which was objected to, still, in the assignment of errors and in argument, the objection is presented in a two-fold sense: first, that it was error to allow the testimony to go to the jury at all, for the [479]*479reasons stated in the bill of exceptions; and, second, that it was error in the court in submitting to the jury the question as to whether the defendant was in restraint or custody at the time of making the admissions contained "in the answers of the witness objected to.

Confessions, say the elementary writers, are divided into two classes—judicial and extrajudicial.

“ Judicial confessions are those which are made before the magistrate, or court, in the due course of legal proceedings.” “Extrajudicial confessions are those which are made by the party elsewhere than before a magistrate, or in court; this term embracing, not only explicit and express confessions of crime, but all those admissions of the accused from which guilt may be implied. All confessions of this kind are receivable in evidence, being proved like other facts, to be weighed by the jury.” 1 Greenl. on Ev., sec. 216, 6th ed.; Roscoe’s Cr. Ev. 37. It is the latter class — extrajudicial confessions'—with which we have to deal in the present case. We may remark, further, that the effect of this kind of testimony, or the weight or degree of credit to which it is entitled, does not arise in the present case; the sole question is as to its admissibility.

We hazard nothing by saying that, as a general rule, confessions of guilt, freely and voluntarily made, are admissible against the accused, and that confessions not so voluntarily made are, as a general rule, not admissible. As was said by Eyre, C. B., in Warickshall’s case, cited in 1 Greenl. on Ev., sec.

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Warren v. State
29 Tex. 369 (Texas Supreme Court, 1867)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Tex. Ct. App. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speer-v-state-texapp-1878.