Standfield v. State

208 S.W. 532, 84 Tex. Crim. 437, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1919
DocketNo. 4920.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 532 (Standfield 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
Standfield v. State, 208 S.W. 532, 84 Tex. Crim. 437, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 15 (Tex. 1919).

Opinions

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

Appellant appealed from a conviction of cattle theft with a penalty of three years assessed against him.

He claims that three of the State’s witnesses, Alex Shinault, Alvie Tucker and his wife, Etta Tucker, were accomplices and that their testimony showing the offense was not sufficiently corroborated to justify conviction.

The animal was alleged to have been taken from Johnnie Jones, the owner, on or about January 18, 1914. The indictment was preferred on April 4, 1917.

The testimony shows that said Jones had the care, control and management of what is called the OX ranch in Cottle County. This ranch *439 was apparently quite a large one. It was on both sides of the Pease Eiver. In February, 1914, there were about 3000 head of cattle on said ranch owned by said Jones, as stated. The owner’s brand on said cattle was OX. Their mark was “7 under bit” in each ear. Appellant owned at that time a 160-acre place just across the road and along the side of said ranch. His 160 acres ran down very close to the Pease Eiver. Jones swore that he never gave appellant or any other person permission to handle or kill a red yearling or coming two-year-old heifer and he did not give anybody permission to handle, dispose of or kill any OX .cattle. Nor did he sell any heifers around in that country at that time. That they never sold anything only what went out of the country or to be shipped and slaughtered, and that he never gave appellant or anyone else permission to handle, kill or dispose of any OX cattle. On cross-examination he swore that he knew nothing about the facts of this alleged theft. Nor of appellant’s connection with the alleged stolen animal. He swore: “I do know that our cattle get out on the river once in a while. The fence up there right across from appellant’s wasn’t extra good.” That he did not miss any cattle, and with the large number they had they never could tell—that they couldn’t miss one yearling.

On appellant’s place there were two sets of small houses about 300 yards apart. Said Alvie Tucker and his wife Etta, his tenants, lived in one and the Shinaults in the other. It seems he was in and out of his place and part of the time boarded and stayed at the Tucker’s— not any great length of time nor continuously, but occasionally from time to time. The Shinaults had moved on his place in January, 1914. He had fifteen or twenty head of cattle in February running in a stalk field on his place. On or about February 13, 1914, appellant was at Shinault’s as well as some relatives of the Shinaults by the name of Hicks. At that time Mr. and Mrs. Shinault had some six minor children living with them. Among them was their son Alex Shinault, a boy about eighteen years old, and a daughter, Safronia. A few days after the alleged theft old man Shinault became sick and remained so until he died on February 34th. The Hickses, who were visiting Shinaults at that time, were related to the Shinaults, Mrs. Shinault’s nephews. There were four of the Hickses there on the day the animal was butchered. -

The proof .shows that old man Shinault at that time owned a Jersey steer or bull yearling and that it was in the pasture on appellant’s place that Shinault then had rented. That old man Shinault needed provisions and intended to slaughter his said yearling for beef at that time and so announced to the company, including his wife and daughter and said son and the Hickses and appellant. Appellant thereupon said to Mr. Shinault that he had a red heifer yearling which he would trade him for said steer yearling if Shinault would give him the hide of the heifer yearling to boot between them. Mr. Shinault told appellant that if his red heifer was fit for beef he would trade with him. Thereupon *440 appellant asked Alex Shinault to get on his, appellant’s horse, go down in the stalk field and drive up all of his cattle. The boy Alex Shinault complied with this request, went down in the field and drove up into Mr. Shinault’s lot what appellant said were his cattle, including the said red heifer. Then appellant pointed' out to Mr. Shinault his claimed red heifer as the one he proposed to trade for Mr. Shinault’s Jersey steer or bull. Upon looking at it and asking Mr. Tucker, who was also present, if the red heifer was fit for beef and Mr. Tucker telling him he thought it was, they traded. Mr. Shinault then shot and killed said red heifer. He and his son Alex, Mr. Tucker and appellant skinned and dressed it for beef. Mr. Shinault at the time sold to Mr. Tucker half of the beef, for which Mr. Tucker paid him $8, the value of it. Mr. Tucker then took his part of the beef to his home, hung it up in his barn and he and his wife ate it until they ate all of it. Appellant at the time was staying at Mr. Tucker’s.

So far as the Shinaults, Tuckers and Hickses were concerned, the testimony was sufficient to show, and we think did show, that they each and all were acting in the utmost good faith, and that neither of them believed or had any reason to believe that any of them were at the time in any way partieeps criminis in the theft of said red heifer by appellant from said Jones.

We will give in substance briefly the testimony of several of the witnesses. Alex Shinault testified that his father at said time owned a Jersey year old past steer running in the pasture where they then lived and that he determined to kill it for beef. That appellant was present when he announced this and told his father that he had a red heifer yearling he would trade him for said steer, and - that his yearling was larger than his father’s, and proposed to trade his red heifer for said steer if Shinault would give him the hide of the red heifer to boot. That appellant called him and told him to get on his horse, go down in the field and drive up his cattle, which he did, there being some fifteen or twenty head of them. That appellant then pointed out to his father said red heifer yearling and that they then traded yearlings on the terms proposed by appellant. That they then turned out of the lot all of the other cattle and his father then shot and killed for beef the red heifer which appellant had just traded to him for said steer yearling. That his father, he, appellant and said Tucker then skinned and dressed the beef. That his father sold half of it to Tucker at the time for $8, which Tucker then and there paid him for. That appellant rolled the hide up, put it in-a sack and carried it over to, and put it in, Tucker’s barn. That at the time that appellant started to roll the hide up he noticed that the brand was OX and that the ear mark was “7 under bit” in each ear. That when appellant and his father traded as stated, he, his father, Alvie Tucker and four of the Hickses men, his uncles, were present and that his mother and his two grown sisters and the other' little folks were also there. On cross-examination he testified that he thought the cattle he ran up at appellant’s instance and drove into his *441 father’s lot were appellant’s! That at the time appellant and his father traded that he did not pay the yearling any mind, than that he saw it and looked at it. He did not look close enough at that time to see the brand.

Alvie Tucker testified among other things that he moved on appellant’s place about January, 1913, and continued to live on it until about June, 1914.

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 532, 84 Tex. Crim. 437, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standfield-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.