Stokes v. State

506 S.W.2d 860, 1974 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1577
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1974
Docket48199
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 506 S.W.2d 860 (Stokes 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
Stokes v. State, 506 S.W.2d 860, 1974 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1577 (Tex. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

QUENTIN KEITH, Commissioner.

The jury found appellant guilty of murder and assessed his punishment at confinement for 5000 years.

The indictment charged that while intending to commit, while in the act of preparing for, and in executing the offense of sodomy, appellant caused the death of Teresa Ann Wilson.

Although the evidence is largely undisputed, appellant challenges its sufficiency, requiring us to set out the sordid details. On January 24, 1973, the 43-year-old appellant was living with Elizabeth Mucker in a house located on North Eleventh Street in Waco. The deceased, eight years of age, was seen entering this house with Elizabeth Mucker on the afternoon of that date. Other witnesses testified to having seen the child in the company of appellant at a nearby grocery store at approximately ten o’clock that night. On January 30, the child’s body was recovered from a shallow grave near the back door of the house theretofore occupied by appellant and Mucker.

The pathologist who performed the autopsy testified that death was brought about by aspiration of vomitas into the trachea and bronchi which in tarn caused asphyxiation and death. He also found male spermatozoa in the rectum of deceased, as well as a tear in the vaginal wall. It was his opinion that while an act of sodomy was being executed upon deceased, the vagus nerve was irritated causing vomiting; and, the deceased being unable to expel the vomitas, inhaled the same and thereby suffocated.

Appellant and Elizabeth Mucker were apprehended and arrested in Longview on January 29, and returned to Wáco immediately thereafter. After having been given the necessary warnings, appellant made a written confession on January 30, wherein he admitted having committed anal sodomy on the deceased at a time when Elizabeth Mucker was present. After completion of his unnatural sex act, appellant said that he went to bed leaving the child with Elizabeth Mucker. When he awakened, the child was dead. He said that he and the Mucker woman buried the child in a shallow grave near the back door of the house in which the crime had been committed.

Appellant’s confession was admitted without objection and he did not testify upon the trial. Elizabeth Mucker was called as a defense witness; but, when the State refused to grant immunity, she claimed the privilege against self-incrimination and did not testify as to any of the details of the crime. The court’s charge included a charge on circumstantial evidence as well as upon the law of principals.

Appellant’s second ground of error contends that he was entitled to an instructed verdict because the State’s evidence did not exclude every reasonable hypothesis except his guilt. His argument is based upon one statement of the pathologist that there was a possibility that the dilation of the rectum by a finger could have caused the irritation of the vagus nerve with the consequent vomiting, etc. However, the doctor said that such would not have been the probable result.

Appellant also argues that certain language found in his confession lends support to the contention now advanced, pointing to this portion thereof:

“I layed down on the couch with Lissie [Mucker] and the girl. I was dressed only in my shorts at the time. When I layed down the little girl_s back was toward me. The little girl was moving around and we were talking. I got an erection and and [sic] I placed my penis *862 between the girls legs. I could feel Lis-sie’s hand on the girls vagina. I then took my penis in my hand and tried to put it in the girl’s rectum. I got it in her rectum a little ways and I could feel Lissie’s hand rubbing the girl and my penis. . . . and I reached a little climax.
* * * * * *
“I went to the bedroom and lay down. It struck me that something was wrong. I could hear Lissie talking baby talk to the little girl. I though— that every thing would be alright and that Lissie would take the girl home. I dropped off to sleep.”

To this we add that after he awakened he found the girl dead; that he and Muck-er buried the body, etc.

From this meager factual basis, appellant argues that the State’s evidence “fails to produce a reasonable and moral certainty that the accused committed the offense charged, but establishes as a reasonable hypothesis that Elizabeth Mucker, after the Appellant had fallen asleep in his room, stimulated the vagus nerve with her finger thereby inducing the vomiting which caused the death.” We disagree with both the premises advanced and the conclusion drawn therefrom for the reasons now to be stated.

The first authority relied upon by appellant is the language found in 24 Tex.Jur. 2d, Evidence § 729, p. 403, as quoted in Greer v. State, 437 S.W.2d 558, 561 (Tex.Cr.App.1969). There were many errors noted in Greer, a burglary case, and the quotation relied upon by appellant states no more than the general rule to which this court has long adhered. The only other authority cited is Turner v. State, 146 Tex.Cr.R. 474, 176 S.W.2d 327 (1943), a forgery conviction wherein appellant’s confession, introduced by the state, negated the commission of the offense. There is language found therein which states the general law that, if the state offers a confession which is exculpatory in nature, it is bound thereby unless it proves the same to be false. Again, the rule is well established and recognized, but has no application to this case.

There is not a scintilla of evidence in this record that Elizabeth Mucker or anyone else ever had a finger in the child’s rectum; nor is there any evidence that the child ever uttered a sound or moved a muscle after appellant had completed his unnatural sex act. As expressed by State’s counsel: “Whether or not Appellant, his co-principal or either of them thought the child was still alive after he climaxed . is, of course, totally immaterial to his [legal] responsibility for her death.”

In 4 Branch’s Anno.P.C. (2 ed. Stout 1956) § 2025, at 336, the author cites many cases supporting the rule:

“If there is no evidence of any other cause for the death than the act^ of the slayer, and his act is sufficient either to cause death or to produce a disease that would cause the death, then the slayer is responsible for the death.”

Ground two is overruled without further comment.

We turn next to the fourth ground of error complaining of the refusal to include a charge on exculpatory statements. The factual basis is said to be contained in the last paragraph' of his confession previously quoted in our discussion of the second ground of error. Appellant argues: “These statements in the confession tend towards establishing the girl as alive when the Appellant left the room because, otherwise, the Appellant could not have thought it alright to take the girl home.” Again, we disagree.

“A statement is not exculpatory unless it exculpates.” Perez v. State, 160 Tex.Cr.R. 376, 271 S.W.2d 281, 284 (1954), and repeated in Mendez v. State, 168 Tex.Cr.R.

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Bluebook (online)
506 S.W.2d 860, 1974 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-state-texcrimapp-1974.