Stovall v. State

108 S.W. 699, 53 Tex. Crim. 30, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 1908
DocketNo. 4244.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 S.W. 699 (Stovall 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
Stovall v. State, 108 S.W. 699, 53 Tex. Crim. 30, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 124 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

BROOKS, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of manslaughter and his punishment assessed at four years confinement in the State penitentiary.

The charge of the court presents three phases of homicide, to wit: Murder in the first and second degrees, manslaughter, and assault to murder and aggravated assault. Appellant and deceased were both young men, had been living in Eastland County and knowing each other quite well for some time. On the night deceased received a stab at the hands of appellant they had both attended a party and about eleven o’clock at night "went to the little town of Nimrod in said county. Russell Harvey, State’s -witness, testified, in substance, that he went from the party with deceased to Nimrod. Appellant was not there at the time they reached Nimrod but came afterwards. He. was seven or eight steps west of the Manning storehouse and across the street from the Teague storehouse when he heard the deceased say, “0 Boykin.” At that time George Stovall and he "were standing talking and when deceased called, George Stovall got on his mule and started off. Witness went across the street to where deceased was and asked him what was the matter, and Boykin Wilkinson said, “Sutton stuck a knife in Lanham.” (Sutton is appellant and Lanham the deceased.) “We then carried deceased into the Teague storehouse. I got the key from Silas Teague and opened the door. Deceased was kind of reeling around and Boykin Wilkinson had hold of him. When we got to the gallery, the deceased said, ‘Hurry, boys, I believe he has killed me.’ I ran to Dr. Stephens’, and then back to the store. When I got back to the store I had a talk with the deceased. It "was not more than fifteen or twenty minutes after the cutting. I asked him how he was feeling, and he said he was feeling bad. He first asked me to go out and give Sutton Stovall a whipping, and I told him that that would do no good and I did not know whether I could do it or not. I then asked him how it happened, and he said he had asked Sutton Stovall out there; and asked him why ho had been lying on him, and that Sutton said he had not been lying on him, and deceased told him that he had been; that Sutton said, ‘Ton are a liar,; and then he (deceased) struck Sutton in the breast. That some one just at that time stepped off the gallery, and that he asked Sutton to come further back and started walking off and that Sutton ran up behind him and stabbed him and jumped to one side about ten feet. I do not remember whether the deceased said what he hit the defendant with or not. I think he said his fist; but I do not now remember that he said what he hit him with. I cannot be certain how long this conversation was after the cutting. I heard deceased call for help, and I was then only a short distance from him, about the distance across an ordinary street. *32 It did not take me more than a minute to go to Mm. A few words were spoken and we took Mm into the store. We did not wait a minute before starting with him to the front of the store. It was only thirty or forty feet- to the front porch, and it did not take us more than a minute to go the distance. I helped him onto the gallery and ran about fifteen steps out in front, and got the store keys from Silas Teague and ran back and opened the door; that did not take more than a minute. I did not help deceased in the house but ran for Dr. Stephens. His house is not a hundred yards from the storehouse, and I ran. It did not take a minute. I told Dr. Stephens of the cutting, and he told me to go to the lot and get his case of medicine and instruments out of his buggy. I ran and got them. I was not in the house three minutes; and the buggy was not a hundred yards from the house. I had no trouble in finding the doctor’s case of instruments. I got it and ran back to the store and got there before Dr. Stephens did. I passed by Silas Teague and the appellant as I went back to the store. I spoke to them, but did not stop. It was not two minutes from the time I got the case of instruments, until I was in the store. I set the case of instruments down and immediately had the conversation with the deceased that I háve detailed, and it was over before Dr. Stephens got there. I was considerably excited and I ran rapidly when going after the doctor and in bringing the medicine case.” This testimony is rehearsed, so as it presents the State’s theory of this case.

Appellant’s statement is as follows: Appellant in his own behalf testified: “After the party at George Stovall’s, I came on down to Himrod, and stopped at Teague Bros.’ store. Lanham Broyles and several other boys were in the store, when I got there. I said to Lanham, 'Well, that was one more storm party in Texas’ (by storm party we meant a surprise party). He said, 'Yes, that was the damndest party I was ever at, or I ever saw.’ I bought a few pieces of gumdrop candy from Silas Teague, and ate it; and some of the candy stuck to my teeth. And 'while I was whittling me a toothpick out of a match to pick my teeth, they started to close the store, and I walked out on the gallery of the store with the kmfe and match in hand. As we walked out on the gallery the deceased said to me, 'Sutton Stovall, come here, I want to speak to you a minute.’ It was dark and cloudy at that time, and had been misting rain. He led the way around the west side of Teague Bros.’ storehouse until we got rather behind and south of a little oil room that is built onto the side of the storehouse somewhere about the middle of the west side. As we got there, the deceased stopped, and as I came up to him he said, T understand that you have been telling that I gave Estelle Stovall a drink of cider,’ and I said, 'I did not.’ And he says, 'Your mother and sister says that you did.’ And I said, 'If my mother says it, I did, I will not deny anything my mother said.’ Deceased then says, 'You and your mother both are damned lying sons of bitches.’ And I said, 'You are another.’ He said, 'God damn you, I will kill you,’ and ran his hand in his pocket and *33 jerked it out, with something that I took to be a knife in it, and struck me in the breast; and as he struck me I had my knife in my hand, and I just made a jab at him with my knife. Deceased then turned off toward the store, and I walked off six or eight feet west of him, and we were standing there when the boys came up. Nothing more was said at that time between us. I had no idea of having any trouble with him when I went around the store building. I did not know what he wanted to talk to me about. We had never had a cross word or any ill-feeling that I know of in our lives before. We had been raised in the country together and had gone to school together and had always been good friends. I cannot tell you just how the blows were struck, as I was very much excited at that moment, as the whole thing came off unexpectedly to me.” In addition to the State’s case above suggested, the State shows that appellant walked off with a justice of the peace after the difficulty and when asked what was the matter, appellant persisted in replying “nothing” and never told his father the facts of the case until some time after the difficulty.

The defense further shows that the next day after the difficulty, appellant had a cut on his coat which he showed to parties. Deceased was stabbed in the right side about two and a half inches below the right nipple, a depth of about two inches and lingered something like thirty days before he died. We have made this statement of the ease in order to properly treat appellant’s various bills of exception and assignments.

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Related

Bradford v. State
372 S.W.2d 336 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W. 699, 53 Tex. Crim. 30, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stovall-v-state-texcrimapp-1908.