Sunday v. State

177 S.W. 97, 77 Tex. Crim. 26, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 9
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1915
DocketNo. 3568.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 S.W. 97 (Sunday 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
Sunday v. State, 177 S.W. 97, 77 Tex. Crim. 26, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 9 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder and his punishment assessed at eight years confinement in the penitentiary,, from which judgment he prosecutes this appeal.

It may be said to be conclusively proven that George Sunday, a brother of appellant, was a tenant of John Dunks, a man some seventy years of age; that while George Sunday and appellant, his brother, were gathering their cane crop some trouble arose between the landlord and tenant. Deceased, Jack Phillips, and George Rabun had married daughters of Mr. Dunks, and after the trouble between Mr. Dunks and George Sunday, the deceased and George Rabun went down into the field where the two Sunday boys were at work gathering their cane crop. Deceased and George Rabun were stout, able-bodied men, weighing 175 to 180 pounds each, while appellant and his brother, George, were small men, weighing from 130 to 130 pounds each. The State’s witness George Rabun says that deceased went to the field fence and called George Sunday, telling him he wanted to see him; that Sunday replied, “If you want to see me you will have to come down here.” Rabun and deceased then went down into the field, and Phillips (deceased) remarked, “Well, I see you have got one-half of the cane through,” and George Sunday replied, “I am through with my part of it, and we are not going to have anything to do with the rest of it.” That deceased then remarked, “I suppose you cursed old man Dunks yesterday and threatened to knock his brains out with a brush hook,” George Sunday replying, “It is a damn lie, I didn’t do any such thing.” That deceased then knocked George Sunday down, calling him a “whore-house s—n of a b—h.” Rabun says appellant interceded then and asked deceased not to strike George any more, when he told appellant, “Shut your mouth, you d—ned son of a b—h.” That neither he nor deceased drew a knife, nor threatened to cut the throats of the two Sundays. That while they were talking to appellant and had turned to call Mr. Dunks, George Sunday left and went to his house; that believing he had gone for a gun, he and deceased left and went home.

*28 Appellant says that his brother, George, and Mr. Dunks had had some words about the cane crop, but they had adjusted their differences. That deceased, Jack Phillips, and George Babun came down in the field, and when they got down there “George Babun taken me in the collar with his hand and Jack Phillips taken my brother George in the collar and drawed their knives on our throats, and Jack Phillips told my brother, asked him how come him to take his cane knife to old man Dunks. My brother told him, says, ‘Jack, I didn’t take no cane knife to old man Dunks.’ He says, You are a God damned lie, you did do it and Mr. Dunks says you did it.’ He hit my brother up side the head with his fist and he reached and got a stalk of sugar cane off the wagon and hit him across the back of his head and told him, says, ‘I will cut your God damned throat,’ and knocked his head back with his arm and started to cut his throat; I said, ‘Jack, please don’t cut his throat.’ He waved his knife at me, he says, ‘If you say airy other word I will cut your God damned throat, you mother fucking son-of-a-bitch, from ear to ear.’ George Babun says, Yes, if you say airy other word I will cut your God damned throat.’ Jack says, You are nothing but a set of God damned mother-fucking-sons-of-bitehes, the whole business of you, women folks and all and mother.’ I will tell you what he said about my mother; he told me my mother, sisters and wife were not nothing but a set of mother-fucking-sons-of-bitches; he says, ‘God damn a man who would take it, you got to take it, you can’t help yourself.’ He told me, he says, You can’t stay in that house nary nother night’; says, ‘If you do we will kill every one of you.’ He says, You can’t stay there nary nother night.’ When he was talking to George threatening what he would do to George I asked him not to cut George’s throat, and he told me if I said ary nother word he would cut my God damn, throat, you mother-fucking-son-of-a-bitch. George Ba-bun told me if I opened my head ary other time—said ary other word he would cut my throat from ear to ear. I guess George Babun would weigh 180 or 190 pounds.”

Appellant desired to prove what George Sunday told his wife when he got to the house, and what he, appellant, told George and his wife when he met them coming from the house. We do not think the court erred in excluding such statements. They were not res gestae of the killing, which took place the next day, and would be what is termed self-serving declarations.

Appellant testifies that when he started to the house he met George Sunday and his wife, and told George not to go back down there; that deceased and Babun had said they were going after their guns and would kill them all, and that they had to move off the place; that George and his family at once left and went to their brother-in-law’s, a Mr. Field; that he and George then went to Montgomery and saw the justice of the peace. The court would not permit him to testify what his mission was; what he said to the justice of the peace, nor what the justice said to them. And would not permit the justice to testify to what was said to him, nor what he said to appellant. How *29 ever, he permitted the State to prove that they had gone to Montgomery, and had purchased a box of shotgun shells loaded with buckshot, and carried them home with them. If appellant had no explanation of why he purchased these shells it would be a most material fact to show-murder upon express malice—that .after the difficulty, they had gone direct to the town of Montgomery, purchased the buckshot shells and returned home, the killing taking place early next morning. Had appellant been permitted to do so, he would have testified that he and his brother went to Montgomery to have deceased put under a peace bond, and applied to the justice of the peace; that the justice declined to do so, when they purchased the shells to use in defense of themselves if it became necessary. In the bill of exceptions it is shown the justice of the peace would have testified, “That the defendant and the said Geo. Sunday came to the witness on the night preceding the homicide, in the town of Montgomery, some four and a half miles from the home of the defendant, and reported to the witness that they had been assaulted, abused and threatened by Geo. Rabun and the deceased, Jack Phillips, and that defendant and said Geo. Sunday sought of the witness to have the deceased, Jack Phillips, put under a peace bond for their protection, and that the witness and Constable Prank Rabun, who was present at the time, told the defendant and Geo. Sunday that it would make Jack Phillips worse to put him under a peace bond, and would increase the danger of them taking their lives, and the witness Davis, as justice of the peace, for that reason, declined to institute proceedings to have the deceased put under a peace bond.”

As the State was using the fact that appellant and his brother had gone to Montgomery and purchased buckshot shells as a circumstance tending to show a predetermination to kill deceased, we think it was permissible for the appellant to show that his mission was a peaceable one, and that he applied to the officers of the law to have deceased put under a peace bond 'and thus avoid any further difficulty, and it was only after the justice of the peace had refused to institute peace proceedings that he had purchased the shotgun shells.

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Related

Smith v. State
256 S.W.2d 578 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1952)
Majors v. State
273 S.W. 267 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 97, 77 Tex. Crim. 26, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunday-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.