Swann v. State

46 S.W. 36, 39 Tex. Crim. 310, 1898 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 1898
DocketNo. 1515.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 36 (Swann 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
Swann v. State, 46 S.W. 36, 39 Tex. Crim. 310, 1898 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 121 (Tex. 1898).

Opinion

*313 HENDERSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of twenty-five years, and prosecutes this appeal.

We will make a brief statement of the case in order to clearly present the several errors assigned. Deceased was an unmarried man, and owned a farm in Washington County, situated some six miles southeast of Chappel Hill. Appellant and his wife lived on the farm of the deceased, and o seem to have been engaged in some business for deceased, though what is not stated. Deceased lived and boarded with appellant and his wife in the house occupied by them on his farm. A state of ill feeling existed between appellant and deceased for some weeks prior to the homicide, engendered from some disagreement in a settlement between them. The record on the part of the State shows that the defendant borrowed a gun from a neighbor, and had been carrying it for deceased for some week or more before the homicide. Appellant, however, denied this, and introduced evidence tending to show that he was carrying said gun for another party in the neighborhood who had burglarized his house some time before. In order to understand the testimony connected with the homicide, we insert the following diagram of the house and surroundings where the homicide occurred:

*314 A is where the buggy was standing while Foster was at the steps talking to Swann. P is where Foster stood talking to Swann. B is the place where Foster’s body was found; also where the buggy turned out of the road after the shooting. C is where Swann stood when he shot Foster. 1 is Foster’s room; 2 defendant’s room; 3 the door out of which Swann came when he killed Foster. The figures in the plat represent the various dimensions of the house and distances.

On the morning of the homicide Simpson and Foster were about starting to Chappel Hill. They had harnessed the horse to the buggy of the deceased, and the horse and buggy were standing just in front of the house. Appellant was sitting on the gallery, and his wife was standing near by. According to the State’s testimony, just before leaving, deceased, who was standing front of the gallerjg with his foot on the step, said to Swann, “I want to see you.” Swann replied, “My time is important.” Foster then said, “I have been trying to have a talk with you for several days; I want to speak with you privately.” Swann replied, “Why do you want to speak to me privately ?” Foster replied, “Because I don’t want to hurt your wife’s feelings.” Swann said, “I don’t want to talk to you.” Foster then said, “Swann, I want you to vacate my house.” Swann replied, “I will vacate your house when you pay me what you owe me.” Foster said, “I have paid )rou all I owe you; besides, who broke our contract ?” Swann replied, “You did.” Foster said, “You are a damn liar.” Simpson, who was standing near by, then said to Foster that “it is time we were going,” and he and Foster- then got in the buggy and started off; Foster being on the right side, and Simpson riding on the side next to the house. They elbowed around the house, going east; then down the road north, towards the gin. They had proceeded about thirty-three yards toward the gin, when appellant came out of his back door with his shotgun, and shot deceased, the shot taking effect in the back of deceased’s head, side of his left jaw, and in his back near his shoulder. He fell out on the left side of the buggy. Simpson immediately got out of the buggy, and soon others, who were near by, came up. Two or three witnesses saw the shooting. They testified substantially as did Simpson. Appellant and his wife both testified in the case, and they testify as to what occurred at the house just before the difficulty, substantially as did Simpson, except they state that when appellant declined to talk privately with the deceased, at his suggestion that he did not desire to hurt his wife’s feelings on account of his respect for her, that deceased replied, “By God, I want my house and I want you to get out.” Appellant then told him he would have to pay him his money on his contract before he got out, and told deceased that he had broken the contract, and deceased replied, “You are a damn liar.” That appellant then replied, “That is all right,” and deceased told him he would see that he got out of the house at once. They then state that deceased and Simpson got in the buggy. (While deceased was talking to the appellant he had his hand on his pistol.) The appellant’s wife then looked out, and said, “Foster is coming around the house to shoot you.” Appellant looked,.and saw Simpson and *315 Foster driving around the house in the buggy. That he then went in his room, got his gun, rushed out the back door into the back yard, and he saw Foster pushing Simpson down in the buggy with his left hand, his right hand in his bosom, and at that instant he raised his gun and fired. The horse in the buggy reared, and Foster fell from the buggy on his face. That, just as he raised his gun, Foster turned his face from him as he fired, and as he fell from his buggy he had his pistol in his hand, and after he fell out of the buggy he walked up to within a few feet of the body, and he and his wife both saw the pistol lying nearly under Foster on the ground. That he called his wife’s attention to it. As stated, his wife substantially agrees with this version of the shooting. He explained that he went out the door into the back yard to defend himself, because his wife told him that deceased was coming around behind the house towards t.he back door to shoot him. Mrs. Swann testified that Schultz was the first person to reach the body of the deceased, and he picked up Foster’s pistol, and put it in the waistband of his pants. Schultz denies this. Simpson, and two or three witness for the State, who came up immediately, testified that deceased’s pistol was in the waistband of his pants, on his left side; that he was lying on his back. Appellant and his wife testified that he fell on his face. Simpson, who was present, and two or three other State’s witnesses, who saw the shooting of the deceased, all testify that deceased made no demonstration whatever, and it is unquestioned that the shots from appellant’s gun struck defendant in the rear. A shot in the left jaw, which struck near the base of the jaw, and came out under the right eye, was more in front than any shot received. The State’s witnesses testified that the road traveled by deceased from the time he got in the buggy until he was shot was the traveled road from the house to the gin," and on to Ohappel Hill, and that the buggy, up to the time of the firing, pursued the road; that at the time deceased was shot he had his head turned rather sidewise, to the left, talking to Simpson. Appellant and his wife testified that Simpson, about the time of the firing, was pulling the horse in towards the left of the road. The road in question, after running a few steps south, elbowed around the house, and then pursued an easterly course, diverging gradually from the house. Deceased had passed the house about twenty yards when he was shot. These are substantially all the facts necessary to be stated in order to consider the assignments of error.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pettis v. State
81 S.W. 312 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1904)
Abshire v. Rowe
66 S.W. 394 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 36, 39 Tex. Crim. 310, 1898 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swann-v-state-texcrimapp-1898.