Taylor v. State

195 S.W. 1147, 81 Tex. Crim. 359, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 138
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1917
DocketNo. 4389.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 1147 (Taylor 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
Taylor v. State, 195 S.W. 1147, 81 Tex. Crim. 359, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 138 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

MORROW, Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment condemning appellant to twenty-five years confinement in the State penitentiary for the murder of Rex Chamberlain.

The deceased was killed by a discharge of buckshot from a shotgun shortly before dark on December 24, 1915. The homicide took place in the vicinity of Taylor’s store, which was owned by appellant’s uncle, and along a road running in an eastern direction from the store there were situated bn the south side the premises of Ivan Taylor, a brother of appellant, about 250 yards from the store, appellant’s premises, approximately two-thirds of a mile from the store, deceased’s barn, about a mile from the store, and on the north or left hand side, were deceased residence, just across the road from his barn, and a pasture, known as Fischer’s pasture, and deceased’s'field, in which he was killed, at a point about 500 or 600 yards from the store. Appellant’s father lived between 500 and 600 yards south of the point at which the homicide took place. All the parties mentioned had lived in the neighborhood for several years, and there was evidence that for one or two years prior to the homicide appellant and deceased were not on speaking terms and that other members of appellant’s family, including his father and brother, were not on friendly terms with the deceased. There was evidence that it was customary to have a tarlcey shoot at *362 the store on Christmas Eve, and on the morning of the day of the homicide appellant went to the store, taking his shotgun with him and leaving it in the custody of his uncle at the store. Appellant’s cousin, Hugh Taylor, and a witness named Arthur Gabriel, claimed to have found some bottles of whisky at a culvert near the store mentioned, and it was shown that they and appellant started on horseback for this culvert and on their way met deceased.- As they approached appellant suggested that they should not stop and appellant did not stop, though the others did so, and invited deceased to drink. The bottle of whisky which was offered him was labeled “Old Taylor,” observing which deceased made a remark about the Taylor name, which offended Hugh Taylor, and some words followed, and deceased assaulted Hugh Taylor, who ran away on horseback, the deceased following him. Appellant had no part in this controversy, but when it took place he rode to Hugh Taylor’s house, which was nearby, and told Hugh Taylor’s wife that the deceased had Hugh cut off from his home and that the appellant wanted a gun to assist him.. She objected to his having the gun and said that she would go after her husband, and she claimed that as she was about to do so deceased, in company with a Mr. Cast, passed along the road. Appellant ^remarked that he would not need the gun. It appears that appellant then rode back to the store and obtained his gun from his uncle, had some conversation about immaterial matters with the parties at the store and then taking the gun with him got on his horse and rode away. Before going, however, his brother Ivan handed him some cartridges, the testimony being conflicting as to whether they were loaded with buckshot or bird shot, one witness testifying that Ivan said at the time: “Shoot low.” This was contradicted partly by cross-examination of the witness and partly by other testimony. A witness testified that approaching the store from the east he passed along the road mentioned late in the evening of the day of the homicide and when he reached a point near the barn of the deceased he heard a report sounding like a gun or firecracker; that he noticed deceased’s wife in the barn lot milking, and that when he reached the point opposite the Chamberlain field he noticed the deceased’s horse saddled and looking somewhat excited and standing near the southeast corner of the field, and at the same time saw a man about 140 yards away going off through the brush; that he merely glanced at him and could give no accurate description of him further than he had on what he took to be a regular brown hunting coat. He took the man to be Chamberlain and said that he was not going in the direction of the appellant’s house but was going down through the Fischer pasture. The appellant testified and introduced the testimony of several witnesses as to his whereabouts at and about the time of the homicide, and their testimony, if believed, was sufficient to establish an alibi. There was.evidence that near the point where the deceased was killed were some bushes cut away and knee prints on the ground, presumably indicating the locality of the party who fired. There was evidence introduced of tracks found *363 in the Chamberlain field and that these tracks fitted the shoes belonging to appellant and which a witness testified appellant claimed to have been wearing at the time. The tracks, however, were not discovered until several days after the homicide. They were not characterized by any peculiarity, and there as evidence that a number of persons were in the field during the night on which the homicide occurred. There was evidence that appellant was not wearing the shoes mentioned but was wearing boots of a different shape and that he did not claim to have been wearing the shoes on the day of the homicide. This is a partial statement of the evidence; the record is so long as to preclude a complete statement.

The court charged the jury on the law of murder, alibi and circumstantial evidence.

In one of his bills of exception appellant complains of the exclusion of evidence to the effect that a short time before the homicide deceased drove his wife away from home and back to her mother, and that his father-in-law, Fischer, and the members of his family were not on speaking terms with deceased at the time of the homicide.

Appellant sought to draw out this proof on cross-examination of the witness McMahan, who testified in part as follows: that he went to the Chamberlain field in search of Eex Chamberlain on the night of the evening when he was killed and found his body in the field about 7 or 8 o’clock and after dark. He stated that he thought he was the first one who found the body; that his wife and Eex Chamberlain’s wife were sisters, both being daughters of old man Gus Fischer; that said Fischer was in attendance upon the court; that said Fischer at the time Chamberlain was killed had three sons-in-law living right there close in the section of where Chamberlain was killed, and two a little further off; that said Fischer had grown sons; that said Gus Fischer is about sixty years old; that this witness, McMahan, was at said Fischer’s house that night when he heard about the body of Chamberlain; that two other sons-in-law of Fischer were at his house then, they being Wallis Star and Fred Williams; that the occasion of their being at Fischer’s house was that one of Fischer’s sons had been away and hadn’t been in for a good while and came in that day and they had gathered at Fischer’s house on account of the return of this son; that from the place where he found Chamberlain’s body in the field straight through the pasture to Gus Fischer’s house is a mile or a little further; that the Fischer boys lived there with their father, Gus Fischer; that from the place where Chamberlain’s body lay through the Fischer pasture across to where the witness McMahan lived would have been something over a mile and to where Edgar Petty then lived- something like three-quarters of a mile.

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Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 1147, 81 Tex. Crim. 359, 1917 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-state-texcrimapp-1917.