Thompson v. State

163 S.W. 973, 72 Tex. Crim. 659, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1914
DocketNo. 2718.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 973 (Thompson 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
Thompson v. State, 163 S.W. 973, 72 Tex. Crim. 659, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 73 (Tex. 1914).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was found guilty of murder, and his punishment assessed at death.

Appellant was charged with the murder of Norman Reeves. Reeves *661 was at the home of appellant on Saturday afternoon, appellant, his father, sister and some others being present. The testimony would indicate that Reeves was drinking, and it is claimed he sought to have intercourse with appellant’s sister, to which she objected, and left home to go and get an officer. The testimony would further show that appellant was present in the home at the time, and heard and saw all that took place; however, his sister says that while appellant was in the adjoining room playing dominoes, she does not know whether he heard her holler, or heard deceased talk or saw his actions or not. But when she places her brother, herself and deceased in the position she does, it seems incredible to anyone that appellant could not and did not know what was taking place, while the State’s witnesses would have him not only hearing and seeing all that was said and done, but making remarks about the matter, yet he permits deceased to quietly leave the house, he following after him shortly. Then just before dark he is seen talking to deceased; while some time that night deceased is murdered. They trace tracks from the body of deceased, found in a dugout or ditch, in the direction of Lucy Thomas’ house, and appellant is shown to have appeared at her house between eight and nine o’clock at night, and she testifies that appellant told her that he and Commie Lloyd had a fight with deceased, and had robbed him of his ring, purse, money and a handkerchief. When appellant was arrested a purse was found on his person that Charlie Reeves and Mrs. Reeves (father and mother of deceased) positively identify as the purse of the murdered man, Mrs. Reeves telling of circumstances of it getting real wet and drying it, whereby she could identify it. It is true that the mother and sister of appellant say the pocket-book found on appellant is their mother’s, yet the justice of the peace says that at the time of the examining trial he showed this pocket-book to appellant’s mother, and while she at first claimed it as hers, yet when questioned she admitted that her pocketbook was not sewed like this one, and was not torn as this one was, and that it was not her pocket-book. It was further shown by the State that appellant in the afternoon played pool in a hall in Mineola, and when he got through did not have enough money to pay the fees he was owing, but came back in that night and took a five dollar bill out of a purse and paid his bill, and took the change, placing it back in his purse, and said, “he had as much money as a Jew.” Deceased is shown, when he left home, to have had between $40 and $50, yet when found he had no money and his large pocket-book was missing. Two other witnesses testify that appellant admitted to them, or in their presence, that he killed deceased. So the contention of the State was that appellant killed deceased to rob him, while the defendant’s theory is, if appellant killed him, it was on account of the insults to his sister hereinbefore recited.

One of the complaints is that the court erred in not giving appellant’s special charge requested on circumstantial evidence. Inasmuch as Lucy Thomas, Mamie Thompson and Alice Briscoe all testified that appellant *662 admitted to them he struck the blow that killed deceased, there was no error in refusing the special charge. Branch’s Crim. Law., sec. 203.

The first four grounds in the motion for a new trial complain that the evidence, and all the evidence, would not justify a finding nor support a verdict of murder in the first degree. Of course, if we should take appellant’s theory, that he killed deceased because of insults to his sister, this perhaps would be true, yet if appellant heard the insulting remarks and witnessed the conduct of deceased, and made no effort to restrain him or kill deceased at that time; let him leave, and then follow along behind him, and after dark take an iron rod or bolt and strike him in the back of the head, and then rob him of his money, this state of facts, instead of presenting manslaughter, would be most cogent circumstances to show a premeditated killing for the purpose of robbery. However, the State was not bound to accept the theory of appellant, and it offered strong and cogent proof that the killing was not on account of any insult to his sister, but for the purpose of robbery, and at the time this case was tried if the killing took place under circumstances showing that it was done in perpetrating robbery, it, in law, would be murder of the first degree. (Article 1141, Penal Code.) The evidence for the State further shows that deceased that day had between $40 and $50 on his person and in his pocket-book; this pocket-book was found in possession of appellant after the murder; he was shown to have no money in the afternoon, while later in the night of that day he is shown to have a five dollar bill, and when he got it changed in Monroe Ellis’ pool hall said: “I have got money in m'y hip pocket like a Jew.” Lucy Thomas testified that appellant admitted to her that he and Commie Lloyd had had a fight with deceased, struck him with a piece of iron, and had taken off of him his money and ring, handkerchief, etc. All these things were missing from deceased when found, and he had been murdered by blows from some kind of instrument, one in the back of the head and one on the side of his head, the skull being crushed from both blows. This evidence if believed by the jury certainly supports the verdict in this case.

The next ground in the motion is that the court “erred in not affirmatively charging the jury that the insulting words and conduct of deceased towards appellant’s sister was an adequate cause.” The court did so instruct the jury. Paragraph 19 reads: “The following is deemed an adequate cause: insulting words or conduct of the person killed toward a female relation of the party guilty of the homicide.” This is all of paragraph 19, and we find in it no such language as stated in appellant’s motion for a new trial. The court does not use the words “could be” but instructs them this is adequate cause, ancj the charge is in the language of section 4 of article 1132, Penal Code.

The only other complaint of the charge on manslaughter reads as follows: “Because the court erred in his charge on manslaughter in the twentieth, twenty-first and twenty-second paragraphs thereof, for the reason all the testimony showed that defendant, if he committed the kill *663 ing, did so immediately after the deceased left his house and after he had insulted his sister and attempted to ravish her, and that he committed such killing as soon as he could get to the deceased, and the charge of the court to the effect that the killing could not be reduced to manslaughter unless the killing occurred as soon as he saw the deceased or as soon as he learned and heard of the insults and attempted rape on his said sister.” In the first place we will say that the evidence does not show that “he committed the killing as soon as he could get to the deceased.” The evidence offered by the State, if true, conclusively showed that appellant was present and heard and saw all that was said and what took place, and while deceased was in the room with him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 973, 72 Tex. Crim. 659, 1914 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-state-texcrimapp-1914.