Toussaint v. State

244 S.W. 514, 92 Tex. Crim. 374, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 482
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 1922
DocketNo. 6625.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 514 (Toussaint 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
Toussaint v. State, 244 S.W. 514, 92 Tex. Crim. 374, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 482 (Tex. 1922).

Opinion

MORROW, Presiding Judge.

— The judgment condemns appellant to suffer death for the offense of murder.

The deceased and appellant were father and son. They were partners in business and lived together in the same bachelor’s quarters.

Appellant, who was thirty-three years of age, formed the design to kill his father and purchased a pistol for that purpose. The father went in his automobile to spend the evening at the home of a neighbor, and while there, appellant secretly disconnected and removed some of the wiring in the automobile to prevent its use, secreted himself so that when his father would walk home, he might be intercepted and killed. This appellant did, shooting deceased with a pistol, after-wards rifling his pockets and taking therefrom a watch. He hid the watch and pistol, went to his home and spent the night, and pro *376 ceeded with the conduct of his business affairs on the next day. He first disclaimed any knowledge of the assassination, but later admitted that it was his act, describing in detail his manner of doing it, disclosed the locality of the hidden weapon and watch, and gave as a reason for the homicide that his father’s peculiar ways thwarted his ambition; that he believed the responsibility for his mother’s death rested upon his father; that the deceased had threatened to disinherit him and demanded that he give up his wife; that he had complied with the demands, but felt that he was wronged and that the accumulated property would go to his brother, and due to the acts of his father, he determined to dispose of him. The State introduced a number of witness who testified to facts corroborative of the confession.

Insanity was relied upon as a defense. In the preliminary statement, counsel for the appellant reviewed his life from infancy, averring that he was born in the slums of the city of Washington, and came as an unwelcome visitor; that reared in such surroundings his childhood was sad and melancholy and his habits secluded; that in early manhood he had done many extraordinary things such as ■jumping into the Potomac River from a bridge seventy-five feet high, having his hands and feet tied; that he worked his way through school, acquiring a university education and took a post-graduate course in Harvard University as a civil engineer; that he traveled much pursuing his profession in various local ties; that he was at the time of the offense permanently insane and would remain so the balance of his life; that his insanity was hereditary, and that those affected with his form of malady would often kill. A number of witnesses were introduced upon this issue both by the State and the appellant. Some of them were experts and some not experts. It would be profitless to quote their testimony or discuss it in detail. Suffice it to say that upon the issue of insanity there was a radical conflict such as would have justified a solution either for or against the appellant. It presented a purely jury question and reveals nothing that would warrant a disturbance by this court of the finding in favor of the State. Appellant founded his motion for new trial in' part upon newly discovered evidence. Several non-expert witnesses residing in Wichita Palls were named in the motion, and- in addition thereto, the affidavit of .Dr. George P. Powell was appended. In this affidavit, after detailing the incidents of his examination of appellant, he said:

“The one outstanding feature of his case is his failure to comprehend the enormity of his act, or that he has violated any law of the State, society or God. He, seemingly, does' not understand why he should be convicted or be made to suffer any punishment of any kind on account of his father’s death, which he thinks was a laudable act.
Prom the foregoing I do not believe him to be a normal or sane man, or wholly mentally responsible for his acts. It is a form of mental *377 disorder known as paranoia. It is hereditary in most cases, and is incurable.”

Some six months intervened between the filing of the indictment and the trial of the ease. Appellant and his father had been residents of the city of Wichita Falls for several years immediately preceding the tragedy, and their business activities brought them in touch with many people of the city. While the attorneys representing the appellant were appointed by the court without funds, save that which they individually advanced, the record reveals that their diligence brought to the trial many witnesses both in person and by deposition, the only non-resident witness named in the motion for new trial being Doctor Powell, a physician of distinction and head of one of the State institutions situated in a neighboring city. His reputation in mental disorders was not unknown. The non-expert witnesses would have testified, in the main, to trivial acts upon the part of appellant upon which they predicated their opinion of his want of sanity. Viewed in the light of the precedents which control this court in reviewing the action of the trial court in overruling the motion for new trial, and taking into account that there is some laxity in eases where the defense is insanity, we are constrained to believe that in overruling the motion for new trial upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, the trial court did not abuse its discretion. Particularly is this true as no effort was made, as shown by the record, to procure a postponement of the trial in order to make better preparation for it. It is manifest from the record that Doctor Powell’s testimony, had it been sought, might have been available at the trial. The record impresses us that the parties in charge of the defense were not ignorant of the fact that Doctor Powell could be induced to make the examination, and that if favorable to the appellant, it would be of value to him upon the issue of insanity.

There was, in our opinion, no error in the court’s refusing to permit the appellant’s attorneys to open and conclude the argument.

The statute, Article 724, Code of Criminal Procedure accords to the State’s counsel the privilege of opening and concluding the argument in a criminal case tried on the issue of not guilty, and Article 1020, Code of Criminal Procedure, giving to the accused such right does not relate to a trial where the issue of guilt or innocence is involved, but only to a trial of the issue of insanity after verdict of guilty.

In submitting to the jury the issue of insanity, the court adopted the language embraced in appellant’s Special Charge No. 1, and having done so, the refusal of appellant’s Special Charge No. 2, on the same subject was proper.

Separation, prohibited conversations, and misconduct of the jury are charged in the motion for new trial, also that a prejudiced juror sat in the case after claiming on his void dire that he was impartial. The officer who had charge of the jury, describing his experiences *378 with the jurors after they were impaneled and sworn, related in substance that two members of the jury had stepped out of the window on to the fire-escape and engaged in conversation, on several occasions, with two women who were prisoners.

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 514, 92 Tex. Crim. 374, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toussaint-v-state-texcrimapp-1922.