Trijo v. State

74 S.W. 546, 45 Tex. Crim. 127, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 1903
DocketNo. 2459.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 74 S.W. 546 (Trijo 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
Trijo v. State, 74 S.W. 546, 45 Tex. Crim. 127, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 122 (Tex. 1903).

Opinion

DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree, the penalty assessed being life imprisonment in the penitentiary.

On the night of the killing the witness De la Rosa and deceased met in a saloon about midnight. After drinking beer, they had some conversation, which witness says was in a joking manner, while other of the eyewitnesses thought it presaged a. difficulty. The two went outside the saloon and deceased embraced, witness and remarked, “They [referring to the people in the saloon] think we are going to fight, but we are too good friends to do that;” that deceased asked the witness, “to go for a spin with him and get a drink of mescal at Celestina’s, who lives across the track.” Another witness, Rodriguez, a shoemaker, was with them. The three went up a street north, from the saloon across the track, and went to Celestina Aguilar’s house. Deceased knocked on the door, and the door was either opened for him or he opened it, and’ went inside the room. This witness heard talking inside the room, but did not distinguish what was said. A moment after deceased entered the room defendant came out and passed Rodriguez and witness, and went up the street west. Just after defendant left, deceased came to the door and told witness and Rodriguez they could go, as he intended to stay all night. Rodriguez and witness went down the street, east, until they reached the corner of a block, where [Rodriguez asked witness to wait a few moments while he went home and secured some money with which to buy the drinks. Witness waited awhile, and until Rodriguez returned. Just as Rodriguez rejoined him, a shot was heard in the direction of Celestina’s residence; and he said to Rodriguez, “Let’s go and *129 see what hag happened.” As he reached Celestina’s he heard the blow of a police whistle, and asked Celestina what had happened? And she replied “the shot was fired just outside of her window.” - This witness further testifies he saw some one running up the street west, and started after him, but, failing to overtake him, returned to the residence of Celestina; went around the corner of the house and found deceased lying on the ground, face up, dead; and remarked to Celestina, “It is Brondo” (deceased), and asked her what she was going to do about it. And she said, “Rotify the police.” This shot occurred, according to this witness, about an hour and a half after they "left Celestina’s and about 2:30 in the morning. A pistol was lying on the ground at the feet of deceased. On cross-examination he stated that when he went to the house to see who was shot, he lighted a match Celestina had handed him through the door. She did not come out. After defendant came out of the house and walked west, witness did not see him again. There is a window in the west side of the house, and a door in the south side. Deceased went in the door and defendant came out of the same door, and went straight west. The body was lying north and south, the head to the south, and the feet north immediately under the window. This witness testified that he did not know whether or not deceased had a pistol on the night in question. The testimony of Rodriguez is similar to that of the preceding witness. However, he did not see any match struck, as testified by De la Rosa, and did not go to the body of deceased with De la Rosa.

The physician testified in regard to post-mortem examination of deceased, stating that the shot which produced his death entered the back of the neck and came out of his chin and windpipe in front, the spinal column being broken. He says the bullet might have been a 38 or 44-caliber, and caused death instantly. " Celestina Aguilar states that she knew defendant and deceased; that defendant came to her house about 2 o’clock on the morning deceased was killed, and asked her to open the door, which she refused. He then forced his way into the house, grabbed and tried to stop witness, and for a little while was striking at witness. She caught him and held him, and heard two or three persons approaching the house. Deceased came to the door, knocked and said, “Celestina! Celestina!” and defendant did not want witness to answer, and was angry. She told him that her mouth was her own, and that she would answer. Deceased opened the door, came in and asked for a. drink of mescal. “Defendant raised the mosquito bar, and stood up.” She informed deceased she had no mescal, and defendant told deceased to get out of the room, in an angry voice; and deceased kept asking for mescal. Defendant then went to the door, stood, and' said to deceased, “You stay with the whore; she has her customers that visit her at night,” and then took his departure. Deceased remained in the room, asking for a drink. Witness begged him to leave, informing him that defendant was a very bad man; she knew him well, and that he *130 would return and do some injury. Deceased went to the door, and told some one outside to go away, that he was going to stay; and witness entreated deceased to leave also. Finally deceased concluded to leave, and went out of the door. Witness immediately shut and tied the door with a rope which defendant had cut. She was very sleepy, having been up two nights without sleep, and had come in on the train from Mexico, and immediately threw herself on the bed and went to sleep. She was aroused by a pistol shot near the window where her bed was situated. She got up from the bed, and saw defendant at the window. He remarkedjto her, “Hist, Celestina; be careful not to say that I did it.” Smoke was coming in through the shutters of the window. She did not see any arms about defendant. He had changed his coat.since he had left her house and before the shooting. Upon his making the remark to hey, he went away. Witness aroused her daughter, who began blowing the police whistle. After blowing the police whistle, witnesses De la Eosa and Eodriguez came to the house and asked what had happened, and witness informed them that defendant had fired a shot by her window, but did not know who he hit. Defendant lived several blocks west of witnesses’ house, and had been drinking that night at a dance at his (defendant’s) place. She denied lighting a match when De la Eosa came after the shot was fired. The window is in the west side of the house and was up. She denied dropping the pistol out of the window, and did not know that the pistol was there. Defendant had treated witness badly on several occasions, and she had made complaint against him during last December. He had assaulted her in March, and of this she had made no complaint. She had never had any trouble with deceased.

Brennan, city marshal of Laredo, testified : That he went to defendant’s house after the shooting and failed to find him; found an empty Winchester scabbard, and part of a box of 44-caliber cartridges; found, just outside the door of defend.anfs house, some of the same character of cartridges on the ground, and finger marks, as if some one" had dropped them and tried to pick them up; found an empty shell of same kind of cartridge in defendant’s house; also an empty shell near the body of deceased of the same kind, both of which empty shells he had with him at the time he was testifying. There was a dance that night at another house in defendant’s yard.

Defendant introduced some evidence showing the words occurring between himself and De la Eosa at the saloon were friendly and jocular. However, some of the witnesses seem to have gathered from this conversation that a fight was imminent. De la Eosa had on a blue checked jumper or blouse.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W. 546, 45 Tex. Crim. 127, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trijo-v-state-texcrimapp-1903.