Trimble v. State

104 S.W.2d 31, 132 Tex. Crim. 236, 1937 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1937
DocketNo. 18278
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 S.W.2d 31 (Trimble 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
Trimble v. State, 104 S.W.2d 31, 132 Tex. Crim. 236, 1937 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 193 (Tex. 1937).

Opinions

LATTIMORE, Judge.

— Conviction for murder; punishment, five years in the penitentiary.

This killing took place very early in the morning of November 27th. During the night preceding, appellant with one Opp [238]*238and several others had been engaged in driving out of what is called the Brown pasture and into that of deceased, some eighteen hundred head of sheep and goats belonging to deceased, which he was pasturing in said pasture theretofore leased by him from Opp. The written lease had expired September 1st, of the same year, but the evidence supports the conclusion that Opp had given to deceased a verbal renewal of same some time in September, which Opp was apparently seeking to override. By registered letter of date September 7, 1934, Opp notified deceased that his lease contract was cancelled and to vacate by November 1st. Deceased seems to have concluded that Opp had no right to peremptorily break the lease contract, and did not vacate.

Appellant was a special ranger located near Gladewater, Texas, and looking for employment. Gladewater is some four hundred miles from Menard, the county seat of Menard County. Opp lived in Menard County and is shown to have gone to Gladewater, to have seen appellant and hired him ostensibly,— and as claimed by appellant on this trial, — to detect and stop sheep stealing. It appears that appellant went at once to his home at Eden, Texas, and on the afternoon of September 26th went to Menard with Opp and others, and that with these and others, all apparently armed, the party proceeded to the pasture above referred to, a distance of some twenty miles from the town of Menard, and said party on horseback and in the night rounded up the sheep and goats mentioned and drove them through a bump gate into the pasture of deceased, upon the ■discovery of which the next morning deceased and his son, after trying to communicate by telephone with the sheriff of the ■county, and finding the telephone line not working, went to said bump gate where Opp, appellant and four or five other men were assembled, and at this place shortly thereafter a shooting took place in which appellant was wounded and deceased Tomlinson was killed.

We see no need for setting out at greater length the testimony except same be necessary in order to make clear some conclusion herein set forth. We are of opinion that on the facts shown the jury were justified in their verdict of guilty of the offense charged. Since in our opinion it becomes necessary to reverse this case for errors hereinafter discussed, we pass over alleged errors based on arguments of counsel and statements of State’s counsel claimed to be erroneous, — trusting that there will be no need for such complaints upon another trial, if one be had.

[239]*239We see no vice in allowing proof of what deceased told his son to do at or about the time they drove up to said bump gate and stopped their car. Appellant made no claim of any kind based on the proposition that he heard any part of said statement, or that what was said to or done by the son, after said statement, in any way affected or influenced him, appellant, or that whatever statement may have been made by deceased to his son could or did affect the jury in their consideration of appellant’s right to act, from the standpoint of the transaction as viewed by him, upon reasonable appearances of danger at the time, in the light of what appellant knew, saw or heard.

We find nothing in the record supporting any claim of a lawful or peaceable re-entry by Opp or this appellant, as an employee of Opp, upon the land theretofore leased by Opp to the deceased. There is no dispute in testimony of the fact that Opp had renewed his lease of said pasture to deceased, and that deceased was lawfully in possession of same on the night of this killing; nor do we find anything showing that Opp’s invasion of said pasture with an armed force on said night, and his surreptitious driving of the sheep and goats of deceased from said pasture, was either right or justifiable in law.

Appellant made no claim while a witness that he was employed by Opp for any other purpose than to do special ranger service in sheep theft cases, which job he said Opp told him would last that fall and through the following winter. He swore that Opp agreed to pay him for this service $150.00 per month for five or six months. Cross-examined while a witness, appellant swore that Opp must have driven around four hundred miles in order to employ him to work on sheep theft cases; and that he knew of no other reason why Opp should have driven this far to have employed him. Appellant said “Except he wanted some one to work on sheep theft cases.” He further testified: “I was expecting to receive one hundred and fifty dollars a month for working on these sheep theft cases. * * * When I got in the car that night I thought I was going to Menard County to work on sheep theft cases. * * * I did not tell Mr. Opp that I was employed to work on sheep theft cases, and that I was not employed to help him round up sheep.” Appellant also testified on direct examination that when deceased drove up to the bump gate mentioned, and demanded to know what they were doing there, he, appellant, told deceased he was an' officer of the law and had a right to be there. ■

• Complaint is made of the reception of testimony that at sottie' time on the night of the 26th of September, after 7 o’clock [240]*240P. M., and before 8 o’clock A. M. of the 27th, the telephone wire leading to the home of deceased was cut. We think the complaint without merit. It was shown that some ten miles out from the town of Menard a lane called Russell lane branched off from the Menard-McKavett road, and that up this lane a telephone line went which served only four houses, that of deceased being one of them. This line was used by a customer about 7 P. M. on the 26th and at such time connection was made with Menard. On the morning of the 27th deceased and his son tried to phone the sheriff at Menard but got no response. Another attempted use of the line by another party met the same result. Later it was discovered by representatives of the telephone company that at a point some sixty feet from where Russell lane left the McKavett road, the telephone wire was cut. It was freshly done, and car tracks were observed turning out from the road, and also human tracks were noted at the place where the cut was. It was in testimony that during the existence of said private line it had never been cut or broken before. A pair of wire cutters or pliers were found lying in one of the cars driven by appellant’s party on the night of the 26th up Russell lane. The State’s theory evidently was that appellant and those engaged with him in the enterprise of throwing goats and sheep out of the Brown pasture and into the pasture of deceased, cut the wire to prevent communication with officers and to enable them to accomplish their object in removing said livestock without interference. We regard the .evidence as admissible, but note that the charge of the court ■was excepted to for its failure to instruct the jury that such 'evidence should not be considered by the jury for any purpose in this case, unless they found from the testimony that such ■cutting was done by appellant or those acting with him in the xemoval of said stock. We are of opinion such charge should have been given.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.W.2d 31, 132 Tex. Crim. 236, 1937 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimble-v-state-texcrimapp-1937.