Tuberville v. State

4 Tex. 64
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Tex. 64 (Tuberville v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuberville v. State, 4 Tex. 64 (Tex. 1849).

Opinion

Lipscomb, J.

The appellant was indicted for the crime of incest with his •own daughter, and foijnd guilty. He appealed to this court, and asks a reversal of the judgment—

1st. Because (iie court belo'w erred in overrulingdiis motion for a new trial.

2(1. The court, erred in tile charge to the jury.

The charge contained in the indictment was so shocking to the moral sense ■of every civilized being, so degrading and humiliating to human nature, reducing man from his boastful superiority of a moral, rational being to a level with the brutal creation, that our pride and respect for our species would not allow us to believe it possible to have been committed in tiiis age and country, unless constrained to yield conviction on the most indisputable proof. Is the proof in this case of that character? In considering the whole structure of the evidence of the. witness, I must unhesitatingly say that it is not; that it does not afford the slightest legal proof that our country lias been degraded by tlie commission of so loathsome, so lieartsickeiiing an offense In onr midst. The language supposed to have been evidence of the offense by no rule of construction known either to the jurist, or to the common-sense use of words could sustain the charge. First, the improbability that this witness heard enough to disclose truly the subject of tlie conversation. If it related to the cause of the difficulty between tlie accused and his wife, it may have referred to a different charge. It might have referred to efforts on the part of the accused to prejudice his daughter against her mother and induce her to believe that the mother, and net the father, was to blame in the difficulty that had disturbed the harmony of tlie family. A single word not heard by the witness might materially have changed what he understood to be tlie purport of what he had heard. Suppose it had been, “You have stated that I have been talking with [66]*66Sarah.” The witness not hearing the word “talking,” it would then have fallen on his ears as “I have been with Sarah,” when in truth the eonver-■sation may have related to talking with Sarah. Again, if witness hoard the words in proper connection, they may have referred to another pereou of whom the wife may have, been jealous, and.may have supposed that with such person the husband had been guilty of acts of infidelity to his marital obligations. It may, and probably did, refer to another Sarah. It is, however, useless to speculate on what was meant by' the words testified to as passing lie,tween the husband and wife. Whether taken in mitiori sensu or in (heir ordinary acceptation as used- in common parlance, they never could convey an imputation of the offense charged.

It is said, however, that although there may' not have been any legal evidence to sustain the. verdict of the jury, yet an appeal will not be entertained in this court from such a refusal to grant a new trial, for tile want of jurisdiction. Whether the decision of a judge on a motion for a new trial can he revised in an appellate court or not is a’question that has been variously decided. In some States it is considered as entirely addressed to the discretion of the judge, and that it is not competent for an appellate court to revise his decision, whether that discretion has been wisely exercised or not. Such is the rule in the Supreme Court of the United States, the same in the State of Alabama. It was so ruled in the last Stale, not long after the organization of the Supreme Court, in a criminal case; hut its application has been to all cases, civil and criminal. The opinion of the court was expressly placed on the authority of the Supreme Court of the United States. (Phleming v. The State, Minor R., 43.) See Spence v. Tuggle, (10 Ala. R., 538.) by which it will he seen that the same doctrine is still liekl in the Supreme Court of that State. In Virginia a different rule, prevails, sustained by along train of decisions, from Washington’s Reports down to'the present time. The. same doctrine is found to prevail in Tennessee — and the decisions of the.court of original jurisdiction have been again and again revised — and is not questioned. (Keller v. Bevans, Cook R., 89; Rayburn, Adm’r Harbour, 7 Yerg. R., 432; Pawley v. McGunpsey, Id., 502; Hawkins v. Carrol, Id., 505.) Same rule prevails in Kentucky. (Bagby v. Lewis, 2 Mon. R., 77, 78.) It will ho seen that in New York a motion for a new trial is made in the Supreme Court; and it is there decided on • a view of the evidence. They were decided in King’s Bench by a reference to the evidence at nisi prius.

In South Carolina it is the constant practice of the appellate court to decide a motion for a new trial on an examination of the evidence; and it is a matter of right to ask a revision of the testimony on which the jury found the verdict. In tliis country it lias been the, uniform practice of the. Supreme Court, from its organization after the Revolution, to revise, the testimony on which the verdict was found, and for a long time to do so whether a motion for a new trial liad been made in the court below or not. This was modified; and the court now refuse to do so unless a motion was made in the court a quo and overruled. (Foster & Foster v. Smith, 1 Tex. R., 70.)

I have so far discussed the doctrine on the subject of revising a decision of the judge in refusing to grant a new trial, without any regard to the distinction supposed to exist between civil and criminal eases; ’and I think it may safely be concluded that at this day by far the greater number of the appellate courts oí the different States do exercise jurisdiction on the subject in some mode or other. In England it was not considered a matter of right to claim that the question whether the evidence supported the verdict should he referred ; hut if the judge at nisi prius thought, proper, and did reserve the question, the judges passed upon the evidence and awarded a venire de novo or not, according to their opinion of the evidence ; and this both in civil and criminal eases. In South Carolina any person dissatisfied with the evidence on which a verdict was found against him, whether in a civil or criminal ease, could have it referred to the Supreme Court; and if, in the opinion of the Supreme [67]*67Court, the verdict was not supported by the evidence, a new trial was granted. In the case of the. State v. Anderson, (2 Bail. R., 565.) Judge Johnson, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court on a motion for a new trial, laj\s down the same rules that would govern the court on application for a new trial in a civil ease; in fact, he refers to several cases of that character. lie says that, “where the judge is not. satisfi-d with the finding of the jury, it is very seldom a new trial is refused.” The offense charged in that ease, was capital, and the jury had found the accused guilty. One of the.grounds assigned for error was that the verdict of the jury was contrary to evidence and to the opinion of the judge; and it was on this assignment the motion was granted and a new trial awarded. Many eases might'bo cited to show that no'distinction is made, on a motion fora new trial, between civil and criminal cases. In the. ease of The State v. Fisher, (2 N. & McC. R., 261.) it is said that unless a verdict is clearly and manifestly against evidence or wholly without evidence, the court will not set it aside on'thiit ground. In The State v. Kane, (1 McC.

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Related

Taylor v. Murphy
50 Tex. 291 (Texas Supreme Court, 1878)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Tex. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuberville-v-state-tex-1849.