Vann, Alias Vance v. State

77 S.W. 813, 45 Tex. Crim. 434, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 200
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1903
DocketNo. 2759.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 813 (Vann, Alias Vance 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
Vann, Alias Vance v. State, 77 S.W. 813, 45 Tex. Crim. 434, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 200 (Tex. 1903).

Opinions

DAVIDS OH, Presiding Judge.

Appellant (a hack driver) was convicted for the murder of A. J. Grimes (a policeman), and his punishment assessed at death. The statement of facts discloses that appellant had been arrested two or three times by deceased for violating the hack ordinance. By virtue of one of these arrests, under the writ of habeas corpus, this hack ordinance was declared void. These matters engendered some ill feeling between deceased and appellant; in fact the record discloses there seems to have been some feeling between the hack drivers on, one side and the policemen on the other. The killing occurred just on the edge of what is known as the Al Hayne Triangle, immediately west of the Texas & Pacific Railway depot. Along the street west of *438 said depot, two street railway tracks are laid. The city council of Fort Worth passed an ordinance prohibiting hack drivers, hotel runners, and kindred classes of people from taking their stand east of this streetcar track for the purpose of soliciting passengers who came in on the different railway trains. The theory of the State is that appellant took the stand within the prohibited circle and solicited passengers for his hack, and that deceased undertook to arrest him for this reason. This brought up the difficulty, in which the policeman lost his life. The theory of the defense is that appellant did not take his stand within the prohibited circle, and that deceased did not undertake to arrest him, but undertook to wreak his vengeance on appellant for real or imaginary insults offered him during the conversation immediately preceding the homicide. The testimony is very voluminous—unnecessarily so, and a great deal of it is but repetition. The witness Matkins, for the State, locates himself near the scene of the homicide, at about 6:45 o’clock a. m. He says appellant came driving around Main street toward the hack stand and turned in towards where himself and deceased were standing, and drove up within probably eight or ten feet of the sidewalk. Deceased remarked to appellant, “Jeff you are going to keep on running over there until you get another case filed against you.” Appellant began backing up to the line, and remarked to deceased, “File it; God damn you, file it.” By this time appellant had gotten his carriage backed out to the proper place, and deceased had walked probably fifteen or twenty steps down the sidewalk away from appellant; and appellant remarked, “You are nothing but a God-damned old jobber.” Deceased checked up a little, turned rather facing appellant, when appellant again remarked, “That is all you are; you are a God-damned old jobber; and if" you want anything out of me you can get it.” Deceased replied, “I will just place you under bond; I will place you under bond,” and started over to appellant’s hack. As he did so, - appellant, who was sitting on his hack, arose to a standing position on the boot 'of his hack, drew a glove off his right hand, and stood in that position until deceased walked up to -the side of his ‘carriage to the left. Deceased said to appellant, “Jeff, sign this bond.” As deceased approached appellant he took out a bond; that is, he took some papers from his pocket, three or four, maybe more, selected one, and placed the others back; and said, “Sign this bond.” Appellant looked down at him, and said “I will sign nothing, God damn you; I will sign nothing.” Deceased replied, “If you don’t sign the bond you will have to go with me,” and reached up and caught appellant on the pants “leg, just above the knee, and said, “Get off and come with me; yon will have to come with me.” At this remark, appellant reached down to the cushion of his carriage, picked up a pistol, and said, “Here is the way I will come down,” and fired at Grimes, who was standing right by the side of the wheel. Deceased dodged a little bit, and went back by the side of the hack, and as he did so, appellant fired again; and as he reached the rear end of the hack, *439 he and the deceased fired about the same time. The firing continued until deceased fell. According to this witness appellant drove across the street railway track toward the depot, and after crossing this he was on the prohibited territory, some twelve feet or more. Appellant drove over to meet passengers. At- the time of the shooting the head of appellant’s horses were on the street car line, west of the track, as was this witness —his team being" a little ahead of appellant’s hack. This street railway track designated by the city ordinances is what these witnesses called the “dead-line”—east of which the hacks were prohibited going; and parties were interdicted coming nearer the depot than that unless the passengers spoke to them; and if that occurred, the hackman had the right to go and get such passengers. Witness did not know whether appellant received a signal from any of the passengers or not; but was under the impression they paid no attention to him. There were quite a number of hacks along this “dead-line.” This fairly presents the State’s side of the case and the attending circumstances.

Battis testified for defendant, that at the time of the difficulty defendant’s horses were west of the street car track, standing facing east towards the depot, and appellant was on his hack. The first this witness noticed of the difficulty was when a train came in and some passengers came out from the depot. Appellant called to the passengers, and his team walked on the track; did not walk diagonally across the street but a little south from a straight line, and appellant brought up his team and went to backing them. As he did, deceased hallooed at him, “Better get back across that line.” Appellant said, “I am,” and laughed. Deceased made a remark to the effect if he did not stay across there he would arrest him. Appellant told him he had not been across the line; and there were some other words spoken, but the witness did not understand what was said. There was some noise and trains running and a street car passed also about that time. The next this witness noticed of deceased he was across the track right by the horses of appellant, close to the wheel of the hack; but he could not understand what either of them said. Deceased walked up by the side of appellant’s hack and grabbed him by the coat, near the hip. Appellant sorter twisted a little bit, and deceased hands slipped off appellant’s coat, and there was a shot fired. This witness could not see deceased after his hands slipped off appellant’s coat, on account of the carriage of hackman 'Brooks; but there was a shot fired from that side of the hack, and appellant got hi= pistol and fired immediately afterwards—getting his pistol from under what this witness terms the “dickey-seat” on the hack. “He [appellant] got that pistol immediately after the two shots I heard fired. There was not a great deal of difference between the two shots I heard fired; it was all done very quick. When the first shot was fired, appellant had nothing in his hands but his lines; but when that shot was fired appellant got his gun from under the dickey-seat. Grimes went towards the rear of the hack, and the firing continued until deceased was .shot down.” *440 This witness did not hear appellant say, “You are nothing but a Goddamned old jobber.”

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 813, 45 Tex. Crim. 434, 1903 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vann-alias-vance-v-state-texcrimapp-1903.