Walker v. State

42 Tex. 360
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 42 Tex. 360 (Walker 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
Walker v. State, 42 Tex. 360 (Tex. 1874).

Opinion

Roberts, C. J.

The appellant was indicted for the murder of Green Butler in the county of Galveston, tried, convicted of murder in the first degree, and adjudged to be hanged, as the penalty awarded.

We are of opinion that there are several material errors in the proceedings upon the trial, for which the judgment must he reversed.

One of the highest and safest securities in the preservation of rights is a substantial adherence to the rules of law prescribed for the judicial proceedings in ascertaining and adjudging the legal consequences of their infraction. Whatever may be the facts exhibited on the trial of a criminal cause, if the rules of proceeding that have been adopted as necessary to elicit and establish the truth of the issue, are broken down and disregarded, there is no reliable certainty in the result. Hence, without considering what, in our opinion, should have been the verdict upon the facts, as presented in the record, it is necessary to see how far such verdict might have been tainted, by the infusion into its formation of errors of law, to the prejudice of the defendant.

Our Code requires that in every case of felony the judge shall, whether asked to do so or not, “deliver to the jury a “ written charge, in which he shall distinctly set forth the law “ applicable to the case; but he shall not express any opinion “ as to the weight of evidence, nor shall he sum up the testi“mony.” (Paschal’s Digest, Article 3059.) It further provides that new trials shall be granted in cases of felony, “ where the Court has misdirected the jury as to the law, or “ has committed any other material error calculated to injure [368]*368“ the rights of the defendant.” (Paschal’s Digest, Article 3137.)

The charge of the court in this case develops the principles of the law of homicide, from murder in the first degree down to justifiable homicide, with all of the intermediate degrees, so that the charge itself does not indicate with any certainty what was the character of the transaction under investigation. This superfluity might be, and often is, harmless, where it appeared evident that it was not calculated to mislead, or prejudicially confuse the minds of the jury in the discharge of their duty. But where the court misdirects the jury as to the law relating to the material facts which are involved in the transaction, as shown by the evidence, then such error enters into the verdict as one of the elements of its production.

Without any critical examination of the numerous irrelevant charges, and of the injurious effects they may have been c.tlculated to produce, it will suffice to notice those erroneous charges that applied directly to the facts of the case.

And in order to appreciate their full force, it maybe proper to state, in advance, that the evidence showed without any dispute or doubt that Green Butler was shot and killed in 1ns Own yard by some person, the act being planned beforehand and deliberately performed without any known justification, excuse, dr palliation—a plain case of assassination—and the only fact in dispute as exhibited in the evidence was, whether or not Andrew J. Walker was the man who shot him. The State assumed by the charge in the indictment that he was the man. He, by his plea of not guilty, said he was not. The affirmation of the issue and the burden of the proof of that' fact was on the State.

The dying declarations of Butler identified Walker as the man, to rebut which evidence was adduced tending to show, and for the purpose of showing, that he was somewhere else and not at Butler’s at the time of the killing.

In reference to the issue thus presented by the evidence, the court instructed the jury as to the rules of law under which [369]*369dying declarations were admissible, as specified in the Code, and added thereto, that “ if the statements made by the de- “ ceased were made in conformity with these rules of law, then “ it is competent testimony, and worthy of the same credit as “ other evidence.” In the same connection he charged them that an alibi is a species of defense sometimes relied upon in “ criminal cases, and when an accused relies upon it, the affirm- “ ative of the issue rests with him ; it becomes incumbent upon “ him to maintain it to the satisfaction of the jury, if he would “ enjoy its benefits. It is impossible to convict an accused if “ he was at the time in another and different place than the one “ charged in the indictment. The burden of proving that he “ was elsewhere is cast upon him. If the defendant has adduced “ evidence to the entire satisfaction of the jury, that on the night the murder is charged to have been committed, that he was at “ so great a distance therefrom, or the time was such as to make “it impossible for him to have committed the offense, then the “ defendant must be acquitted. This is a fact for the jury to “ decide from all the testimony elicited in the cause.”

This charge was well calculated to convey the idea to the jury that the case of the State was made out by the dying declarations “ worthy of the same credit as other evidence,” subject to being defeated alone by the defendant proving, beyond a reasonable doubt, or to a moral certainty, or “ to their “ entire satisfaction,” that it was not possible for Walker to have been at Butler’s when he was killed. It makes an alibi a defense in the nature of a plea of confession and avoidance in a civil suit; whereas it is not a defense at all in any other sense than as rebutting evidence tending to disprove the fact alleged in the indictment, that Walker killed Butler, the burden of proving which allegation rests on the State throughout the whole trial, and cannot be changed, so far as the action of the jury upon the evidence is concerned, by anything short of an admission upon the record, if such a thing would under any circumstances be a proper proceeding. For notwithstanding the failure of a plea of autrefois convict, the law does not de[370]*370bar a trial on the plea of not guilty. The obvious error in the charge consists in furnishing the jury with an artificial rule as to the degree in the strength of their conviction (and that the highest possible degree), concerning the proof of the alibi, before it should be allowed to have any influence on their minds in disproving the fact that Walker was the person who shot and killed Butler; whereas the rule of law is that such evidence of an alibi should only be of such weight as to produce upon the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt of the fact affirmed by the State, that Walker was the man who shot Butler. Such a doubt might arise in their minds by the evidence tending to prove the alibi before they had arrived at a moral certainty as to the truth of the alibi, and if so, that would be sufficient to render the evidence available to rebut the affirmative evidence for the State, without their minds ever having arrived at a conviction, to the degree of a moral certainty, as to the truth of the alibi.

For the purpose of correcting the error of this charge, the defendant’s counsel asked the court to charge the jury, that if from the evidence adduced in this cause, there arises in your minds a reasonable belief that the accused was else- where than at the place of the homicide, at the time of its “ commission, then you should acquit him.” The refusal of the judge to give this charge shows clearly that in his opinion a reasonable belief was not a sufficient degree of conviction of the truth of the

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Bluebook (online)
42 Tex. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-state-tex-1874.