Warren v. State

149 S.W. 130, 67 Tex. Crim. 273, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 421
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 1912
DocketNo. 1387.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 130 (Warren 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
Warren v. State, 149 S.W. 130, 67 Tex. Crim. 273, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 421 (Tex. 1912).

Opinions

PRENDERGAST, Judge.

The appellant was indicted as an accomplice to forgery, convicted and his penalty fixed at three years in the penitentiary.

The indictment charges that on or about December 10, 1910, one Dona Saulter forged her father, D. T. Hurley’s, name to a check on the Hamilton Bank and Trust Company for twenty-three dollars, and in proper language further that before this forgery, appellant advised, commanded -and encouraged her to commit the forgery, he not being personally present when the forgery was committed.

The State introduced the forger, Dona Saulter, who testified fully, *275 and, so far as her ■ testimony could do so, made out the offense completely against the appellant. It is unnecessary to give her evidence in detail: We will give only such a statement of it as to aid in making clear the points raised and decided.

The evidence shows that Dona Saulter was a young girl about nineteen years old when the offense is charged to have been com- • mitted; that she lived with her father in the country in Comanche County near the town of Gustine; that in the latter part of the summer and fall of that year, 1910, the appellant was running a tailor shop at said little town of Gustine, cleaning and pressing. Some two or three weeks before this forgery he sold out his business at Gustine, stating that he was going elsewhere and locate in the same business. Dona Saulter’s father’s name was D. T. Hurley. She was married to Perry. Saulter October 30, 1910, but lived with him a very short time, then separated from him. Appellant went with her off and on, all along during the summer and fall of 1910, and until certain blank checks were taken by her out of the back of her father’s check book as hereinafter stated.

Dona Saulter, among other things, testified that somewhere from about the middle to the latter part of November, 1910, the appellant talked to her at her home. He asked her if her father had a cheek book, and when she told him he did, appellant then told her to tear some checks—four or five—out of the back of the check book, make out the checks for small amounts so as to arouse no suspicion, make them payable to herself and sign her father’s name thereto; that he explained to her that the purpose of this was that he did not have any money and this was to raise money so that he and she could leave there together; that they intended to leave there whether they got the money on these checks or not; that upon his advice and at his request she went into her mother’s trunk, got her father’s check book out and tore out of the back five blank checks; that soon afterwards, or about that time, she went from her father’s home near Gustine to Comanche, in Comanche County, to one of her married sister’s home, she having two there at that time, and took- these blank checks in her suitcase with her; that she had an understanding with appellant that he would come up to Comanche after she got the checks, which he did. That she went to Comanche on Wednesday before she forged the checks on the following Saturday. Before going to Comanche she had an understanding with appellant that he would come on the following Monday; that instead, he came on Friday after she went there on Wednesday and phoned her about noon on Friday that he was there, made an engagement with her for her to come down in town and meet him at Cunningham’s store that evening. It seems that her sister, where she was stopping, lived out in the edge of the town of Comanche; that on that Friday evening, in accordance with her agreement with appellant, she met him at Cunningham’s store in Comanche, had some little talk with him, but *276 not about the details of her forging the checks; that they separated, after making an agreement to meet elsewhere in the edge of the town Which they did, where he met her with a buggy and took her out about a mile to a private place in the country; that they then and there talked the details of the forgery over and how to get the money thereon. It seems they had two or three such conferences in which he instructed her to draw the checks as he had before told her, in small amounts, ranging from about twenty-five dollars down to ten dollars, sign her father’s name to them, payable to herself and make some of the checks for some odd cents as well as for dollars. His statement to her at the time for doing this was that nobody would then suspicion anything. He then detailed to her to what stores to take the checks and how to negotiate them, to buy a small bill of goods at each place, tender the check in payment and get the balance in money, and as soon as she got the money and the goods to take them and meet him at a certain place; that while she was negotiating these checks and getting the goods and money thereon he would be around in the town where he could watch after her, and if she got into any trouble he would come to her relief. She says he did stay around in the town, and while he' was not with her, nor where she was that in going from store to store when she negotiated the checks and got .the money and goods, she saw him on or across the street from' her a few times. That after all the preliminaries were arranged by her she went back to her sister’s-and stayed Friday night; that on Saturday morning, December 10, 1910, while she was alone at her sister’s she filled out the five blank checks, all payable to herself and signed her father’s name thereto. One of the checks was for $23, another for $17.40, another for $10, another for $15, and the other for $25.50. She also testified that in the conferences with her while he was instructing her how to draw the checks and to whom and when to negotiate them, she was to take them to the respective stores as he had instructed her to do, in Comanche late Saturday evening after the banks had all closed; that she carried out, in detail, all that he had instructed and directed that she should do; that Saturday evening she took these respective checks, went into the said respective stores, bought small bills of goods, tendered the checks in payment, got the balance in. cash; that she did this right straight along, it taking about thirty minutes from the time she went into the first until she had concluded with the fifth of the stores; that she at once gathered up the goods she had thus procured, met him where he was with the buggy, as agreed; that he took the goods from her, put them in the buggy, she and he then got in and drove off to the country. What became of the goods thereafter is not stated. He took charge of the goods, however, so that she would not have to take them to her sister’s and raise the suspicion of her sister by having) at one time, so much goods; that she gave to him not only the goods, but $20 of the money she had thus received. That it was *277

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 130, 67 Tex. Crim. 273, 1912 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-state-texcrimapp-1912.