Wilganowski v. State

180 S.W. 692, 78 Tex. Crim. 328, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 272
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1915
DocketNo. 3830.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 692 (Wilganowski 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
Wilganowski v. State, 180 S.W. 692, 78 Tex. Crim. 328, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 272 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

HABPEB, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of the murder of her husband, and her punishment assessed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for life.

We will not take up the contentions of appellant in the order presented in the bills of exception and in the motion for a new trial, but instead in the order presented in the able and exhaustive brief filed by appellant’s counsel.

The first proposition, under the first three assignments, is that before a person can be convicted of a homicide the body of the person charged to have been killed, or portions thereof, must be sufficiently identified to establish the fact of the death of said person, which fact can not be *332 established by an extra-judicial confession alone. The second proposition is, before a conviction can be sustained in a homicide case, there must be sufficient evidence that the person alleged to have been killed came to his death by some criminal act or agency of another, an extrajudicial confession alone not being sufficient to establish this element of the corpus delicti. These propositions of law we do not understand the State contests, but admits the soundness of each of the propositions, the disagreement being as to whether the evidence adduced on the trial meets the measure of proof required to establish the corpus delicti, — that .is, (1) that a crime has been committed (the death of Edward "Wilganowski) by some criminal agency; and (2) that his death was caused by appellant and no other person. It may, and will be conceded, that the oral confession made to the sheriff, the admissibility of which is not contested by appellant, if sufficient, would prove that Edward Wilganowski is dead; that he was killed by appellant under such a state of facts as would render her act an unlawful one.. But, in law, as contended by appellant, these facts can not be established by her confession alone; there must be other evidence tending to show that Wilganowski is dead, and was killed by appellant under circumstances rendering the act criminal. But under all the authorities, of this day and time, such proof may be made by circumstantial evidence as well as by positive proof. Outside of the confession, of appellant, there is no direct positive proof that Wilganowski is dead, or that if dead, appellant killed him. To make this proof the State relied upon circumstantial evidence, and the sufficiency of this proof is what, in the last analysis, appellant contests. Now, ignoring both the oral and written confession, what’ would the evidence show? Appellant and Edward Wilganowski were husband and wife, and lived together alone in Marlin, Texas. It was the custom of both to attend the Catholic church on Sunday. The alleged deceased person failed to attend church two Sundays in succession, when his sons, by another wife, approached appellant at the church and asked her where théir father was, and she told them he had gone to Fort Worth to visit a daughter residing there. During the several conversations had she described particularly how he was dressed, and stated that he had carried $600 with him. A son of deceased went to' Fort Worth and learned that his father had not been to visit his daughter, and upon the return of this son to Marlin appellant suggested he must have been killed by a hack driver in Fort Worth for his money. This son finding the shoes appellant said deceased had worn to Fort Worth in the house at Marlin, it aroused his suspicion. Appellant then said she was mistaken, that deceased had purchased a pair of new shoes and had worn them on the trip to Fort Worth. Upon further investigation a trunk belonging to deceased was found in the possession of a son of appellant (by a former marriage) in Bryan, and at this place was found the suit of clothes appellant had stated was worn by deceased to Fort Worth. This son, a daughter and appellant were all arrested after the clothing was found and placed in jail in Marlin. While they were in jail a search was made of the *333 premises occupied by appellant, and sewed up in one pin cushion was found something over seven hundred and fifty dollars. There is in the record (outside of the confession) no evidence of how appellant came into possession of the money and why she sewed it up in a pin cushion. .There was also found sewed up in another pin cushion the watch chain and pendant cross worn by deceased in his lifetime, and the cuff buttons usually worn by him. In an old well near the house was found bones, which the experts testify are human bones, and also in this well was found a watch badly burned, and the metal parts of •a poeketbook. As to this watch found in the well with these human bones, a son-in-law of appellant, J. J. Blaskey, identified positively the watch found in the old well as the watch given by him to deceased. He says he recognized it by the crown and by the engraving on the .side — then going into details on cross-examination. The metal clasps of a poeketbook, found also in the well, were identified by "the son of appellant as belonging to appellant. This identification is weakened on cross-examination by the witnesses admitting there might be other pocketbooks like the one found, but they aré positive their father had one like it. Human bones are also found in a post hole not a great distance from the old well. Witnesses testify to seeing a fire in the yard of appellant and deceased in the night-time about the date of the disappearance of the deceased, and the watch, poeketbook and bones all bear evidence that they had been in a fire. There are other circumstances in evidence, but we do not deem it necessary to detail them.

Appellant relies principally on the cases of Follis v. State, 51 Texas Crim. Rep., 186, and Gay v. State, 42 Texas Crim. Rep., 450, as sustaining his contention that the above detailed facts and circumstances -are not sufficient, in connection with the confession, to establish the corpus delicti. In the Gay ease the evidence was held to be insufficient as nothing was shown except that Lindemann could not be found, and that only charred 'bones and some hair were found. Lindemann was shown to have light hair, sprinkled over with gray hair. In the hair found none of the strands were gray, and the court holds this excluded the idea that this was Lindemann’s hair. Nothing was found that could be or was identified as belonging to Lindemann, and in the absence of some showing that the remains were those of Lindemann, the court held that it was not established that it was Lindemann’s body. In that case there was no confession to aid in establishing the corpus delicti as there is in this case, and that case is no authority to support the contention that the evidence in this casé would not sustain the verdict.

In the Follis case, supra, there was a confession, and the testimony of an accomplice. It was held this would be sufficient to sustain the corpus delicti if the accomplice had identified the remains of the deceased, but this the court says his testimony wholly failed to do, but it does say the accomplice testified the decomposed corpse had on shoes with 'eyelets similar to those worn by McDonald. The court says this would be rather meager testimony upon which to base a finding, as *334 would the testimony in this case if we only had the clasp of the pocketbook, which it may be admitted the evidence only shows that deceased had one like it. But in addition to such evidence, we have in this record the positive testimony of J. J.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 692, 78 Tex. Crim. 328, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilganowski-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.