Wilson v. State

38 S.W. 610, 37 Tex. Crim. 64, 1897 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1897
DocketNo. 1182.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 610 (Wilson 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
Wilson v. State, 38 S.W. 610, 37 Tex. Crim. 64, 1897 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 16 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

HENDERSON, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and given ten years in the penitentiary, and prosecutes this appeal. We do not believe the court erred in overruling the motion for a continuance on account of the absence of the witness Young. Nor did the court err, as stated in appellant’s second bill of exceptions, in admitting the testimony of several witnesses to the effect that the de *66 fendant had previously owned the saloon in which the deceased (William Kay) was then doing business, and permitting his minor son to stay in said saloon. The theory of the defense as presented in the testimony of several witnesses was to the effect that defendant, on the Sunday evening on which the homicide occurred, had gone down to the deceased’s saloon for the purpose merely to get his son, Charley, away from the saloon, or that vicinity. It appears that his son was a minor, and defendant was opposed to his son being in the saloon, and his only intention in going there was to get him away from the saloon. In contravention of this theory, the State proved that some little time before the homicide the defendant, who had pursued his son to a butcher shop, adjoining said saloon, walked up and down the street in front of said saloon and butcher shop, using abusive language towards certain persons, whom he accused of robbing him, and now having his son in said saloon, ruining him. The State was permitted to show the fact that the defendant had previously owned that same saloon, and had his son in there with him frequently, assisting in attending to the saloon business. The explanation of the court to this bill is as follows: “None of the testimony, ref erred to in the bill of exceptions was offered by the State or admitted as original testimony against the defendant, but it was the contention of the defendant on the trial that his conduct at the time of the killing was influenced by the treatment by the deceased of his son, Charley, in keeping him in the saloon against the defendant’s consent, and thereby ruining him. And testimony to this effect, on cross-examination of the State’s witnesses, and by direct examination of the defendant’s witnesses, was drawn out by the defendant to sustain this theory. The State, in rebuttal, was allowed to ask these witnesses, and prove by them, that prior to the time the defendant first claimed that the deceased had robbed him in business, and which fact the State claimed was the real cause out of which the killing grew, that the defendant had run this saloon himself, and that his son was permitted to frequent said saloon for years, and that they had never heard the defendant object to his son staying around the saloon until after the time the defendant claimed that the deceased had robbed him; and this testimony was admitted as a circumstance for the jury to consider in connection with the defendant’s contention as above stated, and the evidence he introduced in support thereof. ' The testimony of each witness as the same appears in the record is here referred to and made a part of this bill of exceptions, in explanation and aid of the same, and with this explanation and qualification this bill is approved.” As thus explained by the court, we think the testimony was admissible.

On the trial the State was permitted to introduce the following testimony as shown by bill of exceptions No. 3: “The State asked the witness, Penninger, who was a witness for the defendant in this cause, on his cross-examination, the following questions: ‘(1) Q. Did you not see W. H. Frey in the town of Stephenville on the day that defendant *67 killed Kay, and at or near the northwest corner of the square, and about one hour after the killing? Ans. I did not see Frey on that day, as I remember of. (2) Q. And did you not have a conversation with him, and tell him all about the killing, and all you knew about it, and did you not talk to him about one hour concerning the difficulty? Ans. I had no such conversation, that I remember of. (3) Q. Did you not tell Frey in that conversation that you had been with the defendant all day, and that you knew it [meaning the difficulty] was going to come off, and that you knew there was going to be trouble, and that you left, to keep from seeing it? Ans. I had no such conversation with Frey. (4) Q. And did you not tell Frey that when it occurred you had started home, and was between the Crow Opera House and Mrs. Sarah Harrison’s hotel, and near the latter place? Ans. I did not. (5) Q. And is it not a fact that in relating the difficulty to Frey you failed to state anything at all about giving Kay a knife, and about hearing Kay say he was going out there, and call the defendant a white-hearted son-of-a-bitch? Ans. I did not state that, or anything else, to Frey, that I remember of.’ And the State afterwards, in rebuttal, placed the witness, W. H. Frey, upon the witness stand, and proved by him that he did see and talk with Penninger at the time and place inquired about of Penninger, and that he talked to him about one hour; that he related to him all the circumstances of the difficulty; that Penninger said to him (Frey) that he had been with the defendant that evening, and that he knew the thing [meaning the difficulty] was going to come off, and that there was going to be trouble, and that he left, to keej') fr°m seeing it, and that he was up near Mrs. Sarah Harrison’s hotel at the time it occurred. And the witness, Frey, further stated that in all of his conversation with Penninger, Penninger said nothing about having given the deceased a knife at the back end of the saloon just before the killing, and said nothing about the deceased having said that he (deceased) was going out there, and call the defendant a white-hearted son-of-a-bitch. To which questions asked the witness, Penninger, and their answers thereto, were objected to by the defendant at the time they were asked and answered, and to which testimony offered and given in evidence by the witness, Frey, to impeach the witness, Penninger, was objected to by the defendant at the time it was offered, upon the following grounds, to-wit: Because each of said questions' asked and answered by the witness, Penninger, and answered by the witness, Frey, in such a way as to contradict him were immaterial, irrelevant and collateral; were calculated to injure the rights of defendant, and were attempts to elicit from the witness, Penninger, his conclusion and opinion as to whether or not the difficulty was going to come off,- and such conclusion was collateral and irrelevant; and the State having, asked the witness, Penninger, about all the matters testified to by Frey, and Penninger having denied such statements, they being collateral matters, and only the opinion of the witness, Penninger, the State was bound,by his .answer, and the State could not impeach him by showing by Frey that he. had made *68 false statements about such matters of opinion, or about any statement that is immaterial and collateral. ” And the court overruled all of said objections, and admitted said testimony, to which ruling the defendant-excepted.” The same character of testimony is also presented in two other bills of exception. Said bills show that the witness, Penninger, was impeached by witnesses, Williamson and Dunn, upon the same point. As to a part of this testimony, appellant contends that it was an impeachment of the witness, Penninger, upon an opinion or conclusion of said witness that in his opinion (he having been with Wilson in the morning) the difficulty was going to come off.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 610, 37 Tex. Crim. 64, 1897 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-state-texcrimapp-1897.