Wimberly v. State

250 S.W. 691, 94 Tex. Crim. 252, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1923
DocketNo. 7284.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 691 (Wimberly 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
Wimberly v. State, 250 S.W. 691, 94 Tex. Crim. 252, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 111 (Tex. 1923).

Opinion

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Llano County of manufacturing intoxicating liquor, and his punishment fixed at one year in the penitentiary.

From the testimony of one B. M. Mays we learn that a still was in operation on the premises of Dick Wimberley. Appellant lived on an adjoining farm. Mays testified that he first saw this still on Thursday February 17, 1922, on which occasion he went to where same was with Dick Wimberley to get some chops for the latter’s hogs. No one seems to have been at the still on this visit. Mays *254 testified that he went hack there the Saturday morning following and Willie Wimberley was there “with the can cooking whisky.” Witness stayed thirty or forty minutes and says that while he was there appellant came from a near-by field in which he was plowing; that appellant sat down and took a drink of whisky and went back to his plow. Willie Wimberley was sitting over by a tub with a half gallon measure and “the stuff” was running into it. Witness testified that while there appellant said “it was good whisky we are making.” On cross-examination Mays admitted that he had testified in cases already tried against Willie and Dick Wimberley and that he did not recollect that in either trial he had attributed to John Wimberley the statement just mentioned. He also admitted that in each of said cases he swore that while he was at the still appellant came down and just sat around and was not doing anything and went on back to his plowing.

On Tuesday morning following the visit to the still just described, this witness admitted that appellant and Willie Wimberley beat him up pretty badly, John Mays, a brother of witness, being present, and that at once after the fight witness went and phoned the officers at Llano, twelve miles distant, who came out in about an hour. Search by the officers revealed on Dick Wimberley’s place several barrels partly filled with mash, some jugs, cans, funnels, several sacks of corn chops and a furnace made of bricks and rocks, with a stovepipe, and having over the furnace a piece of iron with a hole in it. Others of the party who went with the officers found what they called a still, in a sack in a thicket, tree limbs having been thrown over it. This was found by means of information given by John Mays. No witness attempts to locate the place where this still was found except Mr. Johnson, the sheriff, — his testimony plainly showing it to be hearsay in this regard. He swore that when he got back to his car after finding the furnace, etc., on Dick Wimberley’s place, Fred Jackson had already found the still and brought it to the car. He does not claim that anyone pointed out to him the place where the still was found. It follows that the statement of the sheriff as to whose land the still was on when found, would necessarily be hearsay. Fred Jackson was not asked on whose place he found the still.

We thus have the case against this appellant for manufacturing intoxicating liquor resting solely on the proximity of his farm to the one occupied by his brother Dick Wimberley, on whose farm there was a liquor factory, and the testimony of B. M. Mays that appellant came to where said still was in operation, sat down, took a drink, said that was good whisky we are making, got up and went back to his plowing. This statement attributed to appellant by Mays is so ambiguous as it appears in this record, that it is impossible to tell whether said witness intended to say that appellant said that witness and Willie Wimberley were making good whisky, or that it was good *255 whisky appellant and witness were making, or that it was good whisky appellant and Willie Wimberley were making. We can not afford to be careless about a matter on which depends a felony conviction of a citizen of this State. Aside from this statement just referred to, the record is devoid of legal testimony sufficient to support a conviction. If the testimony of Mr. Johnson be accepted, — which is not according to law, — the can in which whisky had been cooked, or the worm through which it had run (we are not informed what the witness meant when he used the word “still”), was found in a sack under some tree limbs in a thicket on appellant’s place. A day or two before such finding it was in operation on the place bf Dick Wimberley. Evidently it was not operated on appellant’s land, and if found on his land as appears in the hearsay statement of the sheriff, it was put there by some one for hiding. By whom we are not informed. No liquor was found on appellant’s farm, no mash, no signs or evidence of liquor manufacturing except the still found in the sack. No one bought any liquor from him. He tried to sell none. No one saw him bring wood, water, chops' or anything used in liquor manufacture. B. M. Mays alone testified that appellant came from where he was plowing to the point on Dick Wimberley’s farm where Willie Wimberley was making whisky. If coming there made him guilty, it would also make State witness Mays guilty, — for he went there by himself. If sitting down made appellant guilty, it also made Mays guilty, and likewise the taking of a drink of the whisky. The only thing in the testimony of Mays possessing evidential value bearing on appellant’s guilt is the statement which we discussed above. The ambiguity of the language and the fact further evidenced by the record that this witness had gone over this same occurrence in two other trials, given two recitals of this transaction and now admits that he can not recollect whether he had mentioned this statement before, causes us to have a great hesitation in accepting the testimony as sufficient to support the verdict. B. M. Mays was of kin to the Wimberleys, had enjoyed their hospitality, drank their whisky until for a reason not disclosed John and Willie Wimberley beat him up, and then he reports them and gives testimony upon which apparently John, Dick, Ike, Willie and Andrew Wimberley, four nephews and a brother-in-law of Mays, were indicted.

Whisky manufacture is an evil and a grave one, and a violation of the law. So many of the good men of this State have for years been striving to rid the country of the curse of intoxicating liquor that it seems difficult to as calmly weigh the evidence in a case of this character as would be done in other felony cases. We must do so.

We do not think the application for continuance by appellant showed diligence. It is not shown that a subpoena had been issued in this case for the witness Iva Wimberley; nor had process been issued promptly for any of the other absent witnesses.

Appellant was allowed to cross-examine B. M. Mays as to his *256 recent movements, but the State’s objection to extended cross-examination' as to where he had lived, etc., was sustained. The bill of exceptions does not show that appellant expected to obtain facts by further examination along this line showing that witness had engaged in any occupation or had lived at any place either of which indicated moral turpitude, or that he was by reason thereof unworthy of credit. While we fully appreciate the value of the right of cross-examination into the antecedents of a witness, still a reasonable limit must be set, and we do not think that fixed by the learned trial court in the instant case any abuse of his discretion.

An indictment charging kindred offenses in separate counts, is not duplicitous.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 691, 94 Tex. Crim. 252, 1923 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wimberly-v-state-texcrimapp-1923.