Wright v. State

388 S.W.2d 703
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 1965
Docket37690
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 388 S.W.2d 703 (Wright 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
Wright v. State, 388 S.W.2d 703 (Tex. 1965).

Opinion

WOODLEY, Judge.

The offense is murder with malice; the punishment, five years.

The indictment alleged that appellant voluntarily and with malice aforethought killed Martin Garlaska by shooting him with a pistol.

The jury rejected appellant’s plea of self-defense and accident and his plea for suspended sentence.

The offense of assault with intent to murder was submitted to the jury, coupled with instructions to acquit appellant of murder if they had a reasonable doubt that the injury inflicted upon the deceased by shooting him with a pistol caused his death.

The undisputed evidence shows that appellant shot the deceased in the back with a pistol. The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the jury’s finding that the shot was fired voluntarily, and not in self-defense, is not challenged.

The shooting occurred at the Oyster Bar on May 12, 1961. There was evidence that a few hours earlier at Rich’s Club, the deceased was assaulted and beaten by appellant.

There is also evidence to the effect that the deceased was stomped or received a blow in the abdomen.

Dr. William L. Sheehan, whose qualifications as a licensed physician were stipulated and who attended the deceased from July 1 to his death on July 19, 1961, at the Veterans Hospital in Houston, testified that in his opinion: “ * * * Martin Garlaska died of a gastro intestinal hemorrhage from an ulcer that had been produced by his injury occurring some two months prior to his death.”

He further testified, in part:

“Q. * * * without the gunshot wound in question, in your opinion, would this man have died from this bleeding gastric ulcer, would the ulcer have come about?
*704 “A. Without the injuries sustained there would have been no precipitating stress to produce the ulcer.”

On cross-examination:

“A. If I might quote my summary. History of the patient. Patient after his arrival indicated that he was shot by an unknown assailant and then stomped in the abdomen. Patient stated that he did not know his assailant and had never seen him before or since.”

On re-direct examination:

“Q. Doctor, you filled out as part of your report there — you filled out the death certificate and as related in your initial testimony the series of steps — you got a series of steps that in your opinion caused his death?
“A. Well, the immediate cause was bleeding.
“Q. All right. Gastrointestinal hemorrhage ?
"A. From his ulcer.
“Q. * * * Which you said was due to what?
“A. Debilitation and malnutrition.
“Q. Which, in turn, you said was due to what?
“A. The gunshot wound and the abdominal trauma.
"Q. Both?
“A. Both.
“Q. Absent the gunshot wound it would have been unlikely he would have died from—
“A. Well, absent the gunshot wound if this man perforated an intestine symptoms of this would have been manifest within minutes.
“Q. In your opinion, doctor, to sum it up; you say that definitely a man with a wound of this nature knowing that he was paralyzed would have severe emotional stress?
“A. Correct.
“Q. Which would be a contributing factor to the gastric ulcer which ultimately resulted in killing him?
“A. Right.
******
“A. He died from the bleeding ulcer.”

The gunshot wound was described by Dr. Jack Orrick, Jr. who attended the deceased from May 12 to May 25, 1961, when he was transferred to the Veterans Hospital in Houston, as: “ * * * an entrance wound of a bullet or a missile on the back area just to the right side of his left shoulder blade. * * * the right side of the chest * * * was full of either air and or blood. There was a second exit-type wound in the right chest at about the level with the third rib just on the front lateral part of the chest, * * * ”

Dr. Orrick further testified:

“Q. What was the initial procedure there at the hospital as to whether any exploratory surgery was done or what was done there that night?
“A. The first thing we did after starting his * * * transfusions and getting set up to replace his blood loss, I put a chest tube into the right side of the chest in the emergency room and over of a period of our observation down there in the emergency we pulled off into the chest tube approximately two quarts of blood out of the right side of his chest. There was evidence that the bleeding was continuing from that side of the chest as the level of the bottle kept rising. It was on the basis of these injuries we were going on ahead to open the chest at that time. Now in our further examination down in the emer *705 gency room it was noted that he was not moving either of his lower ex-tremeties, his legs, and then in checking up and down we found that there was no sensation at all and no movement at all below the level of approximately the third rib of the chest. There was no movement in either leg and no sensation below the upper part of the chest. So, we were afraid there had been damage to the spinal cord at a high level. We took him to surgery after he had gotten out of shock initially and opened the right side of his chest. We found that the upper lobe of the right lung was pretty well splintered — a two-inch wound on one surface and three inches on the other, and then there were fragments of the body vertebrae or the backbone around the third and fourth backbone, which had been driven into the right lung itself. We removed approximately another quart of blood from the right side of the chest. We took the bone fragments out of the right lung, controlled the bleeding and repaired the right lung and drained the chest and closed it. Then at that point we turned him over and Dr. Faulk, Dr. Ed. Faulk, then did a maninectomy or made an incision of the upper part of the chest over the vertebrae and we went down to the spinal cord in the area of the injury to see if there was anything correctible. The track of the missile was found to have passed directly through the spinal cord; it had essentially destroyed the spinal cord at the third and fourth level completely. So, other than the removal of the bone fragments and some blood clots there was nothing further that we could do at that time.”.
“Q. And a gastric ulcer would not have been caused by the bullet wound, would it ?
“A. You mean immediately?
“Q. Yes, sir.
“A. Not immediately, no.

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Bluebook (online)
388 S.W.2d 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-state-texcrimapp-1965.