Zimmerman v. State

215 S.W. 101, 85 Tex. Crim. 630, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 509
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 1919
DocketNo. 4952.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 101 (Zimmerman 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
Zimmerman v. State, 215 S.W. 101, 85 Tex. Crim. 630, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 509 (Tex. 1919).

Opinions

LATTIMORE, Judge.

In this case appellant was convicted in the Criminal District Court of Travis County for the offense of *633 murder and his punishment fixed at eight years in the penitentiary.

It will be necessary, in order to understand the opinion, to state substantially the facts in the case. Appellant and deceased lived only about two hundred and fifty yards apart, one on the north and the other on the south side of a public road of which deceased was overseer. Because of a bad culvert in said road, the deceased had let down his fence made of woven wire, laying some rocks on the same, and thus made a gap through which the users of said road might go across his land and avoid the defective culvert. The record discloses no ill-will between appellant and deceased prior to the day of the difficulty. On that morning deceased had called appellant over the telephone and told him his stock was in the pasture of deceased and he wished them taken out as there was very little grass which he needed for himself. Deceased was heard to say in the ’phone during the conversation with appellant, “Well, you know it is not up.” A little later the wife of deceased saw appellant driving his stock out at the place where the fence was down and also saw him put the fence up so that the traffic could not pass through. She said she saw appellant stoop down and throw the rock off the fence and raise the wire up, and that she called the attention of deceased to this and ihe expressed surprise and came and stood by her looking at appellant, and then suggested that he go down and see what appellant had done, saying: “I wonder what he is doing that for, I believe I will go down and see what he is doing.” Deceased then went down to the gap and after looking at it for a moment walked on up to the house of appellant. The wife of deceased said that he was not angry at that time and denied having said to Mrs. Zimmerman that he was; also denied stating to Mrs. Pox that he was angry at said time, in which statement she was corroborated by Mrs. Pox when on the stand.

It is uncontroverted that deceased was not armed when he went to appellant’s house and that the appellant was on his porch when the deceased reached his gate, and that the deceased was shot twice, once in the upper part of the chest and once in the arm; also it is uncontroverted that appellant fired all the cartridges in his pistol, about six in number.

A sharp conflict ap'pears between the evidence of the wife, son and daughter of deceased, testifying for th State, and. that of the daughter of the appellant, corroborated to some extent by her mother, testifying for the appellant; said conflict being as 'to' whether the shooting by appellant began while deceased was outside the gate and doing nothing, appellant advancing to where deceased was and shooting Mm again after he had fallen; or whether deceased at the gate threatened appellant and started to him up the walk and was there met by appellant and the shooting took place.

We reproduce substantially all of what each of said last named witnesses testified. The first three for the State stated with substan *634 tial accord that they witnessed the whole of the fatal difficulty; that appellant was sitting on the porch of his home and deceased walked up to the front gate of appellant’s yard, which was about twenty or twenty-five feet from the edge of the porch and that appellant sprang up and started toward the deceased, firing at him' with a pistol, once from the porch and the other shots as he advanced to where deceased fell just inside or partly inside the gate. For the appellant, his wife swore that she was sitting in her room and did not see deceased as he approached the house, but heard him ask the appellant if he put that gap up and heard appellant say no, and that she then heard the word rock, and nothing more as she was engaged in her work, till she heard the pistol. She then ran further back in the house where her son was asleep and waked him. She says the feet of deceased were five or six feet from the gate as his body lay there after he was shot.

Appellant’s daughter swore that she was lying on her bed and heard foot-steps, raised up and looked through the window and saw deceased who was outside the gate; that he walked to the gate and she noticed him, and noticed that he was very angry; that he was pale and trembling all over. She said that wh^n deceased got to the gate he spoke, saying: “Did you put that gap up ?;” that her father’s voice answered, “No;” that she could not see her father at that time though by his voice she located him on the front porch; that deceased said: “You didn’t move the rock off the wire?” that her father said: “I may have kicked one off;” that deceased replied: “I know you did and I am going to make you put it up,” and that he started through the gate as fast as he could have possibly gone; that when deceased was about two-thirds of the way to the house her father met him and she heard a shot fired; that the men were not more than two or three inches apart at that time; that they clinched and she ran to the telephone and tried to call up the sheriff; that the men kept fighting back toward the gate and over east of the walk, and she kept trying to ’phone for the sheriff but central did not know his number and she went toward the door and saw her father shoot deceased who then fell, and her father came on into the house; that she ran out in the yard and in a few minutes deceased died. On cross-examination, this witness said that all that was said by deceased was spoken by him outside the gate, and that as soon as her father spoke she could locate him on the front porch but could not see him and did not see him until deceased had gotten about half way from the gate to the porch. She was asked if she did not have a conversation with sheriff Matthews who came to the scene in a short time, and she said that she did, but further denied telling him that deceased came to the gate and asked her father if he took the rock off the fence and that her father immediately began shooting at him. She also denied telling Mrs. Fox the same morning of the killing, that she was in the back, and did not see any part of it.

*635 Sheriff Matthews swore that on the morning of the killing he reached the place in a very short time and that he talked to the daughter of appellant, and that she stated to him that deceased asked her father if he took the rock off the fence, and when he said that her father jumped up off the gallery and went to shooting at him. Mr. Matthews also said he asked her if her father went into the house after his pistol, after deceased came up and that she said that he did not go back into the house at all, that when deceased asked him that appellant was sitting on the front gallery and commenced shooting and advancing toward deceased. Mrs. Fox also testified that on the morning of the killing the daughter of appellant told her that she was in the back and did not see any part of the killing.

Appellant defended on the grounds of insanity and self-defense; and also contends before this court that the law as to each of said defenses, as well as that of manslaughter was erroneously charged to the jury. We have given the ease careful scrutiny, examining the able brief of counsel for the appellant as well as the entire record. The court charged in the seventh and eight paragraphs as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 101, 85 Tex. Crim. 630, 1919 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-state-texcrimapp-1919.