Spencer v. State

An indictment was returned against appellant in the District Court of Falls County charging him with the murder of one George Thomas. His trial resulted in a conviction of manslaughter with a penalty of two years confinement in the penitentiary.

1. On the trial of the case when the State's witness James McCleary was on the witness stand he was asked on cross-examination if he had not stated to Mr. Gray, the city marshal, and appellant that he saw no part of the killing, did not see any one with a pistol, and did not see appellant or any one else shoot the deceased. He admitted that he made this statement to these parties and stated that when he was brought before the grand jury that they told him not to tell any one what his testimony would be. The appellant then asked the witness the question that if his testimony on this trial was true if he did not know what he was telling appellant and Mr. Gray was a story, the appellant contending that he expected and intended that if the witness answered the question in the affirmative to press the inquiry further and make said witness admit to the jury that he did tell appellant and Gray a story and that he knew at the time he was not telling the truth; and in this way attack his credibility. The judge in his qualification to the bill says that the witness stated that the reason he had told appellant and Mr. Gray this was that the grand jury told him not to mention it and that he, the witness, testified fully as to what he told appellant and Gray. With this explanation the bill, we think, is without merit.

2. We find also a bill of exceptions in the record to a question propounded by the State to this same witness as to why he had told appellant and Gray that he did not see appellant at the difficulty. The appellant had already proved by this witness that he had told Gray and appellant he knew nothing of the difficulty and then on redirect examination the State asked him why he told this. We think this bill is without merit.

3. Bill of exceptions No. 3 is to the action of the court in permitting the State to prove by deceased's wife that she and her husband were living on the appellant's place at the time of the death of her husband, and that the appellant and her husband were in partnership in the truck business. There was no error in admitting this testimony.

4. Bill of exceptions No. 4 is to the action of the court in sustaining the State's objections to the testimony offered on the part of appellant by the witness Aiken and others to the general reputation of the deceased for being a quarrelsome, violent and turbulent man. The State *Page 220 objected to this testimony when offered on the ground that there had been no testimony offered on the part of the defendant that the deceased was doing anything at the time he was killed that would justify the taking of his life, the defendant claiming that he would be able to show that the killing was in self-defense and that the court had no right to direct as to how he should proceed with this testimony. At the time this testimony was offered, the record had not disclosed that the deceased was doing anything at the time he was killed and it may be said that in the then condition of the record the testimony was inadmissible. But concede that the court was wrong in this, the court did permit him to introduce this testimony at a subsequent stage of the proceeding and, therefore, no error was committed of such a character as would authorize a reversal upon this ground.

5. Bill of exceptions No. 6 shows that the appellant offered Dewberry and Wilson as witnesses to prove that they had a difficulty with the deceased some two hours before the killing and that the deceased in that difficulty was wholly wrong. It is too well settled to cite authorities that the particulars of difficulties between the deceased and other parties can not become the subject of inquiry in the trial of a party for killing the deceased unless the proof develops and connects such difficulty with the killing. It is always permissible to prove the general character of the deceased for being a peaceable or violent man but to permit the defendant to go into an inquiry of every difficulty that the deceased may have had with different people could not possibly throw any light upon the issue being tried for if the inquiry could be extended to an investigation of particular difficulties with other parties, then the other side would have the right to show who was in the wrong in that difficulty and we would find the court trying collateral issues and other offenses rather than the offense upon trial. The court correctly refused to permit the appellant to make this proof. This is a sufficient answer to the other objection made by appellant as to a difficulty Find and Price had with the deceased.

6. Bill of exceptions No. 7 was to the action of the court in refusing to allow the appellant to prove by the witness Alexander that some thirty minutes before the difficulty in which the deceased lost his life, the deceased said to the witness that he was going up to the Spencers' store and clean out the whole damn Spencer delegation; that he liked the appellant very well, but did not like his brother John. This bill of exceptions is approved by the court with the following qualification, that the witness was asked this question by the defendant: "Was anything in that conversation said about either one or both of the Spencer boys? A. One of them. Q. Which one? A. John. Q. I will ask you now to state what Thomas said, if anything, about either of them in that conversation, and what the conversation between you and him was?" Mr. Connally for the State said: "We object, unless it is shown to be *Page 221 connected with this defendant. There is no evidence showing that he and Charley ever had any altercation. All the evidence shows that all the trouble was with John." The Court: "What he said about John Spencer I do not think is relevant." Defendant: "Note our exception." With this qualification of the judge the bill is without merit.

7. There are several other bills in the record that we do not think necessary to notice. We have carefully read the same and think they are without merit.

8. On the trial of the case the appellant took the stand and testified that an altercation sprang up between him and the deceased in his, appellant's, store in regard to the difference between them in a settlement for some fees, etc. The appellant said he had collected some money for some hogs that had been put up; that the deceased wanted him to give him, deceased, the money and the appellant insisted that as the deceased owed him, that he credit it on his store account. When he made this proposition, the appellant says, the deceased flew into a rage; and continuing appellant says: "I asked him to go on home, as he was drunk. He seemed to be drinking, and I told him I did not want any trouble, and for him to go on home. He seemed to get madder and madder, and he finally cursed me, and threw his box and bell out towards the door, and grabbed me and said he was going to cut me. He caught me around the head and neck here, and where he grabbed me it was just like I was in a vice. I was trying to get away from him, for I thought he was going to cut me, and while we were in the scuffle some one shot; I do not know where it came from. I did not have any pistol up there. I did not know he was going to be shot. I did not have any understanding that John Spencer, or either of us, would shoot him on that occasion. I did not know that John was going to shoot, if he shot at that time. . . . When the shot was fired Thomas fell to the floor and pulled me down. . . . After we fell to the floor he asked me to help him up, and I could not get him up, and I called Dock to come and help me. Dock was the porter who worked for me there in the store. He was so heavy I could not get him up." The court in his general charge to the jury charged them as follows: "You are further charged that if you believe from the evidence that John Spencer, or some other one than the defendant, on an independent impulse of their own, shot and killed George Thomas, the deceased, or if you have a reasonable doubt thereof, then you will acquit the defendant." At the request of defendant the court gave the following charge: "If you find from the evidence, or have a reasonable doubt thereof, that some person other than defendant fired the pistol on the occasion in question, or if you have a reasonable doubt whether the defendant, or some other than defendant, fired the shot which killed deceased, you must acquit." The contention of appellant in this case being that the court should have charged the jury the law with reference *Page 222 to the right of a third party to intervene in the protection of the life or limb of a party who is assailed, and to the rules of law that should govern his action. It strikes us that the charge given by the court as well as the one given at the instance of the appellant was much more favorable to the appellant than would have been a charge as to the right of a third party to interfere in a difficulty. Here the court, independent of whether the defendant was in the right or the wrong, and independent of whether the party who had fired the shot was acting with defendant or acted without knowledge as to who was in the wrong, or acted without knowledge as to whether the deceased was doing anything that would threaten the life of defendant, told them that if somebody other than defendant fired the fatal shot they would acquit and if they had a reasonable doubt as to whether or not the defendant fired the shot they would acquit. We, therefore, hold that the failure of the court, in view of the charges given, was not reversible error in omitting to charge on the right of a third party to interfere.

9. This brings us to the consideration of the last question presented in the motion for new trial and that is that the court erred in failing to submit article 676 of the Penal Code on the presumptions arising from the use of a deadly weapon. The contention of appellant being that if the appellant was being assaulted by the deceased, and the instrument used by the deceased was a deadly weapon, the law presumed that he intended to kill. Now the appellant, when he took the stand, testified that the deceased grabbed him around the head and neck with one arm, ran his hand in his pocket and said, "I will cut your guts out." There was no proof that a knife was ever drawn out of his pocket; the knife was afterwards found in the deceased's pocket closed and there was no proof that it was a deadly weapon. Article 676, supra, provides that when the homicide takes place to prevent murder, if the weapons or means used by the party attempting, or committing such murder are such as would have been calculated to produce that result it is to be presumed that the person so using them designed to inflict the injury. It is true that a party has a right to act upon apparent as well as real danger, but what does the use of deadly weapons within this statute mean? It means that there must be some step taken toward the use of the instrument. It will not do simply to say that this presumption arises because a man simply makes a declaration that he will cut another and has a knife in his possession. There is no proof that the deceased's hand was ever upon the knife and in all of the cases, commencing with the case of Kendall v. State, in the 8 Texas Crim. App., 569, down to and including the case of Duke v. State, 56 Tex.Crim. Rep.; 120 S.W. Rep., 894, it will be seen that the deceased in all these cases, either had the weapon in his hand or was in the act of drawing the weapon and had it partly out and in such cases it was held that it was the duty of the court to charge on *Page 223 the presumption of using a deadly weapon. In the Duke case,supra, the defendant testified that the deceased was coming at him with a gun in his hand when he, defendant, shot. This called for a charge upon the presumption and use of a deadly weapon. It is true that the State's witness denied that there was a gun. The McMichael case, 49 Tex.Crim. Rep.; 93 S.W. Rep., 723, was where the defendant testified that the deceased came into the room where he was and as he passed between him and the light of the fire he discovered a pistol in his, deceased's hand, or what he took to be a pistol. The State's testimony showed that there was no pistol found at his body, yet this court held he was entitled to a charge on the presumption arising from the use of a deadly weapon because he had the same right to defend against the appearances of danger as from actual danger and if it appeared to him that it was a pistol he would have the right to this presumption. In the Ward case, 30 Tex.Crim. Rep., the defendant testified that when he got up within twenty or thirty feet of deceased, he, deceased, looked around and said: "My God, I have got you now," and threw his hand up to his breast and he saw him try to pull out a pistol. The pistol seemed about half way out when appellant fired. This court held that this was the using of the pistol within the meaning of the statute and entitled the appellant to a charge on presumption arising from the use of a deadly weapon. In the Clark case, 56 Tex. Crim. 293; 120 S.W. Rep., 179, the proof showed not only the drawing of the weapon but the firing of the same by the deceased and this court held that the omission to give said article in charge to the jury was cause for reversal. We have been unable to find any case that holds that the court must charge this article simply from the fact that the deceased has in his possession a deadly weapon and makes declarations that he is going to use the deadly weapon. This must go beyond the act of the declaration and he must have begun to take hold of it or to make preparations. In other words, there must be a beginning of the use of the instrument to bring it within the meaning of this statute and he is as much entitled to a charge on presumptions when the party begins to use the instrument as if he was using it, but there must be a beginning. Now the only proof in this case was that he, deceased, seized appellant around the head and neck and said: "I will cut your guts out," and as the witness says, put his hand in his pocket. That he ever had his hand on the knife there is no proof. Certainly it could not be contended that if a man says, "I am going to shoot you" and has a gun on his person but has not put his hand on it, that a party would be entitled to this presumption. We are inclined to hold under the facts of this case that the court did not err in refusing to submit article 676, as the facts as developed upon the witness stand from the appellant's testimony, did not show that the deceased was beginning to use the knife when he was killed. *Page 224

10. Appellant complains that the court did not charge upon apparent danger and the beginning of an attack; that the appellant had a right not only to a charge upon actual danger but also upon apparent danger and upon a belief that the deceased was about to attack him. We do not think that the charge is subject to these criticisms. It is a clear presentation of the law, to our minds, and presented every issue raised by the testimony fairly, fully and favorably to the appellant. Finding no errors in the record that would justify a reversal the judgment is in all things affirmed.

Affirmed.

ON REHEARING. May 4, 1910.