Upon an indictment for murder appellant was found guilty of manslaughter and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for two years.
This case has been before us at a former time and the opinion will be found in 85 Tex.Crim. Rep., 212 S.W. Rep., 166. The facts are exhaustively set out in that opinion and are substantially the same as disclosed by the record now before us. It is not necessary to repeat the facts, but reference is made to the former opinion therefor.
This case originated in Shelby County. In September, 1919, a trial was had in that county, and the jury having failed to agree they were discharged on September 14th. The court failed to enter upon the trial docket or to have carried forward in the minutes of the court an order showing the discharge of the jury on the reasons there for. On February 26, 1920, on the court's own motion an order was entered changing the venue of the case from Sheby County to Cherokee *Page 5 county. Appellant on that date entered into recognizance binding himself to appear in Cherokee County for trial in obedience to the order changing the venue. It having been ascertained that the court in Shelby County had failed to enter an order at the time the jury was discharged upon the trial in 1919, the district attorney filed a motion in the district court of Shelby county on the 30th day of August, 1920, seeking to have said judgment entered nunc pro tunc. He caused notice to be served upon appellant, and on the 3d day of September, 1920, the court in Shelby County, after a hearing upon such motion, entered the judgment discharging the jury, reciting reasons therefor, as of date September 14, 1919. Upon the 17th day of September, 1920, another order was entered by the District Court of Shelby County again changing the venue to Cherokee County and appellant entered into another recognizance in obedience to the last order. The record shows no order of the District Court of Cherokee County transferring the case back to Shelby County, prior to the nuncpro tunc judgment. When the case was called for trial in Cherokee County appellant interposed a plea of former jeopardy. He alleges that the jury which was discharged in Shelby County was not held by the court for such a length of time as showed it was altogether improbable they could agree. He also denies that he had given his assent to the discharge of the jury. He asserts that the District Court of Shelby County, by the order changing the venue made in February, 1920, had lost jurisdiction of the case and had no authority in law to enter the judgment nunc protunc as to the discharge of the jury. He further asserts that it was necessary for the District Court of Shelby County to have made a judicial ascertainment relative to the discharge of the jury and the reasons therefor at the time it was discharged; that the failure of the court to do so renders his plea of former jeopardy good as a matter of law, and that the jury upon this trial should have been peremptorily so instructed.
Unless we be mistaken as to the effect of our own decisions it will not be necessary to determine the validity, or otherwise, of the nunc pro tunc judgment. We agree to the proposition that there should have been a judicial ascertainment of the facts justifying the discharge of the jury, and that this should have been evidenced by a proper entry in the court minutes. This should have been done in the interest of orderly judicial procedure if for no other reason. But courts operate through human agencies, and oversights and mistakes occur in them as well as in all other departments of government or private enterprises. We would observe here, that the entry of the judgment in the minutes of the court is only the evidence of the judicial ascertainment, and not the judicial ascertainment itself. The trial judge doubtless determined the propriety of the jury's *Page 6 discharge, but failed at the time to carry forward in the minutes the judgment evidencing that fact. If the recitals in a judgment discharging a jury were in our State binding on a defendant as upholding or defeating a subsequent plea of jeopardy, we can well understand that a failure to enter such a judgment might be the deprivation of such a right as could well be held a bar to further proceedings by the prosecution. But our court has held although there was a judicial ascertainment upon the discharge of the jury and the judgment thereof entered of record that a plea of jeopardy raises an issue of fact, and that the party urging it is not bound by the judgment nor the recitals therein. Bland v. State, 42 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Vela v. State, 49 Tex. Crim. 588; Hipple v. State, 80 Tex.Crim. Rep., 191 S.W. Rep., 1150. If these opinions be accepted as announcing a sound legal proposition and the entry of the judgment does not bind the defendant, but leaves him free to present the facts upon his plea of jeopardy, then we are unable to give our assent to the proposition that a failure to enter a judgment at the time the jury is discharged will operate against the State to the extent of making the plea of jeopardy good as a matter of law. If the plea is to be sustained or defeated upon the facts, the facts remain available regardless of the existence or non-existence of a judgment. This disposes of the assignment of errors urged for failure to give special charges Numbers 1, 3, 6 and 7, and brings us to a consideration of the complaint that the court erred in submitting that issue in the following language:
"You are charged that in passing upon the plea of former jeopardy that the burden is upon the defendant, Wyatt Rodgers, to show by the evidence that he is entitled to acquittal on such special plea. If you find from the evidence that the defendant was put upon trial in the District Court of Shelby County in September, 1919, and that the case was tried upon the indictment duly presented to the court, the pleas and evidence offered thereon in said case and the jury was charged by the judge and afterwards that said jury was discharged by the District Judge of Shelby County, Texas, before they had been together such a time as to render it improbable that they could agree on a verdict, and that the defendant did not agree for the jury to be discharged, you will, if you so find, return a verdict that you find said special plea to be true".
Article 759, Vernon's C.C.P., reads:
"The jury may be discharged after the cause is submitted to them, when they cannot agree, and both parties consent to their discharge, or where they have been kept together for such time as to render it altogether improbable they can agree; in this latter case, the court, in its discretion, may discharge them."
On motion for new trial and in this court it is insisted that the omission of the word "altogether" before "improbable" in the *Page 7 court's charge was fatal error. Eight special charges were requested by counsel for appellant on the issue of former jeopardy. When we examine the objections filed to the charge at the time of trial, we find nowhere a specific objection calling the court's attention to the omission of the word "altogether." The objection begin by excepting to the submission of the issue of former jeopardy to the jury at all, save as to special charge number one, which was to find peremptorily his plea to be true. They then proceed with the objections, that if special number one be refused the issue ought to be submitted as contained in special charge number two, and so on through the entire eight charges. Each of the special charges embracing the language which appellant insists should have been used by the court have connected therewith the issue of a "judicial ascertainment" at the time the jury was discharged, or some other issue involving the question which would have rendered it improper for the court to give it. Where the trial court has entirely omitted to charge upon an issue a special requested charge designed to supply the omission may be sufficient to direct the judge's attention to the omission; but under Article 735, Vernon's C.C.P., as amended in 1913, where the judge has undertaken to cover an issue in his charge, and the manner of its submission is objectionable to appellant, the objection thereto should be sufficiently specific to direct the judge's attention to the particular thing complained of, and inform him that the special charge is designed to correct it. (See Walker v. State, 89 Tex.Crim. Rep., 229 S.W. Rep., 527; Boaz v. State, 89 Tex.Crim. Rep., 231 S.W. Rep., 790.) We are of the opinion that the matter now complained of was not pointed out with sufficient particularity at the time of the trial to be available to appellant at this time. The substance of Article 759, C.C.P., was given in charge to the jury.
The testimony of the foreman of the former jury was heard. It was shown that the jury retired to consider their verdict about noon on Saturday; that they were discharged about five or six o'clock the following Sunday afternoon; that they made a report to the judge and he questioned each one separately as to what they thought about the probability of agreeing and was advised by all jurors that they were hopelessly disagreed; that appellant and his counsel as well as counsel representing the State were in the court room at the time; that the judge asked the attorneys if there was any objection from either side to the discharge of the jury; that attorneys representing appellant consulted with him and that after this consultation both counsel for appellant and the State told the judge there was no objection to the discharge of the jury. It further appears that by reason of the arrangement of the court room it was necessary for the judge in going to the lavatory to pass through the jury room where *Page 8 they were deliberating; that on two occasions when he passed through the room and prior to the discharge of the jury, the foreman advised the judge that they would not be able to agree.
Under the evidence taken on the issue of the discharge of the former jury we have been unable to reach the conclusion that appellant was in any way injured by the manner in which it was submitted to the jury for their consideration. Article 743, Vernon's C.C.P.
Special charges numbers 9, 10 and 14 were requested instructions upon threats as applied to self-defense. As we understand the facts of this case there was no necessity for the court to charge upon threats. Such threats as were shown were made during the difficulty, and there was no evidence of any antecedent threats. The fight was practically a continuous transaction from the time it commenced on the back porch until it culminated in the killing of Billy Owens. Armstrong v. State,50 Tex. Crim. 27; Hancock v. State, 47 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Dobbs v. State, 54 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Penton v. State,53 Tex. Crim. 323.
We are of the opinion that the criticism directed at the charge on self-defense is unwarranted, and that no error was committed in the refusal to give special charge numbers 24, 25 and 26 upon the same issue.
The court not having in any way limited appellant's right of self-defense by a charge on provoking the difficulty, or otherwise, it was not necessary to give the special requested charge on abandonment of the difficulty. Ware v. State,68 Tex. Crim. 376, 152 S.W. Rep., 1074; Edwards v. State,60 Tex. Crim. 323; Renow v. State, 49 Tex.Crim. Rep..
The State contended that the shot which caused the death of Billie Owens was purposely and designedly fired by appellant. Appellant's contention was that the shot was accidentally discharged while he and his brother and his sister-in-law were scuffling over the pistol, attempting to take it away from his brother. This issue was sharply drawn. Appellant, his brother (Beeman Rodgers) and his sister-in-law all testified that at the time the pistol was fired that they and each of them had hold of the pistol, on, under and upon the barrel, cylinder and hammer, but admitted that none of their hands were burned or powder burned from the discharge. The State was permitted to prove over appellant's objection that an experiment had been made with a Colt's 45-single-action pistol; that witness placed a folded handkerchief over the cylinder of the gun and discharged the same. The witness was permitted to explain to the jury how the test was made and testified that the handkerchief which he exhibited to the jury was a clean handkerchief having no holes in it at the time he made the test. As introduced in evidence the handkerchief showed to be badly burned in a number of places, having several holes burned *Page 9 in it. The foregoing facts are set out in bill of exception number 11. Numerous objections were urged to the introduction of this testimony. (a) Because there was no evidence that such experiment was made under the same or similar circumstances or conditions as those under which the shot was discharged which caused the death of deceased; (b) because there was no evidence that such experiment was made under circumstances approximately or substantially similar; (c) because the handkerchief used in making said experiment was fundamentally different in its nature and texture from the hands of the witnesses who testified to having had hold of the pistol at the time it was discharged; (d) because said experiment was not shown to have been and was not made with the same pistol or kind of pistol, neither the same kind of cartridge or powder as was used on the occasion when deceased was killed.
It is not certified as a fact in the foregoing bill that the experiment was not made with the same pistol or kind of pistol, nor with the same kind of cartridge and powder. That only appears as one of the objections urged to the admissibility of the testimony. As to the insufficiency of the bill in this particular, see Rupe v. State, 42 Tex.Crim. Rep.. We cannot therefore consider this feature of the objections. Although the members of this court might believe that the amount of burning gas escaping with the discharge of a pistol would vary with different kinds of pistols, depending upon the looseness and alignment of the cylinder with the barrel, and the kind of powder used, yet we are not placed in a position by the recitals in the bill to pass upon the question involved. In order to make experimental testimony admissible it is not necessary that the experiment be made under exactly the same circumstances. The rule was laid down in Clark v. State, 38 Tex.Crim. Rep., and re-affirmed in Schauer v. State, 60 S.W. Rep., 251, as follows:
"If the evidence shows that the experiment was made under circumstances similar, or approximately similar, to those which surrounded the original transaction, and such experiment would serve to shed any light upon that transaction, it would be admissible, although such experiment might not have been made under exactly similar conditions as attended the original transaction. The want of exact similarity would not exclude, but would go to its weight with the jury."
This seems to be the settled rule in this State as illustrated in Hodge v. State, 60 S.W. Rep., 157. In that case the defendant claimed a pistol was discharged accidentally by dropping to the floor and striking on the hammer. The State contended that the pistol was so constructed that the hammer rested on a "safety notch" and could not be fired in the manner claimed by defendant. The pistol was exhibited to the jury and it was explained to them how the hammer *Page 10 was kept on the "safety notch" and could not be fired while in that condition. Appellant offered evidence to show that an experiment had been made with the pistol by fastening it in a secure place and striking the hammer a slight blow, and that this blow did cause the hammer to strike and explode the cartridge. The offered testimony was excluded by the trial court on the ground that the experiment was not conducted in the same way that the shot was fired, that is, by dropping the pistol on the floor. It is stated in the opinion that there appeared to be some objection to dropping the pistol on the floor while loaded for fear if a discharge of the pistol did occur that an accident might result. This court held that the experiment was sufficiently similar to permit the evidence to go to the jury. We have a somewhat like condition in the instant case. It occurs to us it would be with considerable reluctance that a witness would place his hands around the cylinder of the pistol and permit it to be fired in order to determine the effect of the discharge upon his hands. This brings us to a discussion of the question as to whether the handkerchief used in the experiment being of different texture and nature from that of the human hand should have caused the rejection of this testimony.
Appellant relies upon the principle announced in Morton v. State, 71 S.W. Rep., 281, and Reagan v. State, 84 Tex. Crim. 468, 208 S.W. Rep., 523, that where the material question was the distance between the muzzle of the gun and the body of the victim, evidence was excluded of the result of experiments as to powder marks made upon pasteboards targets by firing a gun at varying distances, upon the ground that the human body is fundamentally different in nature and texture from the substance upon which the experiments were made. We do not regard the question before us now to be the same by any means. All of the authorities cited by appellant and many others have been examined. They are in line with the rule announced in the two cases supra. We have not been cited to any authority, nor have we been able to find one, where the exact point raised in the instant case has been discussed. The question here is not at what distance from a discharged gun will powder burn or leave a mark on the human hand; but whether the discharge of a pistol will burn at all a hand immediately upon and around the cylinder? The witnesses testified that had their hands immediately upon and around the barrel, cylinder and hammer of the pistol when it fired but that none of them were burned. In order to combat the truth of appellant's contention that the pistol was accidentally discharged during a scuffle when the witnesses claimed to have hold of it, the State introduced the burned handkerchief as the result of the experiment. The fact that the handkerchief was of different texture from the human hand would seem to us in the present case to be *Page 11 immaterial. Fire will burn when brought in direct contact either with the human hand or articles of clothing. The experiment was to determine whether upon the discharge of the pistol fire was emitted around the cylinder which in all reasonable probability would have burned the hands of those claiming to hold it. As presented we think the bill shows no error. The evidence to our minds shed light upon a controverted issue. If we are correct in our view of this matter, it also disposes of bill of exception number 12, which complains of the argument relative to the experimental testimony.
Bills of exceptions numbers 2 and 3 relate to the same matter and will be discussed together. It appears from these bills that John Graham was a witness and present during the trial of the case. At a previous trial of the case in Shelby County he had been placed upon the stand by the State and testified, but for some reason neither side called him to testify upon the instant trial. After the evidence had been closed the attorney representing the State in the presence of the jury stated that the paper he held in his hands was the testimony of John Graham taken by the court reporter at the trial in Shelby County and that he tendered the same to counsel for the defense who might read it to the jury if they desired. This conduct on the part of the attorney representing the State was objected to for many reasons. The judge qualified bill of exceptions number 2 setting out the foregoing matters by referring this court to the statement of facts, and calling attention to the circumstance that appellant's attorney in cross-examination of witnesses had referred to what Graham knew about the case and that the State had at one time used him as a witness. Bill number 3 recites that while the attorney representing the State was making his closing argument to the jury he again exhibited what he said was the testimony of said John Graham taken by the court reporter upon the former trial of the case in Shelby county, and told the jury that although the State had not used the witness John Graham that he, attorney, would read to the jury the testimony of the said witness; further stating that the State had made a case against appellant, and that the reason he did not offer to place John Graham on the witness stand was because he, the said John Graham, contradicted the States case in one or two respects. This statement and conduct on the part of the attorney representing the State was also objected to by counsel for appellant for various reasons. The court qualified the bill by stating that appellant's attorney in argument to the jury had stated that Graham was one of the most credible witnesses; and certified that counsel representing the State told the jury that he was willing for the jury to take and read Graham's testimony.
The purported testimony of the witness Graham was not read to the jury nor given to them to read. As the bills of exceptions are *Page 12 presented in the record we do not believe such error occurred as should operate as a reversal of the case. Unless we misapprehend the two bills of exception, they disclose a condition which frequently arises in a trial where for some reason neither side desires to place a witness upon the stand, but are maneuvering before the jury either for the purpose of forcing the opposing side to call the witness in order to get the benefit of cross-examination, or to gain some advantage from his declining to do so. We do not endorse the conduct of the attorney representing the State; but, if we understand the qualifications to the bills, he was excusable to some extent by reason of the conduct of appellant's counsel and his argument before the jury. It will be observed that nothing was said by counsel representing the State as to the contents of Graham's former testimony which could in any way have injured appellant, the statement being only to the effect that in some particulars Graham's testimony contradicted that of the State, and for that reason he was not placed upon the stand. To this extent the statement, instead of being harmful to appellant, appears to us to have been the reverse.
Twenty-seven special charges were requested, and the record contains fifteen bills of exception. We have not discussed each of them at length but none of them have been overlooked. We have examined each of the special charges and each bill of exception, and as to those not discussed by us in detail have concluded they present no error which would call for a reversal.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ON REHEARING. November 29, 1922.