Conviction is for murder; punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of twenty-five years.
The deceased, Don Turner, and appellant were together on the night of January 4th at the home of the witness Thomas. There was evidence that they had been drinking intoxicating liquor. They left the home of Thomas together, apparently in a friendly mood towards each other, and were riding in a buggy drawn by a mule. Later in the night, the witness Hargrove, who kept a country store, was aroused by a crash and heard a voice outside of his store, and shortly thereafter he heard some one knock at his door and use vile language to insist that the door be opened. The witness did not stir, however, *Page 416 and heard a voice say: "God damn it, what did you run off and leave me for; I will cut your damned head off." On the following morning he found a buggy which was by every evidence identified as that in which the parties were riding. The buggy had struck a post near the store building and was in a damaged condition. It was called for during the morning by the son of the appellant. The post had wire twisted upon it, and we gather from the record that the wire was barbed wire.
Appellant's son testified on behalf of the State and said that appellant came home at about ten o'clock on the night in question; that he had been drinking; that he had bruises about his body. These were described in some detail. Appellant told the witness that he had had a fight with Don Turner near Hargrove's store.
The deceased lived at the home of his uncle, Ed Coleman. After the deceased had been missed for some days, Coleman mentioned the fact to the appellant, who at first said that he had seen nothing of him. The witness then told the appellant that he had heard that they were together on the evening that the deceased was missed, and appellant said:
"We came along by the Redfearn crossing and stopped, and I got out, and we had a big switch in the buggy and he just come down on the mule with that switch and the mule ran off down the road as fast as he could go and that was the last I saw of Don."
There were two ponds near Hargrove's store. About two weeks after the deceased had been missed, there was blood discovered on the bank or dam which held the water in the pond, and about fifteen or eighteen feet distant therefrom the body of the deceased was fished out of the pond.
There was a wound on the head of the deceased. It started at the eye-brow on the left side and extended four or five inches back and ended over the left ear. It was a deep wound and oval shaped and came to a feather-edge at the end. It entered the skull in a place about an inch and three-fourths. It penetrated the skull to that extent, and opened an artery which, according to some of the medical testimony, would have necessarily proved fatal.
There was evidence, pro and con, on the cause of the death of the deceased. The medical opinions were somewhat conflicting upon this subject but were sufficient to support the theory that the deceased was killed and afterwards put into the water. There was some evidence introduced to the effect that there were tracks or at least impressions that might have been made in the mud between the blood that was found on the bank and the place where the body was found. These impressions were discovered after the water had been drained out of the pond.
There was evidence that the deceased's character was that of a *Page 417 violent and dangerous man and especially when he was under the influence of liquor.
Appellant's reputation as a kind and inoffensive man was good. He testified in his own behalf, in substance, that after leaving the home of Thomas, he and the deceased were on their way to Hargrove's store; that the buggy was stopped.
Appellant got out of the buggy and while standing between the wheels to relieve his bladder, the deceased whipped the mule and caused it to run and the buggy ran over the appellant. Appellant, after recovering himself, followed on foot and found that the buggy had been run against a post and the mule had gone. The buggy was in a broken condition. He heard the deceased knock at the door of a store and curse, and as he left the door, appellant met him and asked him why he ran over him and tore up the buggy. Deceased said: "Damn you, I did not run over you." Appellant replied: "You know damned well you did," and deceased said: "By God, don't you like it?" and appellant said: "No, I don't like it, that is Hale's buggy, and you will have it fixed." Deceased then said: "Damn you and Hale both, I will kill the whole damned business." Appellant said: "I got my knife and started to walk off and I told him not to run on to me with that knife. He had a knife in his hand. When I started to walk off, he said, `Run you son-of-a-bitch, you,' and ran on me and struck at me. I threw up my left hand first and when he struck at me I struck him. I do not know whether I hit him or not. I could not tell, for he either tripped me or I tripped myself and I fell. We both went to the ground, but I twisted loose from him some way. I ran home and he ran towards the pools."
Appellant also described the wounds that were on him as a result of the buggy running over him and knocking him down. He said: "I don't know to this day whether I cut Don Turner or not, and if I did, I don't know when it was unless it was when I struck at him" in response to the attack by Turner; that he did not know when Turner cut him on the arm unless it was at the same time. Appellant said that all that he did was for his own protection and with no intention of killing him. Appellant exhibited the knife that he was using at the time, which was described as having a blade two and one-half inches long and three-eighths of an inch wide. The blade came down to a point and was not very sharp.
There was opinion testimony to the effect that the knife in the hands of a man of appellant's size could be used so as to cause death.
In a motion to quash the indictment, appellant urged that it was insufficient in failing to charge the means by which the homicide was committed. The motion purports to set up no facts controverting the averment in the indictment that the means of death were unknown to the grand jury and no evidence was offered or was admissible under the averments of the motion. It simply raises the *Page 418 legal question whether an indictment in the form mentioned would be so indefinite as to meet the constitutional and statutory requirement demanding that the accused be informed of the nature of the charge against him. Mr. Wharton, in his work on Criminal Procedure, 10th Ed., Sec. 198, treats the subject thus:
"If a particular fact, or condition, which is one of the component parts of the offense, can not be accurately described, the indictment will be good, if it state that such fact or condition is unknown to the grand jury, provided that the fact or condition in question be described as accurately as possible. But this allegation, that the name or other particular fact is `unknown to the grand jury,' is not merely formal; on the contrary, if it be shown that it was, in fact, known to them, then, the excuse failing, it has been repeatedly held that the indictment was bad, or that the defendant should be acquitted, or the judgment arrested or reversed."
See also Bishop's New Crim. Proc., Sec. 514; Wharton on Homicide, page 847. The correctness of the principle stated in the text was affirmed by this court in the case of Harris v. State, 37 Tex.Crim. Rep.. It is there stated that in a case where it is doubtful how death was caused, it is allowable to charge that it was done by some means unknown to the grand jury. In the same case it is also said that it was not necessary that the State introduce proof to show that the means of death were unknown to the grand jury. The court said that the rule applicable to an indictment for theft requiring proof of an averment that the name of the owner was unknown to the grand jury was not to be applied to an averment touching the means of death in a case of homicide, especially where there is nothing to suggest that the means of death were known to the grand jury. See also Wharton's Crim. Law, Sec. 658; Wharton's Crim. Ev., Sec. 93.
We understand the case of Carr v. State, 80 Tex. Crim. 465, 190 S.W. Rep. 728, is not in conflict with this view. It simply asserts the view that the grand jury should state the means of death if know. The same is true of Huddleston v. State, 70 Tex.Crim. Rep., 156 S.W. Rep. 1168.
Touching the name of the deceased, it seems that the same rule applies in homicide cases as in cases of theft, that is to say, that the averment of want of knowledge on the part of the grand jury must be sustained by proof. McCloy v. State, 47 Tex. Crim. 125; Wharton on Homicide, Sec. 569.
We fail to find any bill of exceptions to the action of the court in refusing to sustain the motion to quash the special venire. The motion contains averments of facts which are apparently controverted by the memorandum of the trial judge. The complaint in the motion, however, is that the appellant was not present at the time that the order was made directing the issuance of a special venire writ, and *Page 419 the drawing of a special venire of ninety men. The judge certified that the appellant was out on bond and that his attorney was present. We do not understand that appellant's presence was necessary.
The court submitted to the jury the issues of murder, manslaughter, self-defense and aggravated assault. No complaint of the refusal of special charges is presented in a manner which can be reviewed. We find some special charges copied in the record and mentioned in the brief, but there is nothing to show when they were presented to the court before he gave his instructions to the jury. The law requires that they be presented before the argument begins. See Code of Crim. Proc., Art. 737a; Berg. v. State, 64 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Bain v. State,73 Tex. Crim. 528; Gill v. State, 84 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Whitley v. State, 90 Tex.Crim. Rep..
The exceptions to the court's charge are all general. One more specific than others is that contained in the fourth subdivision, from which we take the following quotation:
"This is misleading to the jury and in a way informs the jury that unless the deceased was armed with such an instrument and making such acts that the right of self-defense would not be available to defendant."
After stating abstractly the law of self-defense, the court charged thus:
"If from the evidence you believe that defendant killed the said Don Turner but further believe that at the time of so doing the deceased had made an attack on him, which, from the manner and character of it and the relative strength of the parties and the defendant's knowledge, of the character and disposition of the deceased, caused him to have a reasonable expectation or fear of death or serious bodily injury and that acting under such reasonable expectation or fear, the defendant killed the deceased, then you should acquit him."
Apparently this charge is not subject to the criticism addressed to it in the exception quoted. From appellant's testimony, it appears that the deceased attacked him and cut him with a knife. The paragraph of the charge in question seems applicable to this phase of the testimony.
The general criticsm of the charge of the court to the effect that it does not give the appellant the benefit of the law requiring proof of an intent to kill, where the weapon is not per se a deadly weapon we think is not sustained by the record. The court used this language:
"* * * and if you further believe from the evidence, or have a reasonable doubt as to such fact that the instrument used was not a deadly weapon; that is a weapon which, from the mode and manner used, was not calculated or likely to produce death or serious bodily injury or if you believe from the evidence, or have a reasonable doubt as to such fact that the defendant, at the time he cut the deceased, if he did cut him, had no intention of killing him; then you are instructed *Page 420 that you could not convict the defendant of any grade of homicide but could only convict him of an aggravated assault, as the same is hereinafter explained to you."
We do not regard the general charge of the court as open to the objections urged against it. The evidence did not warrant the trial court in ignoring the issue of murder, The credibility of the witnesses and the weight of their testimony was for the jury. Art. 786 of the Code of Crim. Proc. The words uttered by the appellant on the trial was not the sole criterion. His testimony was to be weighed in the light of all the facts at hand. It is true that he testified that he struck the deceased with a knife, which knife he exhibited on the trial. There was also evidence, however, that this was a deadly weapon. Appellant testified that the deceased, when last seen by him, was running towards the pond. There was much evidence that the deceased was not drowned, carrying the inference that he was killed and that his body was hidden in the pond. The wounds upon him, according to some of the testimony, would instantly have disabled him so that he could not run. The evidence also suggests an axe as the weapon used.
Appellant's silence and declaration that he knew not the whereabouts of the deceased may have been regarded by the jury as incompatible with his testimony describing the fight. We think this court would not be justified in holding that the evidence of manslaughter or self-defense was of a nature to exclude the issue of murder.
There being no errors of the trial court brought up for review which make against the fairness of the trial, and the evidence as a whole being sufficient to support the verdict of murder, the decision of the jury, sanctioned by the trial judge, is binding upon this court.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ON REHEARING. May 23, 1923.