Chester v. State

Ector, Presiding Judge.

The errors assigned as committed on the trial of this cause in the lower court are :

“ 1st. The court erred in its general charge to the jury, because the same was not applicable to the facts of this case.
“ 2d. The court erred in refusing to give the six special instructions asked by the defendant.
“ 3d. The court erred in rendering judgment and passing sentence upon the verdict of the jury, because said verdict *705was not responsive to the issue, and found defendant guilty of a different crime than that charged against him.
“ 4th. The court erred in refusing to the defendant the privilege to prove that Mary Sylvester kept an assignation house.”

The indictment charges the defendant with the theft of one United States legal-tender note of the denomination and value of $100; fifty United States legal-tender treasury notes, commonly called greenbacks, each of the denomination and value of $20 : fifty bills in United States currency, commonly called greenbacks, each of the denomination and value of $10, and fifty bills in United States currency, commonly called greenbacks, each of the denomination and value of $5, the property of Mary Sylvester, alias Mary Packingham.

The indictment is a good one. There is no exception taken to it. The presiding judge delivered to the jury a charge in which he clearly set forth the law applicable to the case. In it he instructed the jury that the defendant is presumed to be innocent until his guilt is established by the evidence, and that, in case they had a reasonable doubt of his guilt, he was entitled to be acquitted. It was so clear in its meaning that it could not be mistaken by the jury and fully covered every material allegation in the indictment.

The evidence in the record shows that Mrs. Mary Packingham drew from a bank in the city of Galveston, on the 8th day of July, 1876, $1,850 in money of the denominations and value as described in the indictment. This money she wrapped up in a paper and placed in a basket which she had with her. She went to Freedmen’s Hall, in the city, where she exhibited her money to the bar-keeper, and it was seen by the defendant. This was between eleven and twelve o’clock. From there she went to Devotee’s Corner, and there took a street car for her home, between Eighteenth *706and Nineteenth streets, on avenue N. She says she arrived at home about twelve o’clock; that she set down the basket, with the money in it, in the front room of her house ; went out in the yard, to the cistern, and prepared a pitcher of ice-water, which took her about five minutes; that she then returned to the room and found her money and basket both gone.

From the testimony of other witnesses it appears that soon after she left the Freedmen’s Hall defendant also left there, went away, was absent awhile, and returned. From Freedmen’s Hall to the residence of Mrs. Packingham was about ten of the city blocks distant. Between twelve and one o’clock on the day the money was stolen defendant took the witness Shanholtz to his room and exhibited a large amount of bills, just such as Mrs. Packingham had lost. He made contradictory statements as to how he got the money. He had, only the day before, pawned his watch for $2. On the Sunday following he handed Smith Washington a roll of money, asking him to keep it, and on Monda)' he went to Shanholtz’s shop and threw on the floor a $100 bill, which Shanholtz picked up and gave him the change for. This bill was afterwards identified by Mrs. Packingham and her daughter, in court, as a part of the stolen money.

On the 11th of July the defendant’s house was searched, when $9 in specie were found in his trunk, and $1 in his pocket. He said that was all the money he had; and then and there, on further search of the premises, $660 in $10 bills were found in a tin can under his house, which he claimed, and also $280 which were buried on the lot. All the evidence in the record tends to show that he did not make this money by honest industry or by gaming. He does not account for it. We find him without funds just before the money ivas stolen; just after, with an amount much larger than he was ever seen to have before, and a *707portion of it was identified as a part of the stolen money. All the facts and circumstances of this case, when taken together, were sufficient to lead the mind of the jury to the deliberate conclusion, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, and no other person, committed the offense - charged.

We do not think that the court erred in refusing to give the charges asked by the counsel for the defendant. The court had given the defendant, as before stated, the full benefit of a charge to the jury as to the presumption of innocence, and on a reasonable doubt.

Whilst it is true that, in cases dependent on circumstantial evidence alone, a jury should not convict a defendant unless the facts are not only consistent with the guilt of the defendant, but incapable of explanation upon any other hypothesis than that of his guilt, yet, as the jury are the sole and exclusive judges of the weight of the testimony, whether it be positive or circumstantial, it cannot be properly said to be an error for the court to refuse to charge the jury upon legal presumptions and degrees of weight in testimony, unless some part of the testimony comes within the defined exceptions to the general rule, such as that “ a conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice unless corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the offense committed.”

If testimony has been offered to impeach a witness who has testified in a cause, for the same reason it would be improper for the court to instruct the jury that, “if any witness having testified in the cause had been impeached to their satisfaction, they should disregard his testimony.” When an attempt has been made to impeach a witness, his testimony is before the jury, and the presiding judge has no legal authority to tell the jury they should disregard Ms testimony if they believe he has been successfully impeached. His testimony is before them, and the question of his credi*708bility is for the jury. Brown v. The State, 23 Texas, 195 ; Boon v. Weathered, 23 Texas, 687.

It is insisted on the part of the counsel for the defendant that his client accounted for himself and his whereabouts,, on the day of the theft, from about the hour of noon until four o’clock, p. m., showing that during those hours he was not near the house of Mary Packingham, and that he could not have committed the theft, inasmuch as the entire evidence offered by the state shows that it took place at her house at or near the hour of half-past twelve, and that, with an alibi proved, the court should have submitted to the jury the issue as to whether or not the defendant, at the time the theft was committed, was in such proximity to the house of the said Mary as would have enabled him to have committed the theft for which he was on trial.

Whilst an alibi is sometimes the only defense which an innocent man can make against an unfounded charge, this defense, as our every-day experience teaches us, is greatly liable to abuse, growing out of the ease with which it may be fabricated, and the difficulty with which such fraud and perjury are detected. When such a defense is attempted to be made, it should go to the jury Eke other evidence, the jury being the sole judges of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the testimony. The evidence of the testimony on both sides, taken together, does not represent the accused as having been at both places at once ; but only as having been at one time in the one place, and at the other time in the other place. The jury, doubtless, in considering the rapidity with which the defendant could have passed from one place to the other, believed he could have arrived at the house of Mrs. Packingham in time to have committed the theft, and then returned to the barber-shop of the witness, Thomas Shanholtz, between twelve and one o’clock of the day on which the theft was committed. Besides this, the jury, doubtless, were not unmindful of the fact that, the *709witnesses do not swear positively as to the exact period of time in either case. As a general rule, men do not note time with precision, particularly where it does not concern their own affairs, even where the occurrence itself is observed with some minuteness. It is seldom the case that two witnesses agree as to the exact time of day when an occurrence happened; In this case no witness made observation of the hour by any time-piece, or with reference to some future ■use to be made of his observation.

We do not believe that the objection to the verdict is well taken. By first reading the charge of the court, we may readily account for the language employed by the jury in finding their verdict. In construing a verdict, the main object is to get at the meaning of the jury. This can be dearly ascertained from the verdict itself, and it is in response to the issues submitted by the court to the jury.

The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.

Affirmed.