Hodges v. State

WOODLEY, Presiding Judge.

The appellant and Clarence E. Gipson, Jr., were jointly indicted for robbery by assault, the indictment alleging that they took from Bessie Lou Nelson one hundred dollars in money and one ring.

Severance having been granted, the appellant was found guilty by a jury and assessed a term of seven years.

He appeals from such conviction and complains, in his brief, (1) that the court erred in not granting his motion for new trial because the evidence is insufficient to sustain the conviction; (2) that the court erred in his charge to the jury, and (3) that the court erred in refusing to allow the mother of Gipson to testify that she had advised him to obtain possession of the ring.

The prosecuting witness testified that on August 31, 1963, her name was Bessie Lou Nelson; that she had since married and her name was Bessie Lou Nelson Langston; that prior to August 31, 1963, she had been Clarence E. Gipson’s prostitute for some four years but had left the house of prostitution where she last worked for him some four months before August 31, 1963; that on said date she saw the appellant and Gipson in a pool hall in Houston and Gipson asked her to go outside and she did.

The appellant was in his car and the motor was running when Gipson “grabbed and kicked” her into the car and got in beside her. Gipson began calling her “nasty names” and was beating her head on the dash board as the appellant backed out of the driveway.

After stopping for Gipson to make a phone call, the appellant drove to a wooded area near the Bayou. They were talking about where they could go and no one could hear her screaming.

They found such a place and stopped the car. Gipson got out and cut a limb off a tree and told the prosecuting witness to take her clothes off and she did. He had her get on her hands and knees on the ground and he cut her hair off. The appellant was there, at one time touching or holding her hands, but Gipson told him he did not need any help and he got back in the car and turned up the radio.

Gipson then took a diamond ring off her finger, had her lie on her back with her legs up in the air and whipped her with the limb he had cut.

In addition to losing her ring, $100 in money the prosecutrix had in her brassiere disappeared during her ordeal.

The prosecutrix also testified that Gip-son stated that she was being beaten and robbed “because I ran away, and then I was supposed to talk to the Austin Sheriff’s Department about other characters and dope.”

She was finally driven back to the pool hall, Gipson telling her he wanted everybody to see how she looked. She testified that her hair was “about an inch long; some parts were longer but the crown was short and my body was black and blue.”

She testified that she had been with the appellant and he wanted her to be his prostitute but she had “never hustled for him.”

The prosecutrix admitted that she had told everybody she was Gipson’s wife and had lived for a time with his mother who thought that she was married to her son, and that she had worked under the name Linda Gipson, but testified “we were never married.”

*423Evidence was introduced showing that the prosecutrix had purchased a watch for $59.50 and the ring which cost $95.00 on credit while Gipson was in the penitentiary and she was living with his mother, and the jewelry store was holding Gipson’s stepfather responsible for an unpaid balance of $85.85 as co-signer.

The prosecutrix testified that Gipson had the watch and that the ring belonged to her; that she had paid what she was supposed to pay and that she had been told that the balance would be paid by an unnamed person, “and if it’s not, I can pay for it and I will.”

She testified that when Gipson took the ring off her finger he said something to the effect “It is mine” — or “It belongs to me.”

The evidence shows that the prosecuting witness called Frank L. Bates, Criminal Investigator with the Travis County Sheriff’s Department, about 1 A.M. from Houston. He met her at the airport in Austin the next morning and took her to the the Sheriff’s office. Bates described the condition of her body on September 2, 1963:

“A. The body was very badly bruised and scratched in back. It was bruised almost continuously from the waist down.
“Q. From the waist down to where?
“A. To the ankles.
“Q. From the waist down to her ankles?
“A. Yes, sir. In the back.
“Q. Did you notice anything about her arms?
“A. Yes, sir. There were bruises on her arms; bruises on her face, and lots of her hair was missing.
“Q. A lot of her hair missing?
“A. Yes, sir.”

Gipson admitted to Joe Thorpe his participation in the robbery and took him to the ring and to the scene where the officer found the cut tree and loose hair which Gipson said had been cut off the head of the complaining witness.

The appellant offered in evidence the testimony of Officer L. E. Shipley to the effect that Gipson “represented that the defendant Hodges did not have any part of the offense except he drove the car.”

Mrs. Guillory testified that at Christmas time her husband went with the prosecuting witness she thought was married to her son and they picked out a watch “and he made the mistake of co-signing with her”; that he went on board ship in January “and as soon as he shipped out she went down and added the ring to the same account,” and that “my husband had to pay the watch out.”

The trial court did not err in excluding testimony of Mrs. Guillory to the effect that she had been contacted by the Jewelry Store and had requested her son Clarence E. Gipson to return the ring to her .so she could return it to the Jewelry Store. Such evidence constituted no defense to the taking of the ring by assault and by violence.

The court charged the jury on the law of principals, and instructed the jury that all persons are principals who are guilty of acting together in the commission of an offense regardless of the particular part performed by either or both. The-jury was also instructed that any person who advises or agrees to the commission of an offense and who is present when the same is committed is a principal whether he aid or not in the illegal act, however mere presence of one where the act is being committed does not make him a principal.

Appellant’s complaint to the omission of further instructions on the law of principals is not before us. Objections to the charge appearing in the transcript are not shown to have been offered before the charge was read to the jury, and the only exception to the court’s order overruling the objections is the notation below the judge’s signature.

*424The contention that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a finding that a robbery occurred is overruled.

The appellant’s brief concedes that unquestionably he drove the car and was part of the plan to aid or abet in the whipping, but contends that nowhere in the testimony is there support for the robbery theory. We do not agree.

The appellant was present when the assault was made, the ring was taken and the money disappeared. He was present when Gipson stated the reason the prosecuting witness was “being beaten and robbed.” He drove the prosecuting witness to the ■isolated place where she was assaulted and robbed, and back to the pool hall thereafter. The jury was warranted in concluding that he was hot merely present but that he agrefed to 'the commission of the offense and was a principal.

The judgment is affirmed.