Looman v. State

The indictment contains three counts — the first for burglary, the second charges appellant with being an accomplice to the crime of burglary, and the third charges him as an accessory. The charge of the court submitted the first and second counts. The verdict of the jury was a general one, not specifying under which count the conviction occurred. It is urged that the testimony is insufficient to support the verdict of the jury. The accomplice, Bonner, testified that he and the defendant became acquainted with each other in the Indian Territory, in June, 1896, and traveled together, with appellant's son, into Grayson County, Texas. They were sharing the expenses incidental to this trip between them. Appellant traveled in a wagon and the accomplice on horseback. Sometimes they would alternate. When they reached the alleged burglarized house, Bonner (the accomplice) testifies: "Looman told me to go up to the house near by, and see if I could get a gun; that they were needing money, and perhaps they could sell it, and by that means get some money. Looman said he would wait out there in the wagon, and watch to see if any one should come, while I went into the house. We all stopped, and I got out of the wagon, and went into the house. I opened the door in order to get in. Saw a gun on the rack in the corner of the house. I took the gun down, walked out of the house, got on my horse, rode on down the road, and overtook Looman in the wagon. We were then going east, I rode up on the left side of the wagon, and handed the gun to Looman, and he put it into the wagon. The gun was a Winchester rifle. No one was at the house when I entered and got the gun. The house was about twenty-five or thirty steps from the road. This was about one o'clock in the day. * * * We all went on down to the town of Weston, in Collin County, and camped on the other side of Weston that night. The next day W.D. Boswell and Alex Robinson (a deputy sheriff) came down there, hunting for the gun. They arrested me, and took me down to the McKinney jail, in Collin County." Alex Robinson testified for the State: "I went down to the camp where defendant, *Page 278 Looman, and witness, Bonner, were, just below Weston. Mr. W.D. Boswell was also there, and he identified a certain gun which he said was the gun taken from his house the day before. The gun at that time was sitting up against the wire fence near the camp. [A gun being handed the witness, he stated, "This is the gun."] Defendant, Looman, and the witness, Bowner, both told us they had brought this gun of Mr. Boswell's through with them from the Territory. The witness, Bonner, told us that he and Looman were brothers, and that his name was Snider. Looman said nothing in reply to that just at that time. He was present, and as close to Bonner as I was, when he said they were brothers. Three or four minutes after that time, and after Boswell had identified his gun, and I told, defendant and Bonner that I would have to take them back to town, defendant called me to one side and told me they were not brothers, and told me that was not Bonner's real name, and told me what Bonner's name was, and said that he had nothing to do with the taking of the gun, and did not know that the gun was in the wagon until they stopped to camp that night." The witness, W.D. Boswell, testified, in substance, to the same facts as the witness, Robinson, and, further, that when they reached the camp of defendant and Bonner, he found his gun sitting up at the camp by a wire fence. He also stated: "While at the camp, and when Alex Robinson had my gun in his hand, and was talking about it, defendant, Looman, said they had brought this gun from the Indian Territory here." Mrs. Boswell testified that at the time of the burglary of her husband's house she was some two or three hundred yards away. She saw the man enter the house and leave it, but could not tell whether he had the gun or not. Just after the burglar left the house, she saw the wagon pass. The gun was identified as the gun taken from Boswell's house. If the testimony of the accomplice is to be believed at all, the case is completely made out; but this is not sufficient under our law. He must be corroborated, and we think this has been sufficiently done. The defendant himself stated before the parties identified the gun at the camp that he and the defendant had brought that gun with them from the Indian Territory. He knew this was false. He also remained silent for some time after Bonner stated that they were brothers. The attending circumstances in this case, as shown by the testimony referred to herein, amply corroborate the accomplice, Bonner, and the corroboration is much stronger than in the case of Martin v. State, 21 Tex.Crim. App., 1. The court in that case held that the testimony was sufficient. In the motion for a new trial appellant contends that the second count in the indictment, which charges appellant with being an accomplice to the burglary, is not sufficient. We think it is. It fully charges that offense, and, if it was not sufficient, the first count is; and in a case of this character, the verdict being general, the testimony *Page 279 being sufficient to prove the first count, the verdict will be applied to that count. The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

[NOTE. — Appellant's motion for a rehearing was overruled without a written opinion. — Reporter.]