Harrison v. State
Harrison v. State
Opinion of the Court
For the third time the appellant prosecutes his appeal to this court from a judgment of conviction for murder, and for the third time we are called upon to send the case back for another trial. On the first appeal the judgment was reversed chiefly because proof of venue did not appear in the statement of facts, and the action of the court in drawing a special venire and causing it to be served upon the defendant was deemed incompatible with the law. 3 Texas Ct. App. 558.
On a second appeal, to our last term of court at this place, the judgment of conviction was again reversed, because the evidence was wholly circumstantial and the court below refused an instruction requested by defendant as to the law in such cases-, and failed to embody any instruction upon that subject in the general charge. 5 Texas Ct. App. 42.
Upon the last trial, the court gave the instruction requested upon the preceding trial, accompanied with the following disquisition: “What is termed circumstantial evidence is legal evidence, and is often as conclusive and strong upon the understanding as direct and positive evidence. Circumstantial evidence is, in the abstract, nearly, though perhaps not altogether, as strong as positive evidence. In the concrete, it may be infinitely stronger. A fact positively sworn to by a single witness of unblemished character is not so satisfactorily proven as a fact which is a necessary consequence of a chain of other facts sworn to by many witnesses of doubtful credibility. * * *' The
Apart from several palpable errors of law in this instruction, taken as a whole it invaded the province of the jury, and extended beyond a plain statement of the law of the case, to which the charge must be restricted under our system of jurisprudence. Evidently the learned judge mistook or overlooked the purpose and object of a charge upon circumstantial evidence, and instead of instructing the jury as to the nature and force of the conclusion which must impress itself upon their minds before they are authorized to convict upon that character of evidence, which is not only permissible but imperatively demanded by the law, he has undertaken to instruct and advise the jury as to the proper process of reasoning upon the facts, and. as to the precautionary considerations to be borne in mind in coming to a proper conclusion upon the facts. “ The jury are bound to take the law from the court, and when the charge is made to embrace the rules of law, and philosophic dissertations upon the nature of evidence, the jury are not always capable of distinguishing the one from the other. A charge, therefore, which extends beyond a plain statement of the
From the language and general tenor of the charge as set out above, the jury were well authorized to receive the same as an advice from the court that they need not be alarmed at the idea of finding a man guilty upon circumstantial evidence, because it was not only legal and competent, but frequently more convincing than positive testimony, even though the facts constituting the chain were testified to by witnesses of doubtful credibility, and that they were as likely to make a mistake and convict an innocent man upon positive testimony as upon circumstantial. The jury not only did not need this stiffening incitement to a discharge of their official duty, but the law absolutely forbade its administration by the court. “ The measure of the law is not filled by mere abstinence of the judge from any positive expression as to the weight of the evidence, or. his refraining from a positive discussion of the facts. The spirit of the law requires of him to avoid even the appearance of an intimation as to the facts, and to so guard the language of his charge that no inference, however remote or obscure, may be drawn by the jury as to the facts in evidence from the charge as given them, which is made the law of the case.” Stuckey v. The State, 7 Texas Ct. App. 174. See also Walker v. The State, 42 Texas, 373.
The defendant having excepted to the charge of the court as upon the weight of evidence, we are forbidden by statute to inquire whether or not the defendant was thereby prejudiced, and are required to reverse the judgment without looking further. Code Cr. Proc., art. 685; Bishop v. The State, 43 Texas, 390; Heath v. The State, 7 Texas Ct. 464.
The extent and manner of argument by counsel to the
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.