Nolen v. State
Nolen v. State
Opinion of the Court
The appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the State penitentiary for a period of twenty years, on an indictment which charges him with the murder of one Sandy Winn, in Medina County, on April 6, 1879. From our views of the case as presented by the record, it will not be necessary to follow counsel in the argument, or consider consecutively the several supposed errors assigned.
As to the question raised by the defendant’s first bill of exceptions, to the effect that the prosecuting attorney was permitted to interrogate one of the State’s witnesses, over objection by defendant’s counsel, by a certain question as to what the witness had said on a former examination: the question as stated in the bill of exceptions is, “ Did not you say on a former examination that Nolen said that he wanted to pay off that damned old fellow, to get rid of him? — referring to the deceased. ” In law, as to the manner in ivhich a witness is to be examined, “ the subject lies chiefly in the
In the direct examination of a witness, the general rule is that it is not allowable to put to him what are termed leading questions, — that is, questions which suggest to the witness the desired answer. Id., sect. 434, and note 5. -This rule, however, has no reference to that portion of the testimony which is merely introductory to that which is material. The rule which requires the avoidance of leading questions was, we are of opinion, violated by allowing the question to be put to the witness in the form as set out. •There are, it is true, exceptions to this rule, but this does not appear to be within those exceptions. Id., sect. 435, and notes. It is a general rule of evidence that a party will not be allowed to impeach his own witness. This rule has, however, been so modified by statute, in criminal trials, as “ that any party, when facts stated by the witness are injurious to his cause, may attack his testimony in any other manner except by proving the bad .character of the witness.” Code Cr. Proc., art. 755. It does not appear that the objectionable question was asked for the purpose of contradicting, discrediting, or impeaching the credibility of the witness, but rather to get before the jury in an indirect way evidence adduced on another trial.
Ordinarily, we would not reverse a judgment on account of a want of observance of the strict rules of evidence, for the reason that the subject is so largely confided to the trial judges; but a case might arise where' this discretion had been so far abused as to-require our interposition in order to protect a party from injury. We may be indulged in the
The matter set out in the defendant’s fifth bill of exceptions is one of graver importance than any other ruling on the evidence. This matter may be succinctly stated as follows : The State’s witness Henry Shane testified that after the coroner’s inquest, held one day after the finding of the body, the witness, at the request of citizens, and especially at the request of the coroner, having got on track of a wagon at the place where the dead body was found, followed the track to Rabbit Hill, near the corner of Wilson and Atascosa Counties, a distance of about seventy miles, by circuitous routes, sometimes in different roads and sometimes without a road, and having there found a wagon and one Swift, from whom the pursuing party learned that the defendant had gone to one John Camp’s, a distance of twenty or twenty-five miles (other witnesses making the distance less), followed on, and between daylight and sunrise the next morning came upon the defendant, at Camp’s house, up, dressed, and putting on his boots. The party in pursuit of the defendant at this point consisted of the ■ witness Shane, one Tomlinson, and one Carothers, a member of the State rangers, who had joined the witness in the pursuit, and had taken charge of the party.
Inasmuch as what follows appears to have been elicited by the question mentioned in the bill of exceptions, and which the court permitted to be answered, over objection by the defendant’s counsel, we here set it out in the exact
. The question objected to was this: “ Please state what P. S. Nolen said to you about Sandy Winn, the deceased, after you left Camp’s house and before he was placed under arrest? ” In giving the bill of exceptions the judge says, by way of explanation for his ruling, that “ before this testimony as to the admissions or confessions of defendant was permitted, the witness was examined as to whether defendant was in his custody, or that of any of witness’s party. He replied that he was not under arrest or in custody; but,
The charge of the court on this particular subject embraces the tenth and eleventh paragraphs, and is as follows : “ 10. If the jury find from the testimony that, at the time the defendant made the confessions testified to by the witness Shane, he was in the custody of said Shane, or in the custody of any other person in company with Shane, then such confessions cannot be considered by you, and you are instructed to discard them from your consideration. It matters not whether the persons were authorized to make the arrest, or whether the law is complied with; the question is, simply, was he in custody, —that is, involuntarily restrained of his liberty. 11. If he was not in such custody, then you may consider the confessions testified to; you being the judges as to what weight you will attach to it, or to any portion of it.”
The court erred, secondly, in submitting to the jury the question as to whether the defendant was under restraint. Whether the testimony was admissible or not was a question of law for the court, and not for the jury ; and in a doubtful case the defendant should have had the benefit of the doubt. But in the present case there was no doubt remaining on the mind of the court; but instead of withdrawing the testimony as to the confessions from the jury entirely, he submitted the question to the jury. And, in the third place, the court erred greatly to the prejudice of the defendant when, instead of promptly withdrawing it from the jury, when first satisfied of its inadmissibility, he permitted it to
Doubtless a case might arise where a similar error might not materially affect the rights of the defendant, as in Speer's Case, 4 Texas Ct. App. 474: but in one like the present, where the question of guilt depends solely upon circumstantial evidence, the liability to injury is manifest.
The fact that it is not shown that the defendant was arraigned is in this case no longer of moment; he having been by the verdict of the jury in the case virtually acquitted of murder in the first degree, he cannot hereafter be convicted of an offence where an arraignment is required. Whatever may be the requirements of the common law, or the practice in other States, with us there is no arraignment of a defendant except upon an indictment for a capital offence. Code Cr. Proc., art. 508. In capital felonies, however, except in a case like the present, where the defendant is to be tried a second time after an acquittal of the capital felony, an arraignment is requisite, and that this has been done should appear from the record when before this court on appeal. Code Cr. Proc., art. 508, and following.
The evidence admitted over objection of the defendant, and set out in bills of exception Nos. 2 and 3, was but hearsay, so far as is discernible from the record before us, and ought to have been excluded.
We deem it proper to notice one objectionable feature in the charge. The charge is divided into two- parts : one portion relating to murder in the first degree, and the other to murder in the second degree. The charge of the court on circumstantial evidence is so intimately interwoven with that portion of the charge on murder in the first degree, the jury might reasonably have supposed that the charge on that subject applied alone to that degree of the offence, and that it had no reference to murder in the second degree;
For the errors pointed out, we are of opinion the court should have awarded the defendant a new trial. The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded'.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.