Robertson v. State
Robertson v. State
Opinion of the Court
This appeal is from a judgment of conviction for an assault with intent to commit the offense of robbery, alleged to have been committed upon one A. 0. Shamblin in Williamson county, on October 3, 18YJ. The trial in the court below commenced on January 13, 1881, and on that day a jury was impaneled and sworn, and the defendant entered his plea of “not guilty.” The jury returned their verdict on the" 14th day of January, 1881; by which the defendant was found guilty of an
The principal witnesses relied on by the prosecution for a conviction, on the trial below, were A. 0. Shamblin, John Bonner, and Dick Ray. There were several other witnesses introduced on behalf of the State, for the purpose of proving • isolated facts and circumstances, or for certain special purposes. The main facts, however, which connect the defendant with the crime charged against him, other than isolated circumstances upon which reliance is placed, is the testimony of the three witnesses, Shamblin, Bonner and Ray. The important features of the testimony of each of these three witnesses may be stated, briefly, as follows: The witness Shamblin is the person upon whom the assault is alleged to have been committed. His testimony comes before the court free from any taint' of suspicion that it is anything else than a truthful narration of the transaction as seen by himself. This witness testified that on Wednesday, October 3,1817, on the pub-lip road between Georgetown and Round Rock, and near the latter place, in Williamson county, Texas, a man attempted to rob him. It was a mile or two from Round Rock, where the road crosses a branch where there is a thicket of timber and brush on one side of the road. The witness had a wagon and team and four bales of cotton, and was on his way to Austin, and had also about five dollars in money with him. It was about one hour after sun-up. The man came out of the brush without any coat on, and was bare headed, and had on goggles. He told the witness that he had a sick friend there and asked witness to take him on his wagon to Round Rock. Witness assented and started to help him bring the sick man, when he (the man with the goggles) drew a pistol on the witness and said for him, witness, to he down,—that he was going to tie the witness, and take
The witness Bonner testified that he knew nothing about the commission of the offense except what the defendant told him. He then proceeds as follows: “ On Friday night of the Fair week in Belton, 5th October, 1877, the defendant came to my room and called me at. the window. It was 12 o’clock at night. I knew him well, for we were intimate. He told me that he had been to Austin and Bound Bock, and that near Bound Bock he attempted to rob a man who had a wagon and some cotton. Defendant said he was disguised; had on goggles, and had had his hair dyed by a barber in Bound Bock. Said he told the man he had a wounded friend, and asked him to take him on his wagon to Bound Bock; that the wagoner got down and followed him a piece from the road, and he drew a pistol on the man and told him to give up his money and lie down and let him tie him, or he would kill him; said he intended to tie the man and
The witness Ray, after testifymg that he knew the reputation of John Bonner in the neighborhood where he lived for truth and veracity, and that it is good, says: “ On the mght of the 4th of September, 1878,1 went, at the request of John Bonner, and concealed myself in a tree near Belton, and Bonner went off and returned with defendant, F. W. Robertson, and they were talking when they came up under the tree, and I heard the defendant say, 6 Shamblin could not swear to me, and if the negro barber swears to blacking my hair I will kill Mm.’ I knew it was defendant with Bonner, for I know him well and know his voice; was near him.” On cross-exammation he said: I thought it was about 9 o’clock when defend-
ant and Bonner came under the tree; it might have been later; I had no watch. It was a bright moonlight Mght. I was in an elm tree.”
The testimony by which it was attempted to identify, the defendant with the attempt at the robbery and to avoid detection and being identified by having dyed his hair, coming as it does, is, to say the least, very meagre and unsatisfactory as a foundation upon which to base a conviction for a felony. We would not feel warranted, however, in setting the verdict aside on this ground alone, except that to permit the judgment to stand would be to sanction a precedent dangerous to the citizen when the demands of the law had been fully complied with in other respects.
In this case we are unable to say that all the rights of the defendant were properly guarded in the instructions given to the jury on the trial below. In our opinion the following paragraph of the charge is not entirely free from objection: “If you can reasonably.account for or explain the facts and circumstances in evidence before you in this case in any way consistently with the defendant’s innocence, without resorting to unreasonable doubts and theories, then you should do so and acquit. But if you cannot account for nor explain the facts and circumstances detailed before you in this case upon any reason
We are constrained to say that with these plain principles of the statute law staring us in the face, it is erroneous, especially in a case of doubtful evidence as to guilt, for the court by its charge to direct, or even permit the jury to go in search of evidence by which they can find a reasonable explanation of the facts and circumstances consistent with the defendant’s innocence before they would be warranted in acquitting, when the law presumes that he is innocent independent of all those facts and circumstances until his guilt is established by legal evidence. If the evidence leaves the case involved in reasonable doubt as to his guilt, that doubt inures to the benefit of the defendant, and the law says he is entitled to be acquitted. An instruction on the presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt is a proper and necessary charge in all criminal trials, but as a general rule experience has demonstrated that a charge embracing the language of the
It seems from the supplemental motion of the defendant for a new trial, and from affidavits appended thereto, that it was a matter of considerable moment as bearing upon the main defense of the accused, which was that of alibi, to determine when a certain Methodist quarterly conference or camp meeting came on, and that this was an incidental question which was not developed until after the trial had begun. It is not seen that the testimony bearing upon the subject was of a nature which the defendant or his counsel could reasonably have anticipated in preparing for trial. Still we are not assured that in strictness of law the testimony said to be newly discovered was of sufficient materiality and importance to require a reversal of the judgment. We have not deemed it important to discuss in this opinion any of the other questions presented by the record and discussed in argument.
In view of the peculiar features of this case, and considering the meager and unsatisfactory character of the testimony, together 'with the liability of the charge to mislead the jury, and the probability that the defendant
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.