Whitaker v. State
Whitaker v. State
Opinion of the Court
The law of this case cannot be properly discussed and understood without first reciting the facts in evidence.
In September, 1873, E. Townley died at a store or grocery house kept by one John Henderson, in Denton county. For the purposes of this opinion it will be assumed as a fact that his death was caused by a wound inflicted upon his head with a rock weighing two or two and a half pounds, and that the fatal blow with the rock was stricken by the defendant. The deceased went to Henderson’s grocery on the morning of the day of his death, and drank whiskey until he became somewhat intoxicated. Henderson, Hood, Snider, Adkins and Horton were at the grocery It seems that all these parties were more or less under the influence of liquor, and Snider, Horton and the deceased were very much under its influence. Horton and deceased had a fight, which resulted in Horton’s getting whipped. This occurred before defendant went to the grocery. Horton was defendant’s brother-in-law. Defendant went to the grocery in the afternoon, and after reaching there took two drinks of whiskey, one a large drink. He remarked when he first went to the grocery that he had heard that some of them
There was but one wound ■ upon deceased, which was on the left side of his head, above and behind the ear, and was about one and a half inches long, and the skull appeared to have been broken. This occurred about-3 o’clock, P. M., and he died about 9 o’clock, P. M. • Defendant remained with deceased, got water and bathed him, sent for a doctor, and waited on deceased until he-died. A doctor came and examined deceased, and said he-would be all right as soon as the whiskey died in him. One witness stated that when he got to the grocery, after the death of Townley, defendant was sitting by the side-of Townley, and looked up at witness and laughed and said: “Get down and see what you think of this case.”
The deceased was a strong, muscular man, weighing; about 150 or 160 pounds; he was a little lame in one leg. The defendant at the time of the homicide, one witness-' says, was about 16 years old and weighed about 115 pounds; other witnesses stated that he was 21 years old or over, and weighed about 135 pounds. The defendant-left the country immediately after the killing, and was arrested in Missouri in 1879, and brought back and tried upon an indictment for the murder of Townley, filed 19th September, 1879, and was convicted of murder in the second degree and his punishment assessed at five years’ confinement in the penitentiary.
No less than twenty errors are assigned by defendant’s counsel, in the proceedings in the court below. We do not think it necessary to discuss and determine all the-questions thus raised and argued by counsel, and shall confine our opinion to such of the assigned errors as we deem of importance with reference to this particular-case.
We think the charge is correct as an abstract proposition of law. (Penal Code, arts. 614-617.) “Implied malice ” is malice presumed by law from the commission of any deliberate and cruel act, however sudden, done or committed without just cause or excuse. (Jordan v. State, 10 Texas, 479.) If the injury which caused the death was inflicted in a cruel manner, the law would certainly imply malice, notwithstanding the instrument used in inflicting the injury be one not likely to produce death. It is the cruel manner in which the act is committed that stamps it as malicious. If, then, the evidence in the case before us warrants the charge under discussion, we are of the opinion that it is unobjectionable. But it is contended that there are no facts in this case which authorize such a charge, and that therefore it was error to give it.
We have searched the statement of facts carefully to-find evidence which would authorize the court to submit to the jury the issue as to whether or not this homicide was perpetrated in a cruel manner. We can see nothing in the facts and circumstances of the killing which give to it the character of cruelty, any more than is found in
And what makes this portion of the charge more objectionable than it otherwise would be is the fact that it is followed by another paragraph embodying to some extent the same idea, thus: “When the circumstances attending a homicide show an evil or cruel disposition on the part of the party committing the homicide, or that it was the design of the person offending to kill the deceased, and if he commit the homicide upon his implied malice-, he is guilty of murder in the second degree, although it may appear that the means he used were not in their nature calculated ordinarily to inflict death.” This is also correct law, and would have been unobjectionable in this case if it had omitted the word cruel; but in using that word it submitted to the jury an issue which was not
The charge of the court is also objected to because it does not sufficiently define murder in the second degree. It very fully and clearly defines murder in the first degree, and instructs the jury that under the evidence the defendant is not guilty of murder in the first degree. It then proceeds to explain implied malice as follows: “Implied malice is where one doth intentionally kill another without the formed design and deliberate mind required to constitute a killing on express malice, but under such a state of circumstances as do not reduce the killing to manslaughter or negligent homicide, or which do not excuse or justify the killing.” This is the whole of the-definition of murder in the second degree as given in the charge. The jury are nowhere instructed as to the state of circumstances which would reduce the killing to manslaughter. It is contended by counsel for defendant that the definition of murder in the second degree, as given in the charge, is imperfect without a further definition of manslaughter. We are of the same opinion. How could the jury know, without instructions from the court, what state of circumstances would reduce the homicide to manslaughter.
This charge, in effect, tells the jury that the homicide is not murder in the second degree if it is manslaughter, negligent homicide, or excusable or justifiable homicide. Having told the jury this much, it seems to us that, to
It is also objected to the charge upon negligent homicide that it concludes by instructing the jury that, if they believe from the evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligent homicide, they would acquit him, as that offense was barred by the ^statute of 'limitation. It is contended by defendant’s counsel that this was a charge upon the weight of evidence, and calculated to injure the defendant by telling the jury, in effect, that unless they convicted the defendant of murder in the second degree they must acquit him entirely. There was evidence in the case to show that immediately after the homicide the defendant left the county, and was for awhile in Austin, Travis county, and after that was absent in the State of Missouri until after the filing of the indictment in September, 1879,— the homicide having been committed some six years before the indictment was presented. It is provided by art. 202, Code Crim. Procedure, “That the time during which a person accused of an offense is absent from the State shall not be computed in the period of limitation.” Negligent homicide being a misdemeanor, a prosecution for the offense would be barred by the lapse-of two years after the commission of the offense. (Code Crim. Proc. art. 200.)
We think the charge upon this subject, while it was favorable to the defendant, assumed as a fact that the offense was barred, when the evidence left that question a doubtful one which should have been submitted to the jury for then determination, and was therefore a charge upon the weight of evidence. While we would not be-inclined to reverse the judgment for this error, yet, the charge having been excepted to kf the defendant at the time, the statute in such case positively demands
There are other questions in this case which we will not discuss, as they are not likely to occur upon another trial. And it is not necessary to a determination of this case that they should be decided.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.