Sutton v. State
Sutton v. State
Opinion of the Court
The State’s witness Mann testified, in substance, that he and the defendant agreed together to steal Isaac Cole’s mule, and that, in pursuance of this agreement, they stole the mule in the Chickasaw Nation; that it was agreed between them that he should bring the mule into this State and sell it, and meet the defendant at Pottsboro, in Grayson county, and there divide with him the proceeds of the theft; that the defendant furnished him with a bridle and saddle to put on the mule, and fifty cents in money to pay ferriage at the river; that he, the witness, brought the mule to Grayson county, swapped it for a horse, then sold the horse, and met the defendant at Pottsboro according to appointment, and divided proceeds with him according to their previous agreement. The defendant was not with the witness when he, the witness, brought the mule
Upon- this state of facts, the court charged the jury as follows:
“ In order to convict the defendant you must believe that he was personally present at the time and place when and where the mule was taken from the possession of said Cole, and you must believe that he aided and abetted in the same, and you must further believe that the said Sutton brought said mule into Grayson county, Texas. But, if you believe that the said Sutton and Mann stole the said mule under the circumstances enumerated above, and that it was agreed at or before the time that the said Sutton would furnish the said Mann the means to bring the said mule into Grayson county, Texas, and that he did so, and that it was further agreed between them that said Mann should bring said mule into Grayson county, Texas, and sell it, and you believe from the evidence it was then agreed that the said Sutton would meet the said Mann in the said Grayson county, Texas, and that they would divide the proceeds of the sale of the said mule; and further, that in pursuance of the said agreement the said Mann brought the mule into Grayson county and sold it, or first swapped it, and sold the animal he received in exchange, and that the said Sutton met the said Mann in Grayson county, Texas, in pursuance of said agreement, and that they divided the proceeds arising from the said sale between them, this would constitute a sufficient bringing of said mule into Grayson county, on the part of the said Sutton.”
It is insisted by the defendant’s counsel that the foregoing charge is erroneous. Their position is that “to justify a con vietion for theft committed out of this State, it must be shown (with other requisites) that the party who committed the theft brought the property into this State, or, at least, that he had possession or control over it after it came into this State.” This position is unquestionably supported by the letter of the law. (Penal Code, Arts. 798 and 799; Carter v. The State, 37 Texas, 362.) But does not the spirit and purpose of the law reach further? If the defendant not only aided in taking the mule, but furnished the means of bringing him into this State, and then came here himself in pursuance of an agreement to do so, and here received his portion of the fruits of the crime, did he not, within the meaning of the law, bring the property into this State? Was he not, in the eyes of the law, a principal in the theft, from its inception to its final consummation? Was not the possession and
During the time the jury were deliberating upon the case, they came into court and requested of the court further instructions as to whether they had the right to consider the facts which were proven to have transpired in Texas in determining whether the defendant was present when the mule was stolen in the Chickasaw Nation. In response to this inquiry the court instructed them as follows: “ In order to determine whether or not Jake Sutton was present at the time of the commission of the alleged offense, the jury are authorized to take into consideration all the facts and circumstances proven in the case, in so far as the same have any bearing on the question, without reference to which side of the river they may have occurred.”
We see no valid objection to this instruction. It merely directed the jury to look to and consider all the evidence in the case bearing upon the point inquired about. If facts were in evidence which transpired on the Texas side of the river, and which tended to prove that the defendant took part in the theft of the mule on the other side of the river, certainly such facts are proper to be considered in determining the defendant’s participation in the theft. We fail to perceive any force in the objections made to this charge. Of course this charge was intended by the court to be considered by the jury in connection with the main charge previously delivered to them, and we must presume that it was so considered by the jury. The special instruction requested by the defendant’s counsel, and refused by the court, was not in response to the question propounded by the jury, and, furthermore, was not, in our opinion) correct in principle.
The defendant’s bills of exception numbers one, two and four, were taken to evidence admitted over his objections, which evi
On cross-examination of the witness Mann, the defendant asked him if he, the witness, had not been a witness at Fort Smith, in a case on a charge of theft, against a party, and what kind of property it was, and if it was not his mother’s property, and if he did not assist in stealing it, and if he did not turn State’s evidence, and have them to convict the man. Upon objection made by the State the witness was not permitted to answer these questions. We are not informed by the bill of ex- j captions what were the facts intended to be elicited by these qcations, nor the particular objections made by the State. We cannot determine from this bill of exceptions the relevancy and materiality of the testimony sought to be elicited, and therefore we cannot hold that the court erred in its ruling. (Davis v. The State, 14 Texas Ct. App., 645.)
The defendant’s sixth and eleventh bills of exception are likewise too imperfect to enable us to determine the relevancy and the materiality of the evidence that was rejected. It is not I shown in the bills what the testimony was which the questions sought to develop.
The defendant’s eighth bill of exceptions is to the rejection of testimony by him to prove that the witness Mann, while confined in jail on the charge of this same theft, had stated to his counsel repeatedly that the defendant Sutton had nothing to do with the theft of the mule, but that he, the witness, was alone guilty of the theft. This testimony was objected to by the State, and was rejected by the court upon the ground that said statements having been made by the witness to his attorneys, the same were privileged communications, and were therefore not admissible in evidence. It is a well settled general rule that a lawyer is not permitted to disclose communications made to him by his client in the course of their professional relations. (Whart. Crim. Ev., sec. 496; Roscoe’s Crim. Ev., sec. 150; 1 Whart. Ev., sec. 576; 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 237 et seq.) But it is contended by the counsel for the defendant that the case before us does not come
The remarks of counsel for the State in the concluding argument of the case, and set forth in the defendant’s ninth bill of exceptions, were improper, and not within the rules governing argument. The court very promptly checked the counsel, and reprimanded him for this violation of the rule, and instructed the jury to disregard the objectionable remarks. If, upon a consideration of the whole case, it appeared to us that this conduct of counsel had influenced the minds of the jury to the defendant’s prejudice, we would not hesitate, upon this ground alone, to reverse the judgment. But, considering the prompt and commendable action of the learned judge on the occasion, in connection with the facts of the case, we do not believe thni the remarks objected to could reasonably or probably have had any effect upon the jury prejudicial to the defendant.
ft is insisted by the counsel for the defendant that this cnnvic
Does this corroborating evidence tend to connect the defendant with the theft of the mule? We think it does. Unquestionably his saddle and bridle were used by Mann in conveying the mule into Grayson county. The defendant parted with his saddle and bridle on the very day the mule was stolen, and on the next day thereafter he rode his horse bare back to Pottsboro, where he received from the witness Mann the saddle and bridle. Mann had no animal of his own to ride, and this fact was known to defendant. All the circumstances in evidence, omitting the testimony of the accomplice, tend to prove that the defendant knew where Mann had gone to, and the purpose of his going, and that he, the defendant, went to Pottsboro to meet Mann, expecting Mann to be there with the saddle and bridle. Whilst this corroborative evidence is not as full and cogent as is desirable in such cases, still, in our opinion, it fills the measure of the law, and must be held sufficient to uphold the verdict of the jury.
. Affirmed.
Opinion delivered June 21, 1884.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.