Jones v. State, 16337.
Decision Date | 06 June 1934 |
Docket Number | No. 16337.,16337. |
Citation | 75 S.W.2d 683 |
Parties | JONES v. STATE. |
Court | Texas Court of Criminal Appeals |
Appeal from District Court, Taylor County; M. S. Long, Judge.
Tom Jones was convicted of murder and he appeals. Reversed and remanded.
Wagstaff, Harwell, Wagstaff & Douthit and Scarborough & Ely, all of Abilene, for appellant.
Lloyd W. Davidson, State's Atty., of Austin, for the State.
Conviction for murder; punishment, three years in the penitentiary.
We held good an indictment similar to the one in this case in Norman v. State, 121 Tex. Cr. R. 433, 52 S.W.(2d) 1051.
It would seem plain that since the provisions of article 42, P. C., make him punishable for the felony actually committed, who while in the execution of some other felony does some act by mistake or accident which if voluntarily done would be a felony, an indictment need not charge an intentional collision or killing which alleged, as in this case, that appellant drove a car on a public street while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, and that while so doing he did by mistake and accident strike and collide with a car occupied by Mr. Perkins, thereby causing the death of Perkins. The very terms of article 42, supra, negative the proposition that the striking of Perkins, or his death, should be alleged to be voluntary or intentional.
There were many special charges asked upon this trial and refused. Also many exceptions were taken to the court's charge as given, some of which apparently caused changes in the charge from the original draft. As we view it, the court's charge gave in an affirmative manner the law applicable to the defensive theories. As illustrative, we quote from said charge as follows:
In our view the above sufficiently presented the propositions that the jury must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the acts of appellant, while engaged in committing a felony, caused the death of deceased, and that said death did not result from the acts of deceased.
The unfortunate collision, according to two eyewitnesses, took place at a point on a well lighted street in the city of Abilene, Tex., said street being forty feet wide at the point of collision. These two witnesses were in a car driving north, and were about three or four feet from the east side of the street. They affirmed that deceased was on the west side of said street going south in a car. One of said witnesses testified that deceased was about as near to the west side of the street as these witnesses were to the east side. North of where the collision occurred was a culvert and at same the street narrowed to about twenty-seven feet in width. Mr. Nixon, one of said witnesses, testified that his car was about forty feet south of said culvert when the collision took place. Appellant was coming up behind the car occupied by these witnesses, and was going north at what was testified to by another witness to be sixty miles an hour. Fowler, the other occupant of the Nixon car, testified for the defense. He said the wreck occurred about forty feet south of the culvert mentioned, and that the collision took place about even with the rear wheels of the car occupied by these witnesses. Fowler got out and went over and said the Jones car, by which we designate the car occupied by appellant, was on the west side of the center of the street. The Perkins car, being the car occupied by deceased, was then close to the west side of the street. He further testified that he saw Perkins some hundred and twenty feet up the street before the collision, saw him plainly, saw him cross the culvert, and then pull his car back toward the west curb of the street, continuing south, and that Perkins drove some forty feet south before the collision. This witness and others testified to the width of the car as being less than six feet, fenders and all, and that from the west side of the Nixon car where it was at the time of the collision, to the center of the street, there would be a space of some ten feet, and if the Perkins car was as close to the west curb as the Nixon car, there would be a space of ten feet from the east side of said car and the center of the street. The effect of the testimony of these witnesses was to show that between the Perkins car and the Nixon car, at the point of collision, there was a clear open space of at least twenty feet.
On the question of appellant being under the influence of intoxicating liquor at the time, the testimony is in a condition of conflict, but seems ample to support the finding that appellant was then under the influence of such liquor.
There are more than sixty bills of exception in the record, all of which have been examined, but most of which we deem not to present any error. Bill of exceptions 44, however, brings forward a complaint of the argument of the district attorney in closing the case for the state. We quote from what is shown in said bill as the argument made:
Exception to this argument was reserved. The court told the jury not to consider same. We consider the harmful character of such argument so manifest as that same could not be cured by an instruction to the jury not to consider it. The district attorney thereby put before the jury not only the fact that appellant, who was not a witness in the case, had before the present occurrence driven another car while intoxicated, but also that he had appeared in court before the district attorney and there pleaded for mercy, and had been given a chance by said district attorney, who let him off reasonably. It would be wholly impossible for any one to appraise the possible harm of conveying to the jury in any case that the person on trial had before the instant occurrence committed a crime of the same character. This appellant was not given the lowest penalty for the offense charged against him. He was asserting, upon the testimony of a number of witnesses, that he was not intoxicated, and was not driving a car while in that condition. Manifestly proof made by the district attorney in his argument of the fact that appellant had theretofore, while intoxicated, driven a car on a public street, would have...
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...(article 42 authorized conviction for homicide committed by accident and mistake while driving intoxicated); Jones v. State, 127 Tex.Cr.R. 227, 75 S.W.2d 683, at 684, 686-688 (1934) (article 42 was general statute prescribing particular state of facts applicable to certain offenses actually......
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Mendoza v. State, No. 08-04-00369-CR (Tex. App. 8/10/2006)
...that a defendant was properly indicted under Article 42 after he killed someone when driving while intoxicated. Jones v. State, 127 Tex.Crim. 227, 75 S.W.2d 683, 686 (1934). It rejected the defensive argument that Article 42 did not apply because Article 1149 was a special statute dealing w......
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