Rogers v. State

Decision Date01 June 1932
Docket NumberNo. 15220.,15220.
Citation54 S.W.2d 1010
PartiesROGERS v. STATE.
CourtTexas Court of Criminal Appeals

Appeal from District Court, Caldwell County; M. C. Jeffrey, Judge.

Louis Rogers was convicted of murder, and he appeals.

Affirmed.

C. J. Williamson, of Lockhart, and Henry Faulk, of Austin, for appellant.

Fred L. Blundell, Dist. Atty., of Lockhart, and Lloyd W. Davidson, State's Atty., of Austin, for the State.

CALHOUN, J.

The offense, murder; the punishment, death.

The appellant was jointly indicted with one Robert Cubit and Willie Ray Autrey for the unlawful killing of one G. W. Mann. The defendants each requested a severance and asked that the appellant herein be placed upon trial first. Said motion for severance was granted, and the appellant was placed upon trial.

There are no bills of exception in the record and no exceptions to the court's charge.

The undisputed evidence showed that the deceased, G. W. Mann, commonly called "Dad" Mann, kept a little grocery store and hamburger stand in the northern part of the town of Luling, commonly known as the Flat, which was in the negro section of said town. The deceased was about 55 or 60 years of age, and lived in his little place of business alone. He had been in business in Luling for six or seven years, but had only been in that particular location for six or seven months prior to the time he was killed. The evidence further showed that he was killed on the night of May 13, 1931.

The witness J. T. Conley, a deputy sheriff of Caldwell county, testified that he lived right across a little street on the Bruner Field road from deceased's place of business and on the same side of the Bruner road. He (the witness) was at home on the night of the killing, and heard somebody holler twice for help. He secured a flash-light and ran to deceased's store, which was open, and nobody was there. He found the deceased in a ditch eight or ten feet deep, and there was an ice pick, six or eight inches long, with a handle about four inches long, sticking in his left breast. The deceased was not dead when the witness found him, but only gasped a couple of times after he was turned over and made no statement. The deceased had on his pants and shirt and was barefooted. The witness examined deceased's pockets and found no money, and the witness further testified that the deceased was in the habit of keeping his bills in one large folder and a purse in which he carried his change, and he carried both purses all the time, one in each pocket. A search of deceased's store the next morning failed to reveal either one of said purses.

The state introduced, as their principal witness, Willie Ray Autrey, who was jointly indicted with the appellant and Robert Cubit for the killing of deceased. Said Autrey testified, in substance, as follows: That the night before the killing he was at Bush's Café and talked to Louis Rogers, the appellant, and Robert Cubit; that one Woodson was also present in the café at the time, and they called him over to where they were, and Cubit asked Woodson whether Dad Mann had any money, and said, "You ought to know, you trade down there right smart," and said Woodson replied, "I guess so" Cubit then asked the said Woodson where the deceased kept his money, and Woodson replied, "I guess he keeps it in his pockets." Autrey further testified that the appellant and Robert Cubit and himself all agreed to go down and rob the deceased, but that Woodson would not go with them and they did not go to deceased's place of business that night, but the next night he met appellant and Cubit at Bush's Café, and, when it was about time for the café to close up, they decided to go down to deceased's place of business for the purpose of getting deceased's money. When they got back of the Tullos Machine Shop, which was just a little north of deceased's store, the witness asked the others what they wanted him to do, and they told him to "just stop here and watch and if anybody comes up you holler or make a noise." The witness further testified that he sat down on a pile of pipes by the machine shop, and appellant and Cubit went on to deceased's store; that he could see them enter the door of the store from where he was sitting, and after a little while they came back out with Dad Mann, the deceased, and each had him by the arm; that they got him outside of the door of his store and walked towards the edge of the highway, and at that time the deceased hollered, "Help, help", and then hollered, "Oh, oh," about twice. The witness then got up and ran back towards the west, and after he had run a little piece he stopped and looked back, and they were then going across the highway in front of the machine shop towards the east with the deceased between them; that the last time he saw the appellant, Louis Rogers, and Robert Cubit they were going down by the machine shop.

The appellant relies for reversal of this case upon the claim of insufficiency of the state's testimony to sustain the conviction due to the fact that such conviction was obtained by the state primarily through the evidence of the witness Autrey, who was jointly indicted with the appellant for the offense, and whose testimony was not corroborated by other evidence and witnesses to that degree of certainty and conclusiveness to the extent that the law requires. The evidence of this accomplice, if entitled to full credit, is unquestionably sufficient to sustain the conviction. The conviction cannot be sustained upon his testimony unless it is corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the offense committed. We must therefore examine the other evidence in the case, and from it ascertain whether or not this witness' statements have been corroborated to the extent required by law.

The witness Lee Woodson corroborated said accomplice to the extent that the appellant and Robert Cubit and the witness Autrey were at Bush's Café together on the night before the killing and asked him if deceased had any money and where he kept it, and they all three said they were broke and were going down to rob Dad Mann, the hamburger man, and asked him to go with them, which he refused to do. He further testified that on the same night he heard a conversation between the appellant and Robert Cubit and one Dora Bell Chambers. He also testified that Cubit tried to borrow a pistol from said Dora Chambers, and also that he saw them at Bush's Café the night of the killing talking together. This evidence, if true, tends to corroborate the accomplice as to what occurred the night before the homicide at Bush's Café and as to the avowed intention of the appellant and the two others to rob the deceased.

The witness Wesley Jenkins also corroborates the accomplice as to the appellant and the other two jointly charged with him being at his café together the night before the killing and also on the night of the killing.

The witness Tom Gant testified that on the night Dad Mann was killed he was checking traffic on the Bruner Field road with one Jacob Bolton, and about midnight they passed by Dad Mann's little store; that they were traveling about 15 miles an hour and were driving on the same side of the road that the deceased's store was situated, and they saw two men standing in front of the store and one of them was Robert Cubit whom he (the witness) had known all his life; that he did not know the other negro with him in front of the store that night, but that he had had...

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3 cases
  • Paulus v. State
    • United States
    • Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
    • October 28, 1981
    ...of the offense." This provision has been a part of every Code of Criminal Procedure ever adopted in this state, Rogers v. State, 122 Tex.Cr.R. 331, 54 S.W.2d 1010 (1932), and the language of the statute has remained the same. An accomplice witness11 has been described as a discredited witne......
  • Reynolds v. State
    • United States
    • Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
    • May 3, 1972
    ...of murder to be corroborated is clearly not the law. 'This Honorable Court spoke further to this question in Rogers v. State ((122 Tex.Cr.R. 331) 54 S.W.2d 1010 Tex.Crim.App.1932). Judge Morrow gave the opinion. He stated as "The law declares that there must be corroborating evidence tendin......
  • Boone v. State, 45864
    • United States
    • Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
    • April 11, 1973
    ...under the circumstances or 'have a more or less direct bearing or effect' in causing or provoking a disturbance? See Rogers v. State, 54 S.W.2d 1010 (Tex.Cr.App.1932) (defining the word 'tend'). 'Disturbance' is defined in Black's Law Dictionary, 4th Ed.Rev., p. 563, as '(a)ny act causing a......

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