DocketNumber: No. 23545
Citation Numbers: 150 Tex. Crim. 277, 200 S.W.2d 187, 1947 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 881
Judges: Beauchamp, Davidson
Filed Date: 1/29/1947
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
Assault with intent to murder is the offense; the punishment, five years in the penitentiary.
The sole question presented for review is the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction.
Owens, the injured party, was ticket agent and in charge of the bus station at Elgin. About eleven o’clock on the morning of March 13, 1946, appellant, accompanied by his friend, Moore, went to the bus station and each purchased from Owens a bus ticket to Austin. Appellant walked over to and started to play a marble machine in the station when, according to the testimony of Owens, the following occurred:
“* * * I told him to leave the marble table alone, because we didn’t let negroes play the marble table, and he turned back and said something, and I said, ‘Boy, leave the table alone.’ He came back and said, ‘God damn it, I ain’t no boy; I’m a man.’ I was standing back of the counter, and, when he said that, I picked up a little billet about that long (indicating) — twelve or fourteen inches long, I guess. I said, ‘Now, you boys can go back in the back and sit down, or get out.’ I said, ‘It don’t make no difference to me, but you can go back and sit down where you belong, or get out,’ and this Moore boy said, ‘All right,’ and
The knife with which the injuries were inflicted was a pocketknife with a two-inch blade.
Dr. Fleming, the attending physician, described the wounds and Owens’ condition, as follows:
“I had occasion to treat Mr. Ned Owens on March 13, 1946, for knife wounds. He had three or four lacerations, one in the left arm, about here, which was pretty deep (indicating location), about the length of an ordinary knife blade, and he had a long cut across the shoulder and he had one stab wound in the shoulder and another one in the chest and another deep wound in the thigh. Some of them weren’t very deep; the knife hit at an angle and undermined the skin, but it didn’t go down into the meat. They were not bad wounds, but it so happened that the knife went in at an angle and just undermined the skin, and we cleaned up all the wounds and sutured them and dressed them and they healed without any complications. By suture, is meant stitches. Well, I don’t remember, * * * but I imagine it was thirty or forty or maybe fifty stitches Mr. Owens had. Some of the wounds were not very deep; they went in at a kind of an angle. Whether they were more painful than dangerous — yes, sir; they were painful and he lost quite a bit of blood through them. The wounds were of such a nature that he could have lost a very dangerous amount of blood if he hadn’t had immediate medical attention.”
The state failed to make the ordinary proof, which should have been done by the physician, that the knife in question from the manner used might have produced death. This failure on the part of the state to make the available proof raises a question, seriously presented in this court, as to the sufficiency of the evidence. The question has been before us under many and varied circumstances. It appears that there is some confusion about what is meant in discussing the “nature” of the wounds inflicted. Apparently some writers have the view that only the
From.the Thomas case we quote: “They were aimed at a vital part of prosecutor, and, although the evidence does not inform us of the size of the knife, we can judge of the deadly character of the instrument from other circumstances in the case. In Walters v. State (Tex. Cr. App.) 35 S. W. 652, there was no proof of the character of the knife; but, looking to the grievous character of the wounds, and where they were inflicted, it was held that the proof was sufficient to show the weapon was a deadly one.”
Touching the sufficiency of the evidence to show intent, where the instrument used is not a deadly weapon, we quote from Ammann v. State, 165 S. W. (2d) 744.
“If the weapon used is not deadly, the intent to kill on the part of the accused may be ascertained from and shown by the surrounding facts and circumstances. If it is possible that death might have been inflicted by the weapon used, and if the accused intended thereby to take life by the use made thereof, the offense of assault with intent to murder is complete, even though the instrument used was not a deadly weapon.”
Again, from Trimble v. State, 190 S. W. (2d) 123:
“If the weapon or instrument used in the commission of the assault is per se a deadly weapon or one likely to produce death from the manner in which it is used, it would justify the conclusion that the accused intended to commit murder; or where the instrument used was not a deadly weapon, but from the manner of its use and the nature of the wounds inflicted it is apparent that such was the intent, the evidence is deemed to be sufficient.”
Considering the evidence of Dr. Fleming, that some of the wounds were deep, all but one were in and about the most vital part of the body, we think the jury had a right to conclude from
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.