DocketNumber: No. 6178.
Citation Numbers: 229 S.W. 508, 89 Tex. Crim. 87, 1921 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 362
Judges: Lattimore
Filed Date: 3/30/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Guadalupe County of burglary, and his punishment fixed at two years confinement in the penitentiary.
Because of an absent witness appellant asked for a continuance. The record shows that he was arrested and placed in jail in October, and was indicted in November following, and the application states that he only employed counsel on December 4th following, and that his case was set for trial on December 6th. The witness desired lived in another county, and was not served with process. It is further shown that appellant had been brought from the jail and informed by the court that if he would give the names of his witnesses to the clerk, process would be issued for them. This he failed to do. No diligence was shown, and the application was properly overruled. We are inclined to think that inasmuch as it was stated that the witness was expected to testify that on the night preceding the burglary, which occurred about 8:30 A.M., appellant was in the town of Eagle Lake some eighty or ninety miles distant from the alleged burglarized house, *Page 88 that the materiality of said testimony does not sufficiently appear. One can easily travel the distance named during a night, on a train or other conveyance, and it is not shown that the means of communication between Eagle Lake and the place where the burglary occurred was not by direct railroad communication. Nor would we be justified in concluding that the trial court abused his discretion inasmuch as positive evidence of disinterested witnesses showed that appellant was near the scene of the burglary on the morning of the day alleged, and the trial court would have been justified in any event in concluding that the expectant testimony was not probably true.
Appellant asked a special charge on circumstantial evidence. We believe this should have been given. Smiley v. State,
The above is the substance of the testimony. No one saw appellant enter or leave the house in question, and his identification as being the man seen fleeing from the premises, is wholly the opinion of the witness Hoffman as to the identity of clothing. The statement of Mr. Hoffmann given at the preliminary trial of appellant was introduced by the defense, and it appears therefrom that said witness there only stated that the man he saw fleeing from his house had on a coat similar to the one worn by appellant and had clothes similar to those worn by him. We are not to be understood as saying that the evidence would not be sufficient to support a conviction, but are of opinion that the facts showing burglary are proven only by circumstances, and that the identity of the accused is also dependent upon the same character of testimony, and that the law of circumstantial evidence should have been submitted.
For the error of the court in refusing the special charge mentioned, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.