DocketNumber: No. 3394.
Citation Numbers: 173 S.W. 1197, 76 Tex. Crim. 308, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 371
Judges: Prendergast
Filed Date: 2/3/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellant was convicted for arson with the lowest penalty assessed.
We think it unnecessary to state the evidence. It was amply sufficient to sustain the verdict.
It is the well settled law of this State that no charge on circumstantial evidence is necessary except when the evidence to establish guilt is purely and wholly circumstantial. Also that where, in addition to cir *309 cumstances, the State has introduced the admission of the accused to the effect that he has committed the act which constitutes the crime the case is not one of circumstantial evidence and the court is not required to submit such a charge to the jury. See sec. 813, White’s Ann. C. C. P., where some of the eases are collated.
In addition to circumstantial evidence tending to show that appellant set fire to and burned the house with which he is charged in this case, the State proved his admission that he had done so. Hence, the court did not err in not charging on circumstantial evidence as contended for by appellant.
Appellant has some bills of exceptions to what he claims was the exclusion of some proposed testimony. We have considered all these bills. They are so meager and insufficient under all of the established rules that they do not present the questions in such a way that the court can review them. But even if it could, as qualified by the judge, none of them present reversible error.
Stress is laid upon one of them by appellant to the effect that he asked one of the State’s witnesses, Mrs. Kiser, in substance, whether or not the appellant in talking to her, when he told her he set fire to the building, she understood or thought he was joking; but the bill does not disclose what her answer would have been. So far as the bill is concerned, we can not tell but that she may have testified that he was not joking. The court qualified it by stating, among other things, that he advised her to state all that was said between her and defendant on the occasion referred to and the way in which the entire conversation occurred and that she did so. At any rate, the bill, as presented, shows no error.
We have deemed it unnecessary to take up each error assigned by appellant and discuss them separately. We have considered them all. Ho reversible error is presented and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.