James C. Ray v. The State.
Court of Appeals of Texas
Volume 4 Texas Court Appeals page 450
1878, Decided
History of the case:
In the forenoon of August 1, 1877, Alfred H. Bledsoe
was found dead in a public road leading from the village of Charleston,
in Delta County. He had been to the village, and had traveled from it
on horseback, about half a mile, to the place where his body lay. A
bullet had entered the left breast, and inflicted instant death. Several
persons heard the shot which doubtless sped the bullet, but no witness
saw the deed.
The appellant, James C. Ray, was also seen in Charleston the same morning,
and while the deceased was there. He was riding a gray mare, with a
colt following her, and he rode out of the village on the same road,
and a very few minutes after the deceased. It was in proof that a difficulty
existed between them on some point of veracity, and that appellant had
said that if Bledsoe denied making a certain statement to him, he (Bledsoe)
would have him to whip or kill.
J. W. Wilson, for the State, testified that on the morning Bledsoe
was killed, he, the witness, was working in a field which extended to
within seventy yards of where the body lay, and, between nine and ten
o'clock, he heard loud talking, and the report of a gun or pistol, from
about where the body was found, from which spot the witness was then
distant about 225 yards. Not as much as fifteen minutes previous he
saw a covered two-horse wagon pass along on the road, and after that
saw a man, riding a white or gray horse, coming from the direction of
Charleston, and towards the spot where the body was found; but this
man passed out of sight of witness about 100 yards short of that spot.
Just after this the witness heard one person hail another, and loud
and boisterous talk between them, but did not hear what was said. The
same day, and before witness heard that Ray, the appellant, was suspected,
he tried to recollect whose were the voices he had heard, and then thought
one of them was Ray's. Witness had often heard Ray sing and talk, and
was satisfied one of the voices was Ray's.
On his cross-examination this witness stated that he was a witness
at the examining trial, and did not then tell about seeing any man pass
on a gray or white horse. But the witness denied that he had sworn at
the examining trial that he saw no one pass except the persons in the
covered wagon. In this matter the witness was contradicted by the justice
of the peace who held the examining court, and by others present at
it.
A great many witnesses were examined upon both sides, and in regard
to many circumstances. Their testimony consists largely of local description,
necessary to a comprehension of the case made by the prosecution, but
not susceptible of condensation. The matters of fact involved in the
rulings of this court are indicated in its opinion.
The jury found the appellant guilty of murder in the second degree,
and assessed his punishment at ten years in the penitentiary.
No brief for the appellant.
W. B. Dunham, for the State, filed a pertinent and able brief.
White, J. Appellant in this case was indicted for the murder of Alfred H. Bledsoe. The murder is alleged to have been committed August 1, A. D. 1877. At the February term, A. D. 1878, of the District Court of Delta County the cause came on for hearing, and, on the seventh day thereof, resulted in the conviction of defendant of murder in the second degree, with his punishment affixed at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a period of ten years.
The number of bills of exception saved and errors assigned show the great care and diligence exercised by counsel for defendant at every step taken in the progress of the trial, and we regret that, in our investigation of the case on this appeal, we have been furnished by them with neither oral argument or brief, to aid in the determination of the questions raised. We have endeavored, however, to give to each supposed error the consideration it demanded, and our conclusion upon the whole record is that there are but one or two questions, really, which require any discussion, the others having been frequently passed upon and adjudicated, and being now no longer open to controversy.
The objection to the manner in which the special venire was drawn does not show the facts, by bill of exception or otherwise, until raised for the first time on the motion for a new trial, and the objection, as there stated, is not supported by evidence in the record. Objections to the mode and manner of drawing and impaneling the jury should be made by challenge to the array, or challenge to the particular juror, as prescribed by the Code of Criminal Procedure. * * * Such challenges should be made at the time the jury are being impaneled, and are not available, except in certain exceptional cases going to the qualifications of the particular juror, on a motion for a new trial. With regard to the ruling of the court in requiring the defense to pass upon the jurors severally . . . * * *
The third and fourth errors complained of, with reference to the action of the court in connection with the jury, may be stated concisely as follows: Shortly after the jury was accepted and impaneled, but before any evidence was introduced on either side, the attention of the court was called to the fact that one of the jurors had been taken sick. Defendant proffered to discharge the juror and have another called in his stead. A physician examined the juror, and he and the juror both came to the conclusion that, unless the juror got worse, he would be able to sit throughout the trial. With this understanding the trial proceeded, when, upon the evening of the same day, the juror grew so much worse as to be unable to sit longer, and was discharged by the court. Defendant then asked that the whole jury should be discharged, and objected to being tried by eleven men. His objection was overruled, and he saved a bill of exceptions. It is not made to appear how, if at all, the ruling inured to the prejudice or special injury of the defendant. The rule is now settled that, "no prejudice to the appellant appearing to have resulted from the rulings of the court below in organizing the petit jury, and no infringement of the jury law in force when the trial was had being apparent, such rulings present no question necessary for revision." * * *
In this instance no rule of law was infringed; on the contrary, it is provided, both in our Constitution and statute laws, that a verdict in certain contingencies (of which one is here presented) may be rendered by less than the whole number of the jury. The constitutional provision reads:
"Grand and petit juries in the District Courts shall be composed of twelve men. * * * When, pending the trial of any case, one or more jurors, not exceeding three, may die or be disabled from sitting, the remainder of the jury shall have the power to render the verdict; provided that the Legislature may change or modify the rule authorizing less than the whole number of the jury to render a verdict." * * *
In conformity with the authority here conferred, the Legislature, at its next session thereafter, did provide that "no verdict shall be rendered in any case in the District Court whereby the rights of any citizen shall be affected, except upon the concurrence of all the jury (unless during the trial one or more jurors, not exceeding three, may die or be disabled from sitting, in which event the remainder of the jury shall have power to render the verdict); but when the verdict shall be rendered by less than the whole number, it shall be signed by every member of the jury concurring in it." * * *
In the case at bar the verdict was signed by the eleven remaining jurors. The discharge or retention of the juror was a matter addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and the explanatory statement of the judge to the bill of exceptions shows that that discretion was not only not abused, but that it was exercised with all necessary caution.
The main errors complained of with regard to the rejection of testimony, shown by the several bills of exception, relate to proposed evidence of acts and declarations of defendant after the homicide. The State did not put in evidence any part of his declarations made to the defendant's witness Stell, and, therefore, he was not entitled to the conversation had with that witness about the homicide the evening of the day it was committed. A party cannot, in this manner, manufacture evidence in his behalf. * * * Nor did the State attempt to prove the flight of defendant as tending to establish his guilt; and the evidence sought to be introduced by him to show where he had gone, and what his intentions were in going, were clearly irrelevant and incompetent. * * *
By bill of exceptions No. 12 it was urged that the court erred in permitting the written testimony of a witness, taken before the examining court, to be read to the jury--the witness having died since giving the evidence. This was not error * * *
We deem it unnecessary to notice the other errors complained of, inasmuch as they present no new or unsettled questions. The charge of the court was a very full and explicit exposition of the law of the case. Defendant did not except to it, and the only additional instruction asked by him was given, as asked, by the court.
With regard to the evidence, whilst it is entirely circumstantial, and in some respects contradictory, we are forced to the conclusion, from a most careful study of it as we find it in the statement of facts in this record, that the jury did not err in finding the defendant guilty. If there are any extenuating or mitigating circumstances, they have not been shown.
We believe the defendant has had a fair and impartial trial, and see nothing to warrant us in interfering with the judgment. It is, therefore, affirmed.
Affirmed.