Case ID: tex-crim_107/html/0030-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "HAWKINS, Judge. —", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Ex Parte Hugh Walker and Whitey Walker.
    No. 10937.
    Delivered May 11, 1927.
    Habeas Corpus — For Reduction of Bail — Reduced.
    Under the facts, as presented in this record, bail fixed in the sum of $35,000 for relator, Whitey Walker, and in the sum of $15,000 for Hugh Walker, on a habeas corpus hearing in the district court, is excessive, and the judgment will be reversed and the bail of Whitey Walker is fixed at $7,500 and that of Hugh Walker is fixed at $1,500.
    Appeal from the District Court of Hutchinson County. Tried below before the Hon. Newton P. Willis, Judge.
    Appeal from an order of the District Court, on habeas corpus hearing, fixing bail for Whitey Walker at §35,000 and for Hugh Walker at §15,000.
    The opinion states the case.
    
      
      Dewitt Bowmer, and Witcher & Robertson, for appellants.
    ■ Sam D. Stinson, State’s Attorney, and Robert M. Lyles, Assistant State’s Attorney, for the State.
   HAWKINS, Judge. —

The petition for writ of habeas corpus includes Ed Bailey as well as Hugh and Whitey Walker. No order appears in the transcript as to Bailey and no notice of appeal by him. Hugh Walker and Whitey Walker are under separate indictments charged with the murder of Coke Buchanan. Upon a hearing in the habeas corpus proceedings Whitey Walker’s bail was fixed at §35,000 and Hugh Walker’s at $15,000. From this judgment the appeal is prosecuted.

The principal and practically the only witness for the state was S. G. Neal. He and Buchanan were both on the police force at Borger. On the night of the killing he and deceased came out of a business place and Neal observed Bailey and Hugh Walker near an automobile, while some twenty-five feet away was another party dressed in a gray suit, who was later ascertained to be Ray Terrell. The man supposed to be Whitey Walker was also near the car when Neal approached it or came up immediately. Bailey inquired if Neal had seen anyone about the car, claiming that a rifle had been stolen from it, which rifle Hugh Walker said had cost him §65.00. Neal observed that Terrell had a pistol stuck in his trousers. When Terrell approached him, Neal reached for the pistol to disarm Terrell. Bailey remarked to Neal, “You are a little out of line, aren’t you?” and about this time the man thought to be Whitey Walker placed a pistol against Neal’s side and someone grabbed him from behind. Terrell took Neal’s pistol and remained standing still while Bailey and Whitey Walker backed Neal down the sidewalk some twenty feet. Neal’s evidence appears to exonerate Hugh Walker from any participation in the matter and is to the effect that Hugh said to Whitey, when the latter had his pistol against Neal backing him away from Terrell, “Don’t do that.” After Neal had been backed away some twenty feet Buchanan, with his pistol in his hand, approached Terrell. Some words passed between them which Neal did not understand. Terrell immediately commenced shooting at Buchanan and fired several shots at him before Neal fled from the scene. Neal’s testimony leaves the impression that Hugh Walker and Bailey also fled. The man Neal thought was Whitey Walker remained. Neal heard other shots after he ran, but says up to the time he left no one had fired at Buchanan save Terrell. Neal does not pretend to know what became of the other parties. He gave the alarm, re-armed himself and in about ten minutes returned to the scene of the killing. Other officers reached the place ahead of him and found Hugh Walker and Bailey there. They disclaimed any knowledge of the killing. When Neal got back he asked Hugh where Whitey was and Hugh said Whitey was not in town and had not been for several days. This was put in evidence by the state. When the officers arrived Terrell and the other man, whoever he was, had disappeared. The only other witness was a girl, who came out of a dance hall and spoke to Buchanan as she passed. After taking several steps she turned and saw that Buchanan had crossed the street and heard shots; she saw a man with a dark suit on fire at Buchanan, who had fallen, and saw a man with a light suit on leap behind a car and crouch down behind it. She did not undertake to identify any of the parties save Buchanan. The witnesses all agree that the streets were poorly lighted. Neal says Bailey was dressed in a dark suit, Whitey Walker in a bluish gray suit, Hugh Walker in a dark gray sweater and trousers of bluish gray, and Terrell in a gray suit.

Neal would not undertake to positively identify Whitey Walker as one of the parties present. The witness usually referred to him as the man I “thought” or “took” to be Whitey Walker. No other evidence is found which supplements this testimony, or makes the identity of Whitey Walker more certain.

Neither is anything found, in the record which indicates an acting together of relators and Terrell in the killing of Buchanan save as it may or may not be inferred from the recited facts.

Without discussing the general principles of law relative to bail, it is our conclusion that the facts do not justify holding either of relators in default of the amount of bond as now fixed. The judgment will be reversed, and the bail of Whitey Walker is fixed at §7,500, and that of Hugh Walker is fixed at §1,500:

Morrow, P. J., not sitting.

Bail reduced.