Court Opinion

ID: 3953612
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:15:12.269581+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:17:20.925282
License: Public Domain

The appellant in this case was indicted for burglary with intent to murder. The indictment was in three counts. The first charged an assault with intent to kill; the second charged burglary at night with intent to kill, under article 838, Penal Code; the third charged burglary at night of a private residence with intent to kill, under article 839a, Penal Code. After all of the evidence was in the court by its charge expressly withdrew the first and third counts in the indictment from the jury, and charged them only on the second. Appellant was found guilty and his punishment assessed at four years confinement in the penitentiary.
1. The State has made a motion to strike out the statement of facts in this case on the ground that it shows that it was made up by the official court stenographer without being passed upon by the attorneys, and the approval of the judge does not state that he made up the statement because of the disagreement of the attorneys. The approval and certificate of the judge is as follows: "The foregoing statement of facts is by me approved as a full and complete statement of all facts proved on the trial of the above numbered and styled cause." While he does not specifically certify that the attorneys failed to agree, he does certify that it is a full and complete statement of the facts. This, in our opinion, is a sufficient authentication of the statement of facts, and justifies us in holding that the judge so made it because the attorneys did not agree. The authorities, we think, so hold. Brown v. State, 56 Texas Crim. App., 87; Lozano v. State, 81 S.W. Rep., 37. See also Morris v. State,39 Tex. Crim. 566. We, therefore, overrule the State's motion to strike out the statement of facts.
2. There are no bills of exception, and the motion for new trial sets up nothing that can be considered otherwise than by bills of exception, except what we will hereafter notice.
By the motion for new trial it is claimed that new evidence is discovered, shown by the affidavit of Mrs. Haynes attached thereto, and complained that the court erred in overruling the motion for new trial on that ground. The affidavit of Mrs. Haynes attached at most is only of statements to her made by the complaining witness, Mattie Montgomery, and could only be for the purpose of impeaching Mattie Montgomery. It is too well settled to need citation of authorities to show that there was no error in overuling the motion for a new trial on that ground. *Page 593 
3. The only other questions presented by the motion for new trial and necessary to be noticed are as follows: (1) "Because the verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence," and (2) "because the verdict of the jury is contrary to the law and not supported by the evidence."
Under this it is insisted by appellant that we should consider the charge of the court in limiting the jury to the consideration of count No. 2 in the indictment, and that it is fundamental error for the court to have charged the jury under that count in the indictment instead of under the third count, claiming that the evidence clearly shows that the burglary with intent to murder was committed, if so, by the defendant in a private residence, and that the evidence clearly showing this requires a reversal of the judgment.
By the Act of June 5, 1899, page 318, burglary of a private residence is made a separate and distinct offense from burglary under articles 838-9 of the Penal Code. By article 845c of that Act a private residence is defined and says that a private residence "shall be construed to mean any building or room occupied and actually used at the time of the offense by any person or persons as a place of residence." This court has repeatedly held that in an indictment under this Act it is necessary to allege that the building is occupied and actuallyused as a residence at the time of the offense by some person or persons, and that it is necessary in the indictment to charge by what person it is so occupied and actually used as a residence. And as it is necessary to allege this, it is also necessary to prove it. Lewis v. State, 54 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Jones v. State, 50 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Johnson v. State, 50 Tex. Crim. 116.
The evidence in this case, without reciting it in full, clearly shows that on or about the night of November 19, 1909, Mattie Montgomery, designated the complaining witness, gave a church supper to raise money for a church at "her house" or "home," to which the appellant and others came. That while the defendant was there sitting in the kitchen at a table eating, Cy Booker, a negro boy, came into the kitchen, when the appellant at once began to abuse and assault him, and did actually strike him on the head with a glass, cutting his head; that there was no occasion whatever for his doing so other than that some time during the evening preceding this the appellant claimed that the boy had "sassed" him and talked ugly to him when he (the boy) approached him to have him pay some money that he was due, and that he was mad at him on that account. The boy ran out of his presence after being struck, and appellant at once left Mattie Montgomery's house, stating that he would get a gun and kill Cy Booker. That he at once left this house and went to his home, which was nearby, procured a double-barrel shotgun and at once returned to Mattie Montgomery's. As soon as he left, Mattie Montgomery and others closed up the house and fastened the doors, fearing that the appellant would return and carry out his threat. He very *Page 594 
soon did return with a double-barrel shotgun. Finding the house closed, he burst the kitchen door open by throwing his force and person against the door and thus entered the kitchen, seeking Cy Booker, declaring that he would kill him. As he burst in the back door and entered, Cy Booker was ushered out at the front door and ran away as rapidly as he could. The appellant was caught, and the gun also caught by Mattie Montgomery and others, and was attempted to be restrained and held to prevent him carrying out his threat to kill Cy Booker. Afterwards other persons came up, and while they were struggling with him his gun was taken from him. Cy Booker had then escaped, and the appellant was taken away, and made no further attempt to carry out his threat. The evidence is clear, establishing beyond doubt the charge as alleged against the appellant of burglary with intent to kill, as could well be.
However, the appellant claims, as stated above, that the proof showed that the burglary was committed in a private residence, and that the case must be reversed because the proof clearly shows this.
There is no direct proof that the house that was thus burglarized by the appellant was occupied and actually used at the time of the offense by Mattie Montgomery as her place of residence, or as a place of residence by any other. The evidence claimed to establish this by the appellant contains such general expressions as the following:
By Cy Booker: "I now live with Mrs. Montgomery. About the 19th day of November, 1909, I lived with Mrs. Montgomery, on Ninth Street, in Port Arthur. I had rented a back room with the lady and I had to go through to go to bed" (this at the time he was first assaulted by the appellant).
By the witness Mattie Montgomery: "I live in Port Arthur. I was at home the night the defendant raised some disturbance at my house. . . . The supper was at my house — the entertainment for the church. . . . I slammed the back door and fastened it and went to my front room to get something to put on the boy's head (meaning Cy Booker); the front was fastened, the screens were hooked, but the door was not locked. All around the house was closed up. He didn't stay no time (meaning appellant), because he didn't live no ways. . . . Hopkins (appellant) run in the kitchen, and after he got in the kitchen and heard him (Cy Booker) getting out of the door so fast he turned around. . . . That was my house; I occupied that house; I did not give him my consent to break into that house."
By the witness Fannie Faughtner: "I was at Mattie Montgomery's house the night that Ab Hopkins broke in there and tried to kill this boy."
By Albert Hadnot, after stating he helped take the gun from appellant, and that appellant broke the door open, he states: "I heard the lady of the house holloing, `He is going to shoot,' and I went out there. . . . Defendant was sitting at the table eating. The table *Page 595 
was in the shed-room part of the house; they call it the kitchen. Defendant lives next door to the witness Montgomery's house."
There are some other like expressions of the various witnesses unnecessary to here state, and the further fact that the house was shown to have three rooms, a front room, another room and a kitchen.
From all this we conclude that this evidence does not necessarily nor clearly show that the house burglarized wasoccupied and used at the time of the commission of the offense byMattie Montgomery as a place of residence. The fact, if it be conceded, that Cy Booker, the party attempted to be killed, had rented a back room in Mattie Montgomery's house, and that one room was designated the kitchen, and that she herself stated that she "occupied" the house and that she designated it her "home," by no means would clearly show that it was occupied by her and actually used by her at the time of the offense as the place of her residence. It could just as well have been occupied by her as a restaurant, boarding or rooming-house or for other purposes as for her residence, so far as shown by this testimony. By being "occupied" by her would by no means necessarily mean that it was her actual place of residence.
Under all the facts and circumstances, as clearly shown by this record, it is our opinion that the court did not commit reversible error by submitting only the second count of the indictment and in not submitting the case under the third count, making the offense one of committing burglary of a residence.
There being no reversible error in the record, the judgment is in all things affirmed.
Affirmed.
                          ON REHEARING.                         March 22, 1911.