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Full opinion text

PRENDERGAST, Presiding Judge. Appellant was convicted for an assault Avith intent to rape Leta Tinnin on July 4, 1914, and his' punishment assessed at four years in the penitentiary. 1. Appellant vigorously contends that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction. It is, therefore, proper to state some of the testimony tending to sustain the conviction. What this court said in Kearse v. State, 68 Texas Crim. Rep., 633, 151 S. W. Rep., 828, is applicable to this case. It Avas there said: “There is hardly any contested case that comes to this court but what there are contradictions in the testimony, and frequently a principal witness may contradict himself in material matters. In such cases, when it is contended that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict, this court can not legally take the place of the jury, and determine whether or not it will believe any witness or witnesses, and from all of the testimony, as put doAvn on paper and sent to this court, it would have found a different verdict from that of the jury, and, if so, reverse the case on that account. The only question this court can determine is whether there is sufficient evidence, if believed by the jury, to' sustain the conviction. This court passes upon that question as a question of law which is all it can legally do under such circumstances. Our law expressly provides that the jury in all cases are the exclusive judges of the facts proved and of the weight to be given to the testimony. This court therefore can not take that question from the jury without usurp-, ing authority that was never given or intended to be given to it. The jury in a felony case is made of twelve fair, disinterested, impartial, unprejudiced, unbiased, and competent jurors selected fromffiifferent portions of the county, each one of whom hears all the witne ses, looks them in the face when testifying, observes their manner and ti ? method of their examination by the respective attorneys, then hears ^ je argument of the attorneys for each side, one side undertaking to break doAvn the testimony of the witness and calling attention to every contradiction by others of him, the other explaining such matters, and seeking to sustain such witness, then hear and take with them in their retirement the charge of the court. Then the twelve men discuss and consider in private between themselves all such matters, and, after weighing it all and all the arguments against it and in support of it,, come to the conclusion that the testimony of a certain witness, or witnesses, although contradicted and although there are contradictions in the testimony of such witness, that it is true and they believe it. The jury is made up of men of different ages, from young to comparatively old men, and they pursue different occupations and businesses. With all these surroundings they are much more competent to arrive at the truth than are the judges of this court, who must look solely to the testimony as written down on paper. It can not portray the manner, the looks, and the deportment of the witness, nor the manner of his examination and cross-examination by the attorneys. Besides this, the presiding judge hears and sees and observes all that the jury does in the trial of the case and he then sustains the verdict of the jury. Therefore, when the evidence taken in its favorable light sustains the verdict, this court can not legally set it aside.” The statement of facts contains fifty-four typewritten pages. We have read it, more than once, and carefully studied it. The testimony establishes some of the facts without controversy. We will here state some of these. Beta Tinnin, the alleged assaulted girl, was just past fifteen years of age. She lived with her parents in Alvin. She had never kept company with any boys prior to this and her parents would not permit her to ' accept company or go out alone. Most all of the witnesses, in speaking of her, designated her as a little girl. The appellant seems to have been a grown man, though his age is not stated. The little girl, Beta, had never seen him before the day of the alleged assault and he was not introduced to her on that occasion. On said date there was a political picnic in Galveston County, on the mainland, some twelve miles from Alvin. On the morning of that day said little girl, together with a young daughter of Mr. Bomine, the constable, with John Sue, in a buggy, went to said picnic. There was a large crowd of men, women and children at the picnic. They had various classes of amusements on the picnic grounds that day. The extent of the picnic grounds is not given, though there are some indications that it was on about a 100-acre tract of land and at a creek. At one locality the soldiers were racing their horses and jumping them. More or less crowd was watching that amusement. At another location they had political speakers and more or less people were giving their attention to that. At another place they had a dance stand and a dance was going on. ■ A considerable number were giving their attention to that amusement. And at another locality was a baseball game, which, it seems, always attracts more or less attendance. There may have been other attractions also on the ground. Up and down the creek there was more or less timber and some undergrowth and brush. This extended from the creek to some seventy-five yards from it. The creek had a kind of double, or treble, bank or benches to it. A bank running up from the water a few feet high and extending back perhaps some eight or ten feet. Then another bank or rise several feet high and extending to another bench; then, it seems, still another to reach the apparently level ground. Along about 4 or 5 o’clock in the evening the little girl, Beta, her companion, Drewie Bomine, the 14-year-old daughter of the constable, and an associate and companion of Leta, and perhaps her little sister, were at the dance pavilion watching the dance when appellant approached her. We now give some of her (Leta’s) testimony. She said: “He walked up to me and asked me to dance with him. I told him I couldn’t dance. He says, ‘Will you go in bathing with me ?’ I says, ‘There are no girls in Lathing; I am not going in when there are no other .girls in.’ He says, ‘There are, too, and come with me and I will show you.’ I sort of did not want to go at first, and then I says, ‘I will go with you, but I know they are not there.’ The girls were not in bathing. We walked down that way a little ways and he says, ‘Stop,’ and I stopped, and he put his arms around me and says, ‘You are the sweetest girl I ever saw,’ and tried to get me to kiss him. I would not do it. I started to cry and told him to turn me loose, and he says he would not do it until I kissed him. He tripped me and then I fell, and he kept trying to get me to kiss him. I would not do it. I said, ‘You let me up, I got to go,’ and he says, ‘You kiss me.’ I says, ‘I am not going to do it.’ I started calling for help and nobody didn’t come to me, and he kept trying to get me to kiss him and I wouldn’t do it. He told me to take hold of his root. At that time, when he told me to do that, he had his hand over my mouth, and his mouth over my mouth part of the time, and told me to hush, and I would holler, and he would keep trying to get me to, and I wouldn’t do it. He says, ‘Take hold of my root,’ and tried to feel my breast. I don’t remember the exact words he said then, if anything was said. He tried to get me to let him feel of my breast and I told him to quit. At that time, when he asked me that, I was on the ground; he had tripped me. We was both on the ground. He was on the ground. I was trying to get on my side, as near as I could and he would get right on top of me. He would get right on top of me. At that time I did see a portion of his private person. He just stuck his hand down under me and commenced undoing his pants. At that time he was lying down. After he said to do this and when he exposed his person, as I testified, well, he was trying to get me to—tried to put his hand over my mouth, and he was putting his mouth in mine, and I would bite him, and one time he put his mouth in mine and I just reached up and pulled his hair, and I just lay over on the ground; and act sort of like he was crazy, and he was not. He would try to get me to hush hollering. He told me to hush, and I said I would not, and I said, ‘Let me up.’ I said, TLet me up or I will holler.’ He says, ‘If you holler and tell on me, I will kill you.’ When I fell on the ground and went down on the ground and he tripped me, the condition of my clothes as to whether or not they were down on my body, they were down. He pulled my dress up as far as he could get it, and had his hand that way. He put his hand under my-slips. My slips, that was the last underclothing next to my skin. I was trying to get someone to come after me; I hollered, Hlelp.’ I hollered it loud. I hollered for help all the time. Well, after that, one time I started to get up and he says, ‘Don’t you run,’ and grabbed me right here at my dress, and I stopped to pick up my umbrella and he took hold of me again. At first they heard me, and Drewie walked down that way by herself; then she turned around and went back and told my little sister; that is Drewie Romine. There was someone else there. My little sister came there. Next after my sister came, well, Mrs.—I don’t know, I can’t call her name,—Mrs. Kavelder, the name.you just called; she was in the buggy; she came down there and said, ‘You rascal, you get up and run.’ He was trying to get me to take hold of it then; she came and says, ‘You better run, you rascal,’ and he got up and ran, started— ... I did not give my consent to the defendant to make this assault upon me or to commit the offense, or have sexual intercourse with me; I was fighting him all the time. I was crjdng at that time when Mrs. Kavelder came up. At the time I was fighting him or scratching him, I made some marks upon the defendant, several times, right along there (indicating face). . . . When he came up to the grandstand and spoke, Drewie was with me there, and another little girl; he asked her first. It was Drewie Romine and another little girl. She is not here this morning; I know her name but can’t think of it. I know her well.” This little girl, Leta, just past fifteen years of age, was subjected to a very lengthy, searching and exhaustive cross-examination by one of appellant’s able attorneys, who had had extensive experience as an attorney in all character of cases. It is not strange that she may have under such circumstances, given testimony contradictory of herself or perhaps in some particulars weaken, in others strengthen her direct testimony. We do not propose to give in detail her testimony upon cross-examination, but we will give excerpts from it. She described the various things about the picnic grounds the best she could. Among other things, stating in substance, that they entered the picnic grounds at a gate from the Dickerson road; that the dance pavilion was about a half mile or less from this gate; that trees extended up and down the bank of the creek and for some fifty to one hundred steps from the creek, all along. The dance pavilion was on the outer edge of this grove of trees from the creek. “Coming from the dance pavilion when I and the young man started away, we went down the creek toward the Dickinson road; the pine trees are pretty thick along there. . . . Coming from the pavilion, where I say I met this defendant, down to the creek toward the shell roád, I and the defendant walked down the little path that led toward the pavilion down to the creek, and to the brow of the hill on the second bank, and we took that little path and walked down skirting the creek.....He did not say which way he wanted me to go. He walked off then towards the road 'down the creek to the bank of the creek and I went with him. I remember that coming up the creek the other way the brush comes down close to where the dancing was. There is brush the other way; where we went it was pretty thick; we were in a trail. ... I did not notice anjdhing when the defendant came to talk to me, as to his acting strangely in any way. From the time he asked me to go down to the creek, he didn’t leave me. And as to his telling me there were some girls in swimming down the creek, and asking me to go swimming with him and my telling him that I didn’t believe there were any girls down there, and if there were I would go in swimming; I didn’t tell him that, I said I would go down to sec, but won’t go in swimming. I would not go in at all. Just go down there to see if there were any girls in swimming. . . . You can not see from where we were; you could not see the creek from the road where we were. ... I didn’t see any women; I thought I would satisfy my curiosity and go down there with him to see if there was anybody in bathing.” She could not tell how far it was from the dance pavilion when appellant stopped her and threw her down, nor can we tell with anything like certainty from the statement of facts, but it must have been, as we judge from the testimony, not less than two hundred yards and probably some distance further. She further testified that in walking off with appellant, “I did not catch hold of his arm. He was a little behind me; he had hold of my arm. I guess he was holding my arm to keep me from slipping. I was not trying to walk right up against him. He held onto my arm until we came to this first place we stopped. . . . He had not attempted to put his arm around me until we stopped. And when we stopped, he put his arms around me, and hugged me and asked me to kiss him, and put his arms around me. At that time, I told him to turn me loose; I don’t exactly remember whether or not I screamed then. ... I told him to turn me loose real loud. . . . He did not turn me loose at once; he would not turn me loose. Then I began to scream; he tripped me, too. Then I was screaming as loud as I could, one after another, but he put his hand over my mouth. I screamed two or three times, and then he put his hand over my mouth. . . . I was fighting him all the time, shoving and pushing, before-1 got on the ground. If I got loose, I was going to run and tell the people. . . . I don’t remember how he tripped me; he put his feet under mine, or something. I fell sort of on my side when I fell. He got on top of me. When I fell, he went down with me, on top of me. I was screaming when he would let me. He didn’t have his hand on my mouth then. He didn’t say anything then; just lay there; after a while he would say, CLet me kiss you,’ and I said, T am not going to do it.’ He did not just lay there on the side of me; it was on top of me. He was laying up and down of me. He wouldn’t let me get on my side. He was on top of me. And I was screaming when he didn’t have his hand on my mouth. ... I was angry with him, I was crying. . . . He would hold himself up on one hand and put his hand on my mouth with the other. My dress sort of flew up, about as high as my knees (when she fell). . . . He did not reach down and pull my clothes up over my head, not then. He made no effort at that time to pull my clothes up over my head. He begged me to kiss him, and part of the time he would lay over on the ground and hold his hand over my mouth and me kicking and screaming, and he would take his hand off and kiss me; and I bit him. I bit his mouth when he kissed me, and the blood ran out on his face. ... I got up on my feet once. He did not get up, too. He got on his knees and grabbed me here (indicating place on dress) and tore my dress.” In the cross-examination of this little girl he had her to state that the time appellant was engaged in this assault on her was longer than five or ten minutes, was longer than twenty minutes and she said perhaps as long as thirty minutes, or still longer. Appellant’s witness A. G. Fallette swore that he was walking the horses back and forth on the edge of the timber opposite the dance hall, back the other way towards the shell road; that he noticed appellant and the little girl Beta going down towards where the assault is alleged to have occurred; that they had not passed him more than five minutes when he heard loud talking and some cursing down in that direction; (this was doubtless John Sue); that a little boy came along and he asked him to hold the horses and he then saw someone (Sue) after appellant; that a large lady (Mrs. Kavalder) came up and talked pretty rash to him; she threatened to hit him with her parasol. “From the time I saw this couple go down towards the creek before I saw this incident happen (Mrs. Kavalder’s attempted assault upon him there) it was not more than five or six minutes; I am satisfied not more than five or six minutes.” The little girl Beta further said she was screaming all the • time. “When he first told me to put my hand on his person, that was after I fell on the ground. After laying there a long time begging me to kiss him, and holding his hand on my mouth, he took my hand and tried to make me put my hand on his person, and I would not do it. He had unbuttoned his clothes; that was while on the ground. He did not take both hands to unbutton his clothes. He held me with one hand and unbuttoned his clothes with the other, and I didn’t get away from him then, not exactly then. And I would not put my hand on his person. He had his hand on his person and asked me to do so. Then he let loose of his person and asked me to take hold of it; I don’t know exactly how long he carried on that way, begging me to put my hands on his person. I finally got up and he caught hold of me and pulled me back. When I was standing up, I took hold of a tree and tried to stay up, and hie would not let me, and down I went again. As to whether he ever turned me over on my back and pulled my clothes up, except where they blew up when I fell, he pulled my dress up first, and slipped his hand up my leg, about here (indicating to above knee). H¿slipped his^hand upjnyjittle pants, and he did that while lying there by me,, and he put his hand on“my leg. ~ ." . " . ^He would run his hands up my legs and_pat me on the lég^and I had been taughf that it was wrong. He was tnung“ta‘get me to love him. I didn’t want to, I didn’t have any use for him. This is all he ever did, about having his hand under my clothes. He never went any further. He tried to get me to play with his person. . . . He was trying to feel of my breast all the time, and pat me on the leg with one hand and on the breast with the other. He had one hand up my panties, and sometimes one over my mouth, and sometimes on my breast. At the time the Romine girl came up he was wanting to love me and was kissing me, and had his hand on my breast, and I was screaming as loud as I could, and he would not let me. I did not say anything to the Eomine girl, not a thing. She went back for help; she was upon the hill and I could see her. At that time he had his hand over my mouth. One of his legs was over me then, one over me and one not. He didn’t, try to get me to take of his person at that time. It looks to me like he was trying to hurt me. He put his hand over my lips. He put his hand over my throat, too, tried to keep me from hollering. He did not hit me at any time. It appeared to me he was trying to keep me from getting away. He wanted me to kiss him. . . . The little Eomine girl went back up the hill and then her and Mary both came; my sister Mary ran across, and Mrs. Kavalder—” On redirect examination, among other things, she testified that when appellant tripped her, he still held her; she didnjt know how he tripped her, whether he pushed her backwards or to one side or how. She said: "He was trying to keep me from hollering all the time. As to whether I was laying there still or struggling; I was trying to get up. I was scratching him with my hands, trying to get away. I didn’t permit him to put his hands down to try to make me take hold of his person; I didn’t want to. At the time he took his hands to pull my dress up, and put his hand under my slip, I did not allow him to do that; I didn’t want him to. To prevent it, I took hold of his arm here, and tried to push him away. I was struggling. I could not struggle any harder than I did; I was struggling my best. He was using his hands and his feet trying to hold me. All this time that I was struggling to keep him from doing this, he was trying to keep me from hollering; he was trying to get hold of me; he was trying to take hold of my breast. He had two hands. These things were taking place pretty fast, whenever he tried to get me not to holler. He put his hand over my mouth, and his mouth over my mouth, and his hand over my throat. As to whether or not I know how long a half hour is, or is that my best estimate, well, I don’t know; it was a long time, it seemed to me.” It doubtless did seem a long time—an age—to this little girl. On recross-examination she said: "At the time the lady (Mrs. Kavalder) came down with that parasol, the defendant’s person was exposed; he was trying to hide it. She came down, she was on the hill and his person was out then. When he got up his person was exposed. As to whether he turned his back to the crowd or his face, he sort of sneaked back like that. I don’t know if he put his person up and buttoned up his clothes. I did see it distinctly. When I saw it, it was just hanging out, just like your wrist dangling around. (Indicated by counsel dangling his wrist.)” This is shown to have been after the other two little girls had heard-her screams and calls for help, and saw her condition and ran back for help and after Mrs. Kavalder had hastened to the relief of the little girl and had holloed at the appellant, called him a brute, told him to get off the girl and he did sneak back off of her. Surely under these circumstances it is no surprise that his tool was "dangling around.” Said witness Drewie Romine testified that she was at the grandstand when appellant came up and spoke to the little girl Leta; she, Drewie, was then noticing another man and her mind was off of them, but she heard him ask her to dance and she told him she did not dance. Drewie then turned around and didn’t notice appellant and Leta until she saw them walking off apiece from her. That soon after that when they were getting ready to go home, “I walked that way and heard her (the little girl Leta) holler for help. When I first heard it, I went on down a little ways and she hollered again, and I found it was behind me, and I turned around and went back. I went about where I thought the hollering was. I could not see anything when I got there; I was so excited I didn’t pay any attention. I saw Leta there; I saw that man and Leta. They were lying on the ground, and I could hear a little mumbling noise. I didn’t stay, I turned and ran; they were lying on the ground. I heard her holler about three times. She just hollered ‘Help’ in a loud screaming tone. After that I went back to her buggy. When I saw them on the ground there, I think they were moving some. I did not look at them very long, as soon as I saw them I ran back. I saw-she was lying on her back. He was lying on his stomach. He was lying kind of on her when I saw them. . . '. After I heard the screams, when I got there, there was nobodjr else there besides these parties, not around there; there wasn’t anybody. I don’t know just how far it was I was away from them when I first heard Leta scream; it was just a little ways from them, because when I first heard it, I was past them, and then I turned and went back. It was only a little piece. Just as soon as I saw them, I ran back to the buggy. I went as hard as I could go.” On cross-examination, among other things, she testified that she had started down the creek and had gone some distance. She said:. “The first time I heard someone holler was when I was past the buggy and was going to the bridge. I had started along the brow of the hill toward the shell road in the shade. I had gone further than fiftv or sixty steps; I don’t know how far it was. . . . When I heard the screams I had passed on the brow of the hill, and passed where the scream came from. I looked back; I heard her holler again and I turned back. I didn’t see them when I turned back, not until I got straight up from them. I came back to the brow of the hill, and when I got up above them, I could see them. There were some bushes and weeds. They were close to the water, it was closer than fifteen feet to the water. It was about ten feet. . . . After I heard her holler the second time, I went back a little piece and then saw her. . . . He was lying on his side with his leg over her. I could not tell what they were doing. . . . I did not say anything to them: I went within about ten feet of them. I don’t know whether she saw me or not; she did not say anything to me. I went back and looked at them and then broke and ran. I heard a little mumbling noise, but could not understand. I saw her dress a little above her Imee.' I did not see where the boy’s hands were.” This witness then shows that she ran back to the buggy and got Mr. John Sue, who was in the buggy, and they ran back down to where the appellant and Leta were. And when they got back down there the appellant was running away from there; that Mrs. Kavalder was then there and got there before she and John Sue did. On redirect examination she testified: “When Leta came up to me from Mrs. Kavalder, her dress was torn; the lace was torn, the lace in front of her waist, and there were grass stains on her dress. . . . The reason I ran and told John Sue, I .went for help; I went to get help to help Leta.” And then she explained the position the parties "were lying when she first saw them. She said, “She was lying on her back and he was lying on her, a little back, and kind of on his stomach.” On recross-examination, among- other things, she said the stains were all over her underskirt; that she didn’t see any on her shoulder, nor on the stomach of her dress, nor on the knees of her dress. Mrs. Mary Kavalder testified that she lived on a farm at Alta Loma, in Galveston County, and saw the little girl Leta that evening. She said: “I and Mrs. Dulce drove in the park and a little girl came running and hollering and screaming that a man had her sister, and we should help. Mrs. Dulce said to me to run over, and I took my parasol and ran with the little girl. Then I saw the fellow laying on the girl there, and I held up my umbrella and hollered, Tet that girl go.’ Then he crawled on his hands and feet back to the bushes and then he ran. The little girl was laying flat on her back. He laid right flat on top of her. She laid- there, when I came she jumped up; when he crawled off of her. When I first saw them—I did n©t see anything, I just run; I was some distance away from them when I hollered; then he raised up his head and he crawled back on his hands and feet backwards, then turned away from me and ran. The little girl jumped up and came to. me and grabbed me around the neck and thanked me. She said, T thank you, lady, for coming and helping me, and saving me.’ She had her dress in front all torn open. She shook like a leaf. Ko portion of her body was exposed at that time, not that I seen, only her breast. When she made these statements, Thank you, lady, for coming up here and helping me,’ she was excited and nervous. She cried; she. cried when I saw her. I did not see any portion of the defendant’s person at that time. I run sideways up to him and he crawled back and he had his back to me before he got up.” On cross-examination this witness showed that when they drove in the gate from the Dickinson road they drove bv the grandstand, where people w7ere dancing: that it was further than one hundred yards, and she jumped out of the buggy when about half way between the road and the grandstand; that it was from a quarter to a half mile from the grandstand to the road; that when she got out of the buggy and went down the hill it was back a piece to where these parties were; that they were pretty close up to the creek, within about ten feet of it, she judged. She said: “I could not see them because it is high and bushy. When I got to the brow of the hill I could see them perfectly plain then. From where they were, you could not look up and see where they were dancing, where the grandstand was. You could see the people when you got up on the hill, but not from where I was at all. I am sure of that. . . . As to there being lots of brush around there where they were about ten feet high," thére was not right there, but around there. They were not just exactly in the brush hiding, either. There were brushes, sure, but they were not in the brush, but they had brush right at the side of them. It was up to the water. He was not lying up to the edge of the water. His head was in the direction up to the picnic, it was parallel to the creek; he was lying along with his side to me, when I came down, the side was to me, and their heads down to the pike; and some little girl came running up to where I was. I saw the Bomine girl that day. She was not the girl who came running up to me. John Sue was not there when I got there, but he came after. I chased him (the defendant) away. And when I chased him, he ran along the bayou. He did not go down the 'creek away from the crowd; he went toward the crowd. He was running as fast as he could. I did not see anything when I came up there. I told him, ‘Let that girl alone.’ I said, You dirty brute,’ and held my umbrella and wanted to hit him. I was not so close; he ran away. . . . When I rushed up-to them I saw he was on top of her. He was right flat over her. I can not say if he had her dress up over her head and down between her legs, because he took his hands this way over the girl’s back. ... I seen this girl’s dress all torn and he lay flat on her. While he was lying on top of her, I did not see any legs waving in the air and kicking. It looked like he held her arms down. I think he had both of her hands. . . . When I came up he was just lying there holding her; he laid right flat on her; I don’t know if he was holding her or not. . . . When he crawled off of her, he crawled backwards, then backed away the way his feet were. He got on his hands and Imees until he was back in the bushes, on all fours, until he was so far he turned back in the bushes. . . . She jumped up as quick as he let her go. She jumped up as quick as she could, and he jumped hack on his all fours, and then turned his face -to the bayou and ran.” On redirect examination she said: “This screaming I heard, just before coming down that way, it came up from the bayou. A little girl came running up to us and hollered that a man had her sister.” On recross-examination she said: “Besides myself, that little girl was around there. There was nobody else in hollering distance.” Mr. and Mrs. Tinnin, the father and mother of the little girl Beta,, testified to the torn condition of the little girl’s clothes when she reached home that evening. This evidence was later excluded by the court. John Sue testified that he had been boarding or working for the little-girl Beta’s father continuously for five years prior to this occurrence; that he had known said little girl ever since she was about ten years old; that her father was an old school mate of his and they were born and reared in the same country and had been, good friends all the time as their fathers before them had been; that he weighed 152 pounds and was six feet high—taller than the appellant, though he guessed the appellant would weigh as much as he did. That along about 4 o’clock that evening he was preparing to start home and went to where some of the little girls were and told them; he then went back to his buggy and got in it. Drewie Eomine came and gave him the alarm of the assault on the little girl Leta; he at once jumped out of his buggy, ran down the bayou to where the assault occurred; that Mrs. Kavalder reached there before he did; that he saw both the little girl Leta and appellant there. The best we can get from his testimony is that his buggy was something like 150 yards from the grandstand and where the assault occurred was 140 or 150 steps beyond that, further from the grandstand; that Leta was still there with Mrs. Kavalder and appellant had not left the scene, but then started to leave and he holloed to him to stop, began cursing him, but that appellant ran towards. the grandstand and he followed him for about 100 yards. “And he came up on the bank and ran into me and I got him. I saw his face at that time. There looked to be finger prints on his face, not scratches, but kind of welts, and one place that was bleeding. I believe that was on the right side (indicating) behind the ear.” That appellant’s pants were unbuttoned when he first saw him and he was trying to fasten them; they were unbuttoned in front from top to bottom; that when he first got to the scene the little girl Leta was crying; he couldn’t understand what she was saying to Mrs. Kavalder, she tried to talk, but crying like she was, she couldn’t. “And when I saw him, his pants were unbuttoned from top to bottom and just flared out;—it didn’t seem that the hook up here—as to whether his shirt was pulled out,—there was something showing, I did not see his private. I immediately told him to stop. . . . He said, T have not done anything and you had better let me alone’ ”; that he was then about fifteen or twenty feet from him. He was up on the brow of the hill and appellant was below; that appellant then commenced to run, and remarked, “I haven’t hurt the little girl; I wasn’t going to hurt her; I was taking her down to where her friends were.” The witness said it was then that they ran together and that he was going to stop him at any cost; that soon after this the officer came up and arrested appellant. The constable, Mr. E. H. Eomine, testified that he was at said picnic and saw appellant there that day; that when he first saw him he was walking as fast as he could, leaving the crowd; this was after the assault and after he had gotten up towards where the crowd was, near the grandstand. Mr. Eomine said: “I saw his face that day. His lips were bleeding; I don’t know whether it was something wrong with his lips, but he had a little blood along here (on his face). I don’t know whether it was marked or just blood from his lip, along the side of his face, but his lip was bleeding.” We think it unnecessary to further state any of the evidence. From what we have given and from the whole of the testimony, the jury were clearly justified to believe therefrom that the appellant, a grown man, enticed this little girl Leta away from her friends and from the crowd, some considerable distance, to a secluded place, hidden from her friends and from the crowd, and assaulted her for the purpose and with the intention of ravishing her; that she was a right young girl, inexperienced and unsuspecting; that she did all that she reasonably could to repel and prevent his assault upon her and that he doubtless would have accomplished his purjjose if the screams and calls for help by the little girl had not attracted others who came to her rescue and ran him oil of her. We think there.can be no doubt of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction, and, of course, the court did not err in refusing to give his special charge instructing the jury peremptorily to acquit him. While perhaps no case exactly in point could be found because each case must, more or less, be bottomed on the facts therein, yet we cite as in point, White v. State, 60 Texas Crim. Rep., 559; Ross v. State, 60 Texas Crim. Rep., 547; Stewart v. State, 60 Texas Crim. Rep., 92; Conger v. State, 63 Texas Crim. Rep., 312. 2. Appellant’s first bill of exceptions shows, in substance, that the • verdict herein was rendered November 3, 1914; that two days later he filed his motion for new trial. In that motion he did not allege any misconduct of the jury. The trial judge fixed November 14 for hearing the motion. On November 11, by leave of the court, appellant, for the first time, complained of the action of the jury, as follows: “8. Because of the misconduct of the jury trying this ease in this: That said jury or some members thereof upon their retirement to consider this case, and after the charge and argument of counsel commented upon the failure of the defendant to testify in his own behalf and upon his failure to place character witnesses upon the stand in his own behalf, and considered such failure to testify and failure to place such witnesses on the stand in arriving at their verdict in this ease. “The matters set forth in the foregoing paragraph are charged to be true by the counsel for the defendant who signs this motion based upon information and belief and they verily believe and charge upon such information and belief that such are the facts. “Wherefore, this defendant prays this court to set this motion down for a hearing, and that each and every juror that sat in this ease be subpoenaed to appear before your honor and that they be placed under the rule and that they be examined by these counsel in open court under oath singly as to the matters in this section eight of this motion. “Finally this defendant prays that after a fair and full hearing upon this motion that your honor do grant the same in all things and award to him a new trial as in law he is entitled to have. (Signed) King & Hughes, R. L. Pillow, Jr., Attys. for Defendant. “The State of Texas, “County of Galveston. “Comes now Harry Tom King, one of the attorneys of record for the defendant herein. Harry Calyon, and in the above styled and numbered cause and upon his oath says that- the matters set forth in paragraph 8 of this motion are true to the best of his knowledge, information and belief. (Signed) “Harry Tom King. “Subscribed and sworn to before me this the 11th day of November, 1914. “L. B. Patton, “Notary Public in and for Galveston Co., Texas.” That on the next day one of his attorneys presented, in person, to the trial judge a carbon copy of his amended motion and told the judge he had filed the original with the clerk and asked for an early consideration relating to the misconduct of the jury; that a few hours later he asked the judge if he had read the motion, and he stated that he had. Whereupon he asked that he direct the clerk to issue process for the jurors as prayed for in said motion; that the judge stated emphatically that he would do no such thing; that he would have nothing to do with that portion of the motion setting up the misconduct of the jury; that he at once applied in writing to the clerk for process for each and all of the jurors, naming them, but not stating what their avocation was, nor their location; that when this was presented to the clerk, the clerk stated positively that he would decline to issue the subpoenas, unless forced to do so by mandamus; that on November 14, when the motion was heard, appellant was present, and his attorneys suggested that he wanted to take up the action of the court and clerk in refusing process for the jurors; that none of the jurors were then present and in attendance. Thereupon, he offered in evidence, particularly, that portion of his motion above copied, the file marks on the application for process and file mark on it and what happened and transpired concerning the amended motion and application for process stated above, and then: “There was then offered the testimony of R. L. Pillow, Jr., one of the counsel of the defendant, who stated that he had talked to one of the jurors who tried the case of The State v. Calyon, No. 17,019, docket of this court, and that he had after such conversation furnished the counsel, Mr. King, who prepared and swore to the amended motion for a new trial now on file in this cause information concerning what had, transpired between him, the said Pillow, and the said juror; and that he had truthfully passed the information received from the juror to his co-counsel, Mr. King. The defendant then offered the testimony of Mr. King, one of his counsel, who stated that he had prepared Section 8 of the defendant’s motion for new trial upon information communicated to him by Mr. R. L. Pillow, Jr., of counsel for the defendant, and that he had made his affidavit thereto based upon such information so received. 1 “And it being agreed in open court between the State and counsel for 'defendant that the foregoing matters herein set out truly reflects the situation concerning that part of the defendant’s amended motion for new trial setting up the misconduct of the jury, the defendant by his counsel then and there in open court excepted to the failure and refusal of the court trying this ease to direct the clerk of this court to issue process upon the application as herein set out and excepted to the failure and refusal of the clerk ■ of this court to issue process upon the application herein set out even without the direction of the court for the reason: That misconduct of the jury having been alleged under oath in the motion for new trial filed herein and an application directed to the clerk of this court having been made by one of the counsel for the defendant under oath asking for process to compel the attendance of said jurors on the date set for the motion for new trial to the end that the matters of misconduct charged might he inquired into, and said application having been reasonably made, that then and in that event defendant was entitled to the process of this court as prayed for. “Wherefore, the defendant now presents this his bill of exception No. 1 and asks that this court examine, approve, allow and order the same filed as a part of the record in this case. “The foregoing bill of exception having been presented to me and examined the same is now approved, allowed and ordered filed as a part of the record in this case. This the 23rd day of November, 1914. “Robt. G. Street, “Judge of the 56th Judicial Dist.” This presents the only serious question in the case. The purported affidavit of Mr. King is simply and solely to the effect that: “to the best of his knowledge, information and belief” said jury or some members thereof, “commented upon the failure of the defendant to testify in his own behalf and upon his failure to place character witnesses upon the stand in his own behalf and considered such failure to testify and failure to place such witnesses on the stand, in arriving at their verdict in this case.” In our opinion this amounts to no affidavit at all. The hill clearly shows that Mr. King had no knowledge whatever about the supposed misconduct of the jury; that he did not give what his claimed information was, nor did he give who his informant was. Mr. Pillow, one of appellant’s attorneys, who claimed to have talked to one of the jurors, made,no affidavit whatever. Neither did their client, the appellant, make any affidavit. On the hearing of the motion, neither appellant nor his attorney, Mr. King, nor his attorney, Mr. Pillow, even told who the juror was that Mr. Pillow claimed to have talked with. Nor did any or either of them tell what said juror had said to them. Nor did any or either of them give any reason or excuse why they did not produce the affidavit of said juror or any other juror, nor in any way show that that juror or any other failed or refused to make any affidavit, or that any of them had been approached for that purpose or requested to do so. In the case of Hicks v. State, 75 Texas Crim. Rep., 461, 171 S. W. Rep., 755, we thoroughly examined, cited, quoted and stated some of the authorities on this subject. In that case one ground of the motion for new trial complained of the misconduct of the jury, alleging they arrived at their verdict hy lot, and stating therein that “defendant was advised and believed, and the facts were that the verdict was so arrived at.” That motion was not sworn to, but was signed by his attorneys. When that motion was heard hy the trial judge appellant had eight members of the jury in open court and asked permission to swear them “by whom defendant’s attorneys stated they believed and said that they had been so informed, they could prove that the verdict was arrived at in the manner,” which would be by lot, particularly set out; that the trial judge refused to permit the jurors to be so sworn and testify, stating that “no issue as to the misconduct of the jury having been submitted to the court, the jury was not permitted to be sworn and impeach its verdict, which appeared not impartial or unfair under all the facts of the case.” This court sustained the action of the lower court in that case and held that the judge committed no error and affirmed that case, which was a conviction for murder in the second degree with a punishment of nineteen years confinement in the penitentiary. The basis of the holding of this court in that case was that the court properly refused to hear the jurors and have them testify, although in actual attendance for that purpose, because the attempted pleading in the motion averring said misconduct of the jury was not sworn to by appellant or anyone for him. In this case, while there is a purported affidavit, it is not really so and is in fact, and in effect, no affidavit whatever. In the Hicks case, among other authorities, we cited, approved and quoted 14 Ency. P. & P., p. 904, as follows: “When the ground for a new trial consists of extrinsic facts and matters not of record, such as irregularity of the court, jury, ... or misconduct . . . the proper method is to set forth the facts by affidavits in support of the motion. . . .” We also cited, approved and quoted 12 Ency. P. & P., pp. 557-8-9, as follows: . . . “When a party moves for a new trial on the ground of misconduct which occurred during the trial, he must aver and show affirmatively that both he and his counsel were ignorant of the misconduct charged until after the trial. "An application for a new trial on the ground of misconduct must he supported hy affidavits as to the facts. “An affidavit to secure a new trial on account of the misconduct of a juror must clearly set out the facts constituting the alleged irregularity. "The affidavit should he positive as well as specific, and should he sustained hy oath and not merely founded on information and belief.” And in that case we further said: “We think there can be no sort of doubt but that these authorities establish, beyond question, that in order for appellant to have had considered his ground of motion attacking the verdict of the jury on any matter extrinsic the record itself, that, as a matter of pleading, he must support it by its own affidavit or the affidavit of someone else specifically showing the truth of the grounds of attack. And when it is not so sworn to or supported it presents no question requiring the lower court to consider or investigate it.” Our statute (art. 837, C. C. P.) says: “Hew trials, in cases of felony,, shall be granted for the following causes, and for no other: . . . “8. Where, from the misconduct of the jury, the court is of opinion that the defendant has not received a fair and impartial trial; and it shall he competent to prove such misconduct by the voluntary affidavit of a juror; and a verdict may, in like manner, in such cases, be sustained by such affidavit.” This court has all the time held that in an affidavit for a continuance which states that defendant “is informed and believes,” in setting out what the absent witness will swear, is wholly insufficient. (Labbaite v. State, 6 Texas Crim. App., 257.) In the very recent case of Byars v. State, decided December 9, 1914, wherein appellant claimed that the court erred in refusing his application for a continuance and wherein he swore what the witness would testify “so defendant has been informed,” this court, through Judge Davidson, said: “It will be noticed that the facts expected to be proved are not stated, except upon information. Appellant nowhere, in the application, nor attached to it, shows or attempts to show from whom he received such information. If appellant had been informed that the absent witness would testify as indicated, his‘'source of information should have been stated and verified.” So it-has all the time been held by this court that in such application for continuance a mere statement that the appellant has used due diligence to obtain the witness is wholly insufficient; that the application must set out what the diligence is so that the court can tell therefrom whether or not the proper diligence has been used. (Henry v. State, 38 Texas Crim. Rep., 306; Cocker v. State, 31 Texas, 498.) So it has all the time been held by our Supreme Court that in an affidavit for attachment it must state positively the facts on which the attachment is sought and that when it is stated merely on information and belief it is wholly insufficient to authorize or sustain an attachment. Sydnor v. Totham, 6 Texas, 189; Dunnenbaum v. Schram, 59 Texas, 281; Lewis v. Stewart, 62 Texas, 352. In 2 Cyc., 25, it is said: "Where material allegations are made on information and belief the source of information and grounds of belief should be set out and a good reason given why a positive statement could not be procured.” In Black v. State, 41 Texas Crim. Rep., 185, this court, through Judge Davidson, said: “Appended to the motion for new trial is the affidavit of George H. Giddings, stating that he is a member of the firm of Gulp & Giddings, counsel for appellant, that defendant did not testify in his own behalf and that subsequent to the return of the verdict he talked with Holman, one of the jurors, who informed him that some of the jury discussed defendant’s failure to testify, while out deliberating upon their verdict. He further states that he prepared an affidavit showing the facts, and requested Mr. Holman to sign it, but he declined to do so until he could see his fellow jurors, and a request was made that the court inquire into the truth of the matter. Hone of the jurors filed affidavits.” He then shows that what purported to be a statement of facts on this question was filed after term time and for that reason could not be considered, and he concludes the opinion hy saying: “For the reasons stated, we believe what is set out as a statement of facts in regard to the alleged misconduct of the jury can not be considered; nor the affidavit of the attorney of appellant, because it states no fact, and is not even supported by the affidavit of his informer " In 2 Thompson on Trials (2 ed.), sec. 2616, it is said: “That presumption of right acting which attends all official conduct, extends to the conduct of juries, and, as a general rule, this presumption can only be overcome by clear and satisfactory proof. A new trial will not be granted where the evidence fails to make out a fair presumption that the jurors were guilty of misconduct. The evidence to establish the misconduct must be clear and positive. The mere statement by an affiant of his impressions counts for nothing; and the same may be said of affidavits made on information and belief—at least unless such' affidavit discloses from whom the affiant acquired his information, and then it must appear why the testimony of such person can not be had" It has always been held by this, and our Supreme Court, that in applications for new trial on account of newly discovered testimony, the affidavit of the new witness must be produced, or good cause shown why it is not done. Cotton v. State, 4 Texas, 260; Campbell v. State, 29 Texas, 490; Cole v. State, 40 Texas, 147; West v. State, 2 Texas Crim. App., 209; Love v. State, 3 Texas Crim. App., 501; Polser v. State, 6 Texas Crim. App., 510; Evans v. State, 6 Texas Crim. App., 513. And if the.affidavit alleges information derived from another person, the name of such other must be disclosed, and his affidavit be filed or the want of it accounted for. Williams v. State, 7 Texas Crim. App., 163; Blake v. State, 3 Texas Crim. App., 581. Any number of cases to this effect down to this date could be cited, but it is unnecessary. Eo case can be found to the contrary. When the affidavit is to the effect that some other told affiant, such affidavit “is purely hearsay,” and is wholly insufficient. (Tyler v. State, 48 Texas Crim. Rep., 611.) When our Supreme Court had criminal jurisdiction, in Dignowitty v. State, 17 Texas, 521, p. 532, it said: “The application for a new trial resting on the unsupported affidavit of the party, was manifestly insufficient, though its force had not been impaired by the counter affidavit or by anything appearing to the contrary, of the matters deposed by the accused.” In Jordan v. State, 10 Texas, 479, our Supreme Court said: “This court can not notice the mere statements of counsel made in their motion for a new trial.” And further, on page 502, said: “In considering the motion, the court may judge, not only of the competency, but of the effect- of evidence. There may be cases where the court might well grant a new trial, if, in the opinion of the presiding judge, injustice had been done; while, at the same time, should a new trial be refused, this -court would not be warranted in reversing the judgment. The judge who presides at the trial is afforded much better and more ample means of judging of the merits of the application than the revising. court can be. And. therefore, it is the governing rule of the action of this court, affirmed and enforced by repeated decisions, from the earliest cases upon the subject to the present time, not to reverse the judgment of the District Court refusing a new trial, unless some principle of law has been violated, misconceived or disregarded, to the prejudice of the party, or there is good reason to apprehend that injustice had been done, in refusing the application. Though the District Court, in its discretion, upon the application of the accused, might have granted a new trial, if, from the evidence and circumstances of the case, as they were apparent to the presiding judge, in his opinion, the ends of substantial justice required it.” As said by Judge Davidson in Gordon v. State, 29 Texas Crim. App., 410: “Hothing will be indulged in favor of such matters (purported affidavits) when they operate as an attack upon the judgment of a court of record, to the end that the judgment may be set aside or vacated on appeal. Every presumption must -and will be indulged by appellate courts, tending to uphold and sustain judgments of trial courts. A party attacking such judgments must make it apparent that sufficient error exists to set aside or annul them.” See also Morrison v. State, 39 Texas Crim. Rep., 519; Shutt v. State, 71 S. W. Rep., 18; cited, stated and quoted in said Hicks case, supra. In Atchinson v. Bartholow, 4 Kan., 124; Thompson v. Higginbotham, 18 Kan., 42; Morgan v. Boord, etc., 9 Nev., 360; People v. Williams, 24 Cal., 31; People v. Tarm Poi, 86 Cal., 225; State v. Stucker, 58 Iowa, 496; Stanley v. Sutherland, 54 Ind., 339; Andrews v. State, 33 Ohio Cir. Ct. R., 564, it was held that affidavits must be positive, and when made on information and belief is wholly insufficient and should not be considered. Our law prescribes (art. 714, C. C. P.), and it was administered to the jury in this case, this oath: “You, and each of you, solemnly swear that in the case of the State of Texas against Harry Calyon, the defendant, you will a true verdict render according to the law and the evidence, so help me God.” In this case the court expressly told the jury, after telling them they were the exclusive judges of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony “you are bound to receive the law from the court and be governed thereby.” In addition, he told them “the failure of the defendant to testify shall not be taken as a circumstance against him, nor shall the same be alluded to or commented on by you in your retirement.” Ho doubt each and every juror in this case was fully and completely tested on his voir dire before he was taken, and they each were wholly disinterested, entirely impartial and fair, and without any prejudice or bias against appellant. It is no light thing to treat the jurors as violating their solemn oaths. When it is attempted to be done by an accused after conviction, certainly something more than a mere purported affidavit by one of appellant’s attorneys to the effect that “to the best of my knowledge, information and belief, the jury or some members thereof, commented upon the failure of the defendant to testify, and his failure to place character witnesses upon the stand, and considered said matters,” should be required to authorize the trial judge to summon them before him and answer to any such charge. They were not on trial. The accused was. Let us further consider the purported affidavit of Mr. King, one of appellant’s attorneys. It is simply and solely to this effect: “tg the best of my knowledge, information and belief, the jury or some of them, commented upon the failure of the defendant to testify, and upon his failure to place character witnesses upon the stand in his own behalf and considered such failure to testify and to place such witnesses on the stand, in arriving at their verdict.” This states no positive material fact whatever. He in no way stated he had any knowledge on the subject. When the trial judge heard the motion and the evidence thereon, it was shown that Mr. King had no knowledge whatever. It did not state his information “to the best of my information,” states no material fact of even information. Hor did he state who his informant was, nor the information given him. ¡Nor did he state why he did not attach an affidavit of his informant, nor that his informant refused to make an affidavit. When the trial judge heard the motion and evidence thereon, Mr. King swore only: “that he had prepared section 8 of the defendant’s motion for new trial upon information communicated to him by Mr. ¡R. L. Pillow, Jr., of counsel for the defendant, and that he made his affidavit thereto based upon such information so received”—simply that and nothing more. On that same hearing said Mr. Pillow swore only: “that he had talked to one of the jurors who tried this case, and that he had, after such conversation, furnished the counsel, Mr. King, who prepared and swore to the amended motion for new trial now on file in this cause, information concerning what had transpired between him, the said Pillow, and the said juror; and that he had truthfully passed the information received from the juror to his co-counsel, Mr. King”—simply that and nothing more. We are impressed to ask, why did not Mr. Pillow himself instead of Mr. King, make the purported affidavit “to the best of Ms knowledge, information and belief”? But he did not do so. ¡Nor did he on said hearing even tell the trial judge who the juror was who “talked” to him, nor what the “information received from the juror” was, nor why he did not get the affidavit of said juror what this “information” was. This “talk” of the juror with him was on or before ¡November 11th. The hearing on the motion was had ¡November 14th, three days later. There can be no doubt most, if not all the jurors, in this case, lived in the City of Galveston, and each and all of them could have been seen and “talked” to by one or the other, or both of appellant’s attorneys, or appellant himself, and that if there had been any foundation, in fact, for such an attack on their verdict, some or all of them would have made an affidavit to that effect. Or, at'least, appellant or one