Dallas
Morning News
February 8, 1893
THE SHARMAN HOMICIDE
The Court of Appeals Defines Conspiracy To Kill
The Death Penalty Assessed Against Chas.
Luttrell Affirmed - Full Text of Opinion
The following is the opinion of the court of
criminal appeals in the
case of Chas. Luttrell of Grayson county,
convicted of
the murder of
W.T. Sharman in Denison, and his punishment
fixed at death.
Opinion by Presiding Judge Hurt, all the judges
concurring:
No. 93, first. Chas. Luttrell vs. the state, in
court of criminal appeals. Dallas term,
1893; appeal from Grayson county.
On the night of April 28, 1892, W.T. Sharman was
assassinated at his
home in Denison, Grayson county. He was
shot while asleep in the
same bed with his wife and a 3-year-old
child. The weapon used
was a shotgun loaded with buckshot, a number of
which lodged in the
body of the deceased. Death was almost
instantaneous, the only
word uttered by him after the shot was
"mamma." A ladder, the end
of which was wrapped with cloth, was found
resting against the roof of
the house near a window. The assassin had
evidently stood on the
ladder and fired the fatal shot over the upper
sash of the window,
which was lowered from the top. There was
no light in the room,
no eye witness to the dastardly deed, and the
murderer escaped
unseen. That the homicide was a
cold-blooded, premeditated murder
is evident.
Appellant Charles Luttrell was indicted for the
homicide, and on the
25th day of October, 1892, was tried and
convicted of
the murder in the
first degree and the death penalty was
assessed. Judgment being
entered on the verdict, he appeals to this
court.
Dallas Morning News
12 February 1893
CARLISLE-SHARMAN CASE
TECHNICAL DISTINCTIONS BETWEEN
FELONIES AND MISDEMEANORS
The Court Holds That the Evidence
Complained of Was Admissible and
Amply Supports the Verdict
Court of Criminal Appeals
J.M. Hurt, presiding judge; W.L.
Davidson and E.J. Simkins, judges;
R.L. Henry, assistant attorney general: W.A.
Hudson, clerk; Dallas Term.
John T. Carlisle vs. state; appeal from Grayson
County.
In 1880 in Lee County, Texas, one Samuel Sparks
was murdered in
the town of Giddings at night. J. M. Brown
was sheriff
of said county.
In 1887 or 1888, Brown having moved to Fort
Worth, indictments were presented
against Ed Myers and J. T. Carlisle for the
murder of Sparks. At the
time of the killing Ed Myers was deputy sheriff
for Brown. In the
fall of 1888 Myers was tried, found guilty of
murder in the second degree
and sentenced to twenty years in the
penitentiary.
On the trail of Myers, W. T. Sharman, the only
eye witness to the
killing, testified that he "was an eye witness
to the homicide of Sparks;
that he was standing in a few feet of Sparks
when he was killed; that Carlisle
and Sparks were walking arm in arm toward
Sparks' horse, which was hitched
nearby, and that Myers slipped up behind them
and the night being dark,
he stooped to get Spark's head above the horizon
and fired a pistol directly
at Sparks' head, the ball entering the base of
the brain and ranging upward
and forward; that Sparks fell dead, whereupon
Carlisle and Myers ran away;
that he recognized Carlisle by his voice."
There was deadly enmity
existing between J. M. Brown and Sparks.
In the city of Denison, Grayson county, between
the hours of 1 and
2 o'clock a.m., on the night of the 28th of
April, 1892,
while lying in
bed with his wife and infant child, W. T.
Sharman was shot with a shotgun
by some person standing upon a ladder placed
against the house, shooting
over the top of the window sash, which had been
lowered about six inches.
Charles Luttrell was indicted as principal,
tried and convicted
of murder in the first degree with the death
penalty, appealed to this
court and the judgment was affirmed.
On May 25, 1892, John T. Carlisle was indicted,
being charged as
an accomplice, also for the murder of W. T.
Sharman was
on the 29th of October,
1892, tried and convicted of murder in the first
degree with the death
penalty assessed against him also. From
this conviction and judgment
he appeals.
The acts constituting appellant an accomplice,
occurring in Collin
County, counsel for appellant contends that
Grayson County, the county
of the homicide was without authority to try the
case. If an accomplice
to a felony be guilty of a distinct offense from
the felony committed by
his principal the position of counsel is well
taken.
We have no definition of definition of a crime
named or called "accomplice,"
but we are informed by our code what acts and
things will make a person
doing them an accomplice to all felonies, to
which there can be an accomplice.
We are aware that there are numerous opinions of
learned courts
strongly intimating that an accessory before the
fact (our accomplice)
is guilty of a distinct offense from that of his
principal. We desire
to notice the reason or legal ratiocination of
several of these opinions.
The following proposition is supported by a
strong line of authorities:
Accessory before the fact in one state to crime
committed in another cannot
be punished in the state where the substantive
crime is committed.
The reasoning by which this proposition is
sustained is, that as the acts
constituting a person an accessory occurred in a
state other than that
in which the crime was committed by the
principal.
Let us examine this subject in the light of the
same authorities
which support the above proposition a little
further. A lives
in
Texas. He procures B, who also lives in
Texas, to go to Missouri
and there commit an act which is a felony in
Missouri.
B is innocent
of anything wrong in what he does. These
same authorities hold that
Missouri would have authority to try and punish
A. Upon what ground?
Because A would be the principal. Again, A
employs B to go
to Missouri and there commit a
misdemeanor. B, with full knowledge
of the criminal intent of A, would be guilty as
a principal, and as it
was a misdemeanor all would be principals and
Missouri would have authority
to punish A, when in fact A had done no act
whatever in Missouri, except
through B. Again,
A sends B to Missouri armed and equipped or the
purpose of murdering C, being instigated thereto
by A. Missouri would
not have authority to try and punish A, because
all of his acts were don
in Texas and because he was accessory and not
principal. Now or the
dilemma; Suppose Missouri should by statute make
accessory before the fact
principals, as several states have done, then
she would have authority
to try and punish A for the murder of C when A
had done no act in Missouri
personally, acting alone through his guilty
agent B.
What is the result of such doctrine? It is
that the power
or authority to punish acts committed beyond the
border of the state which
are crime within the state, depends upon
technical distinctions between
felonies and misdemeanors, accessories and
principals or whether the agent
was guilty or innocent, and not upon the fact
that the criminal act was
or was not committed in the state.
There is another line of authorities resting
upon solid foundation.
The doctrine is this, that distinctions between
accessories and principals
rest solely in authority being without
foundation either in actual reason
or the ordinary doctrine of law. For the general
rule of law is that what
one does through another?s agency is to be
regarded as done by himself.
In this there is no distinction between the
punishment of an accomplice
and a principal. Why? Because the crime is
the same. In morals
there are circumstances in which we attach more
blame to the accomplice
than to his principal. As when a husband
commands his wife or master
his servant, to do, for his benefit, a criminal
thing, which in his absence
is done reluctantly through fear or affection
overpowering a subject mind.
That the crime committed by the accomplice is
the same committed by his
principal is evident. This proposition
rests upon solid legal ground.
In 1 Broom's Legal Max., second edition, 643, we
find this maxim: "The
principal of common law qui facet per allium,
facet per se, is of universal
application, both in criminal and civil
cases." If appellant be guilty,
of what offense is he guilty? He is guilty
of murder of the first
degree? Simply because he, with his malice
aforethought expressed,
through his agent and tool, Luttrell, killed
W.T. Sharman. He is guilty
because Luttrell's act was his act, Luttrell
being his agent. Appellant
is guilty of the murder of Sharman in Grayson
county, though the acts constituting
him an accomplice may have all occurred in
Collin county. Why?
Because when his agent Luttrell shot and killed
Sharman in the city of
Denison, Grayson County, it was appellant also
who, through Luttrell, shot
and killed him in Grayson County.
The correctness of this doctrine is clearly
supported in the death
of Uriah, which was caused by Davis. The
Lord, speaking through Nathan,
said to David: "Wherefore hast thou despised the
commandment of the Lord
to do evil in his sight? Thou hast killed
Uriah, the Hittite, with
the sword and hast taken his wife to be thy
wife, and hast slain him with
the sword of the children of Ammon." Now
David was not present when
Uriah was killed. David did not with his
own hands slay Uriah, with
a sword, but when Joab placed Uriah in a
position in which death was inevitable
and thereby had him killed, under the command of
David, David killed Uriah
with a sword just as if he had slain him with
his own hands. We are
of the opinion that the offense of the
accomplice and his principal is
the same, and if at all, his crime was murder of
the first degree, committed
in Grayson County, and hence the venus of the
case was in Grayson county.
Some further observations on this subject.
We desire to call
attention to the very wise remark of Judge Marcy
in People vs. Mather,
4 Windle 228 and 229. He says: "Writers on
criminal law make some
difference between the offense of principal and
accessory but it is chiefly
as to the order and mode of proceeding against
them."
By statute of New York it is provided that all
suits, information
and indictments for any crime of misdemeanor,
murder excepted, should be
brought within three years after the
commission. The word "murder"
was held to include, as well accessories before
the fact, as principals.
If an accomplice is guilty of a distinct felony
from that of his
principal, then a prosecution for being an
accomplice to murder is barred
by three years, for such an offense in not named
in the statute regulating
limitations.
The indictment is sufficient and not obnoxious
to the objections
made to it. The evidence complained of
under the circumstances of
this case was admissible. The evidence
only supports the verdict.
The judgment is affirmed.
J.M. Hurt, P.J.
The
Galveston Daily News
Galveston, Texas
Saturday, May 13, 1893
pg. 3
CARLISLE AND LUTTRELL
TOGETHER THEY WERE USHERED INTO ANOTHER WORLD
They Met Death Bravely But Quietly -
Last Statements on the Scaffold - History of
Their Crime
Sherman, Tex., May 12 - Charles
Luttrell
called for a lamp when the shadows of twilight
made it impossible to
longer read
last evening. John Carlisle was sitting
with his face
bowed in his hands when the guard placed the
lamp in his cell also.
Luttrell smoothed out his pillow and arranged
himself so he could get
the full benefit of the light and began reading
his Testament. The
doomed man never changed position, but turned
from one marked page to
another. Carlisle read a little,
but went to sleep at an early hour.
Luttrell read on till after 9, however, ever and
once stopping just for
a little while. His lips moved silently. The
death watch could not
catch his words. When he went to lay his Bible
down, he kissed it
softly and murmured out a half audible prayer
that the morrow might
bring no terrors with it. He then bade the watch
good-night and was
soon asleep, awakening but once when a guard
came up from below and
gave him some message. He went to sleep again,
and it was 7 o'clock
when the
DEATH WATCH WOKE HIM UP.
It was an ideal spring morning, the sunshine was
pouring into the cell
and a gentle breeze was passing through, the
beautiful palms near the
prison wall and into the cell. Birds were
singing merrily. Carlisle had
not slept so well during the night, but in the
latter watch he rested
very well. At midnight he was awake and talked
at length to one of the
guards, remarking in an abstract way, "I die
tomorrow; I die tomorrow."
Both men had in the early part of the evening
partaken heartily of a lunch brought them at the
request of the sheriff.
This morning after they took their usual wash a
breakfast prepared was
taken to their respective cells by Sheriff
Hughes in person. The
breakfast consisted of four biscuits each, two
slices of ham and three
eggs each. Luttrell drank sweet milk and
Carlisle took tea. They
ate with an evident relish. They asked if
the
MESSAGES THEY HAD DESIRED SENT
last night had been attended to, and both men
seemed greatly relieved
when informed that they had long since been
forwarded. These messages
were one from Carlisle to Sheriff Teagun of
Brenham requesting him to
see that his body is turned over to J. B.
Samples, who is by the way
the gentleman who married Carlisle's divorced
wife, and whom Carlisle
yesterday told a reporter he considered his
dearest friend on earth and
in whose care he was more than glad to leave his
family. The message
Luttrell sent was to his sister, Mrs. Jennie
Movor, asking her not to
neglect sending or coming for his body, which he
desired interred in
the cemetery in Woodville, I.T.
At 8 o'clock the men were left to themselves for
a while. Carlisle sat
in his cell with that far away look in his face
which has been noticed
for some time. Perhaps his mind was far away
from Sherman to
THE GLOOM SHROUDED HOME CIRCLE
in Giddings. He talked much of his children
lately. Luttrell read his Testament and prayed.
Then A. L. Evans came down to shave the
prisoners, who sat unironed
during it all. Carlisle had but little to say.
Luttrell chatted away as
pleasantly as if he were in a barber shop.
Carlisle showed little a
sign of nervousness, but Luttrell was composed.
There was a total
absence of cowardice or bravery in either. At 10
o'clock they dressed,
Carlisle preferred a dark suit; he already had a
white shirt and tie
and new underclothing constituted his toilet.
Like Carlisle, nice new
underclothes had been furnished him.
At 11 a.m., the two men were taken into the walk
around of the rotary
and there met Revs Shelton of St. Paul's, Rev.
John T. Wilson,
Mrs. Wyte, the kind lady who had been a
ministering agent to the prison
for years, and a number of others.
THE PRISONERS WERE UNBUCKLED
The religious services opened with prayer and
the prisoners joined in
the singing which followed. Rev. Mr. Wilson read
from Acts xii, 1-17,
dwelling at length upon the answer to Peter's
prayer to be delivered
from prison. He held this up to the condemned
men as an evidence that
the name Lord was more than willing to deliver
their souls from the
prison of sin into everlasting peace. The
prisoners tried to join in
the next song, but their voices were quivering
with emotion and their
eyes filled with tears.
Then Rev. Mr. Sheldon read from Exodus, xii,
1-14, and said that as the
slayers of the firstborn passed the lamb's blood
on the doors and
entered not to destroy, so would everlasting
death pass by those washed
in the blood of the Saviour.
Luttrell spoke at this juncture. He said: "I
believe that before long I
shall see with my own eyes the Son of God,
who shed his blood
that I might be saved out of my sins."
SAT AND SILENTLY WEPT
as the sweet old hymn, "There is a Fountain
Filled With Blood," was
started. There was not a dry eye in the room.
While Carlisle was less
demonstrative than Luttrell he expressed to his
spiritual
advisor, Rev. Sheldon, his abiding
faith in Christ and the
belief that he would be saved and when the
visitors left it was with a
promise to the condemned men that they
would return in the afternoon.
At noon neither Carlisle nor Luttrell desired
any nourishment or
stimulants of any kind. Luttrell asked Dr. Winn,
the county physician,
if an injection of morphine would ease the pain
of death, to which the
physician replied that there would be no pain.
Luttrell, however, asked
for it later on, and Carlisle concluded to take
an injection of it
also. To a friend who called during the noon
hour Luttrell exacted a
promise that he would see that his mother heard
of his last wish, to be
buried in Woodville, and said that he would
rather none of his intimate
friends would stay to see him hang.
It was a quarter past 1 when Rev. Mr. Sheldon
and some ladies arrived
at the prison, and were taken to the walkaround
of
the upper rotary,
where they met the prisoners and services were
resumed, during which
CARLISLE WAS BAPTIZED
Luttrell kneeling as the solemn rite was
celebrated. The prisoners were
calm. Once when the noise of the hammering at
the trap in the upper
hall of the prison resolved their hearing the
gave a slight start, but
it soon passed away. Out in the hallway there
was nothing to do but
await the execution. The noosed ropes hitched
over a convenient gas jet
told too plainly what the assemblage awaited.
A BLACK ROBED FIGURE
with a little boy nestled in her arms sat near
the trap. It was Mrs.
Sharman and her little fatherless son. There
were representatives of
several papers at a desk especially provided for
the purpose. The
sheriffs present were: Stafford of Camp,
Chaney of Fannin, O'Neil
of Hunt, Moulden of Collin, Marrs of Denton,
Cahill of Dallas,
Scarborough of Lee, Halles
of Tarrent, High of Morris and Blackburn of
Van Zandt. There were a number of deputy
sheriffs and county officers.
The hanging was of particular interest to
Sheriff High, as he is to
spring the trap at Dangerfield for a negro
murderer two weeks from
to-day.
At 1:30 the crowd in front of the prison had
reached several hundred.
Drs. Winn and Mathews of Sherman, Savage and
Wilson of Denison, and
Heard of Whitewright were present for the
purpose of examining. Other
physicians were present in the assemblage.
At 1:45 Rev.Sheldon and the visitors left the
condemned men. It was
nearly 2 p.m.when Sheriff Hughes began to read
the death warrants to
the condemned men. Both were smoking cigars and
WERE COOL AND COMPOSED
It was just 2:05 when the prisoners were brought
into the hall, at the
north end of which the trap was located. They
were walking by the side
of officers as erect and as firmly as they ever
did. Luttrell wore a
red rose and Carlisle a white one as
boutonnieres, and each carried a
bouquet of the same flowers in their hands. They
stepped out squarely
on the trap and
stood perfectly still.
Sheriff Hughes the informed the condemned men
that they were
privileged to make any statement they chose.
Charles Luttrell, in a
clear voice, turning and facing the crowd, said:
"I don't know that I
have much I care to say but I do desire now
to state that there has
been no ill treatment on the part of Sheriff
Hughes and his guards, who
have treated us kindly. They have been humane in
every particular. I
feel that some of the evidence against me has
been manufactured but I
have
NO MALICE IN MY HEART
I forgive every one as I feel I have myself been
forgiven."
Turning to Carlisle and grasping his hand he
said: "John, shall we meet
in heaven?" to which Carlisle replied: "I feel
that we shall." Then
Luttrell turned again to the assemblage and
said: "I feel that my lose
on earth will be my gain in heaven. Sheriff, let
me thank and ask you
not to forget the little request i have made."
Carlisle spoke briefly: "I haven't much I care
to say except to thank
the sheriff and the officers for their many
kindnesses.
We have been
treated nicely. I have nothing more to say."
They handed their bouquets to an officer, with
the request that they be
placed in their coffins when they were dead.
They moved firmly and
steadily to the place indicated by the sheriff
and stood perfectly
erect as their ankles were pinioned, shaking
hands with all the
spectators whom they recognized. Then their arms
were pinioned, and as
the black caps were being placed over their
faces Carlisle spoke to
Chief of Police Melton. Both turned to the crowd
and said," Goodby."
The caps were adjusted and promptly at 2:18
Sheriff Hughes
PULLED THE TRIGGER
and the bodies shot down, receiving a fall of
nearly seven feet. Twice
the swing of the ropes jostled them together.
Carlisle's feet moved
convulsively just once. Luttrell never quivered.
It was a complete and
successful execution, and when the bodies were
cut down at 2:30 life had
been extinct several minutes. Their necks were
broken. Carlisle's
neck was out and Luttrell's discolored,
but the prison physician
had told them their deaths were painless. When
the bodies were cut down
they were placed on stretchers near the north
end of the lower hall and
the rear and front doors opened and the populace
allowed to pass by and
view the
STILL AND SILENT FORMS
which lay with the black caps still on their
faces. Several hundred
people thus caught a glimpse of the men whose
crimes and sensational
trial and prison life had set the whole country
talking. After the
crowd had dispensed the bodies were placed in
neat caskets and taken to
the undertaker's to await the arrival of
relatives or friends. On their
breasts were the flowers they had brought to the
scaffold.
John T. Carlisle's parents came to this
state from Virginia when
he was an infant. They located in south Texas,
and his mother died when
he was but 4 years of age, and his father died
eight years ago. When a
youth he served as an apprentice to a
blacksmith. He married in the
latter part of the 60s and in 1880, when Sam
Sparks was killed was at
work in a blacksmith shop at Giddings. It
is an erroneous idea
that he ran away from Giddings on account of the
Sparks killing. He
left on account of domestic trouble. He left in
1881, on March 3. He
went at once to Weatherford, where he met Billie
Sharman, whom by the
way, he had taught a trade, and they went in
together. After awhile he
went to Paris, Tex., and worked there quite a
little while for W. S.
Graves. This was in 1881. At Weatherford and
Paris he was known as
Carlisle. From Paris he went to Lebanon,
Tex., where he went by
the name of Thomas. From there he went to Kansas
City, where he worked
for awhile. There, too,
he gave the name of Thomas. From Kansas City he
went to Walla Walla, Wash. Early in the spring
he went to Kansas City,
from whence he came to Texas and opened a shop
at Sulphur Bluff, near
Sulphur Springs, in Hopkins county. At Sulphur
Bluff he will be
remembered as Jackson, the blacksmith. He became
frightened that his
whereabouts were known and he went to Kansas
City, thence to Olden,
Mo., and near West Plains, Mo, he opened a shop
under the name of J. B.
Smith. In April 1890, he went to Kansas City
again and from thence to
Naposta, Col., where he worked on some
irrigation ditches. There and at
Pueblo, he was known by the name of Thomas. From
Pueblo he came back to
Kansas City. In June, 1890, he
ran a shop at Moundville, Mo. near
Kansas City, under the name of J. B. Smith. In
January, 1891, he went
to Hot Springs, Ark., where he met Jim Brown and
came to Brenham, Tex.,
to arrange bond in the sum of $5000, but then
went back to Hot Springs
to wait until more could be heard from the
case, he in the
meantime having been indicted in Lee county in
1887 for the murder of
Sam Sparks, seven years before. He went back to
Hot Springs and a
little while afterward, while he was awaiting
the arrival of Sheriff
Teague of Washington county to whom he
(Carlisle) had let his abiding
place be known, the officers of Hot Springs
arrested him and he was
taken back to Giddings where he succeeded in
making bond all right and
returned to Lebanon where afterward he was known
as Carlisle and
Thomas. It was from Lebanon the he shipped the
gun and other incidents
mentioned in the history of the crime occurred.
Charles Luttrell was born in East Tennessee and
came to Texas when
quite young. He has lived in north Texas and the
Indian territory since
then. Early in life his associations were of a
corrupting nature and
the evil influences did not fail to
have their effect. It was not long
until the mention of Charles Luttrell's name was
sufficient to call up
and cause comment on escapades, if not criminal,
still very unsavory.
It grew on from bad to worse, and finally
Luttrell was sent to state
prison from Hunt county for murder, but was
subsequently pardoned. He
was still a young man, being only 31 now, but he
did not profit by the
warning given him, and to-day he paid the
greatest penalty for the
darkest crime (assassination) known to law. The
history of his acts
since the commission of the crime are briefly
set forth in the history
of the crime which appears below.
Mrs. Jonnie Mayer had telegraphed Sheriff Hughes
to have the body of
Chas. Luttrell buried in Sherman and if this
order is not
counteredminded he will be taken to the alms
house burial ground in the
morning and buried. Up to this time no word
has been received relative
to the disposition of John Carlisle's body.
THEIR CRIME
The theory of the state in the Luttrell and
Carlisle cases being that
the murder of Sharman was done to prevent his
appearance as a witness
in the case of the state of Texas vs. John
Carlisle, charged with
the murder of Sam Sparks near or in the edge of
the town of Giddings in
1880, and which cause is still pending in the
criminal district court
of Lee county, making the facts surrounding the
killing of Sparks
unusually interesting. Some time before
the killing of
Sparks, Jim Brown, who was killed last December
on the ___ truck at
Chicago while resisting arrest, after having
killed one policeman and
wounded another, had been elected sheriff of Lee
county, and one day he
had been assaulted from ambush and nearly
killed, it was supposed by
men to whose misdeeds he had been a serious
stumbling block. One of the
deputies under Jim Brown was Ed Myers. Among Jim
Brown's strongest
political supporters and personal friends was
John Carlisle, a
blacksmith, and in the shop with him there was
employed a young man by
the name of Billie (W. T.) Sharman.
One morning Sam Sparks upon whom Brown and his
friends had in a measure
sought to throw suspicion of complicity in the
attempted assassination
of Sheriff Brown, was found dead. It was the
mystery of the section.
Men had their suspicion but didn't have to nerve
to carry them out.
James Brown continued as sheriff of the county
until 1884 and he was
succeeded by his deputy, Bill Brown, but still
there were no
developments in the mystery surrounding the
death of poor Sam Sparks.
In 1887 the grand jury of Lee county
returned a true bill
charging John Carlisle and Ed Myers with the
murder of Sparks. Myers
was arrested and placed in jail and in a little
less than a year tried
and convicted upon the evidence of the young
blacksmith, Billie
Sharman, and given twenty years in the state
prison.
John Carlisle had moved out of Lee county in
1886 and was not arrested
until February 1891, in Hot Springs Arkansas. He
was brought back to Texas
by Sheriff Scarborough and remained the Gidding
jail for a few months,
when he was released on bond. He failed to
appear for trial and was
rearrested in Collin county and taken to
Oklahoma again, but
succeeded in giving bond in a few days. He
returned to Labanon,
Collin county, and his trial was set for May 2,
1892. He appeared for
trial and was locked up and has since been in
custody. His trial never
came off in Giddings, because on April 25
W. T.Sharman the main
state's witness was fatally and cruelly
assassinated in Denison.
About the time of the arrest and conviction of
Myers, Sharman became
angry and left. He lived for quite a while and
married in Parker
county, Texas, not far from the town of
Weatherford. Subsequently he
came to Denison and engaged in the
blacksmithing business, and at
the time of his assassination was associated
with a Mr. Taylor of
Denison in that kind of work. Time and again he
had received
threatening notes, warning him that if he
attempted to testify against
Carlisle his days would be numbered. He was
rendered nervous and
suspicious. His windows were securely fastened
down and shades over
them all the time at night. When taken to
Giddings as a witness he
expressed a fear of assassination to the
officers. There was at the
time of his murder an attachment from the
district court in Giddings in
the hands of Sheriff McAfee in this county.
Sharman's home was a modest little cottage
facing west on Austin
avenue, near the intersection of Heron street,
Denison.
At 2 o'clock in
the morning while asleep with his wife and
infant, a charge of buckshot
was fired through a window opened from the top
into the body of the
unsuspecting victim who expired ejaculating one
word, "Mamma!"
Shortly after the shot was fired a heavy
drenching rain set in, and the
arrival of Sheriff McAfee from Sherman found all
the tracks of the
assassin or assassins obliterated, but the
ladder upon which the
assassin stood where he fired the shot still
rested against the house
with its ends muffled with pieces of cloth so it
would make no noise in
being shifted about to the most
advantageous position. The window
was down probably six inches from the top.
The officers knew of the threats against
Sharman's life and knew why
threats were being made but the question came
up, who was it committed
the murder? Next morning after hours of hard and
diligent labor,
suspicion rested upon John Poe, who, it is
alleged, had been seen
prowling about the Sharman residence the
day before the killing
and who had sought out Sharman's shop
among the many in town to
have made a pair of clamps frequently used by
stockmen. He was arrested
and incarcerated in Sherman, but strenuously
denied any connection with
the crime. He has not yet been tried, but still
maintains the same
denial.
Later on the same day a gun stock was found in
one place and the
barrels in another. In the barrels, there was
one loaded and one empty
shell. The shot in the loaded shell corresponded
exactly with the
charge of shot which killed Sharman. All
the time the theory was that
it was for Carlisle's sake that Sharman had been
assassinated, and the
officers took the gun to Lebanon, Collin county,
where Carlisle had
lived, and it was there identified as one which
Carlisle had used there
and had loaned to several parties. It was also
learned there that there
had been expressed from McKinney, the most
convenient express office to
Lebanon, a long box very similar if not exactly
like the box in which
Carlisle had received the gun some months since.
The box had gone to
Denison to "C. Luttrell" and that after it had
been sent to Denison
Carlisle was not seen with his gun in Lebanon
any more. At Denison it
was found where "C. Luttrell" had signed for the
gun and took it out.
About this time an anonymous letter from Fort
Worth summoned the
officers to Leo's restaurant in that city, where
it was learned that
Frank Fogg of that city, Charles Luttrell and
John Carlisle had been
seen together in close conversation when
Carlisle was on his way to
Giddings to stand trial, and that threats had
been made there against
Sharman, it was also learned that Fogg and
Luttrell had been seen in
Fort Worth the day after the killing. It then
developed that Fogg and
Luttrell been seen to leave Denison together on
the morning of the
killing, and that they went south on a Fort
Worth train.
Bills of indictment were immediately returned
against Frank Fogg, John
Carlisle, Charles Luttrell and John Poe for
principals and accomplices
to the murder of W. T. Sharman. Fogg was
arrested and brought to
Sherman. John Poe was already in jail and John
Carlisle was in custody
in the Lee county jail. He was subsequently
brought to Sherman, but it
was quite a while and much time and money was
expended before the
arrest of Charles Luttrell was effected near
Gonzalos. He had been in
the employ of Jim Brown, the ex-sheriff of Lee
county, who was the
intimate friend of John Carlisle and Frank Fogg
and the man who
believed that Sam Sparks, the man who was killed
in Giddings in 1880,
was the man who assisted in the ambush which he,
Brown, nearly lost his
life. The cases against Frank Fogg and John Poe
went over and the
Luttrell case came on
for trial.
The fact that he took Carlisle's gun from the
express office and that
it was the gun which undoubtedly did the fatal
work, coupled with his
early departure the next morning in a mud
bespattered and bedraggled
condition proved conclusively to the minds of
the jury that the meeting
at Leo's restaurant in Fort Worth was for the
purpose of forming a
conspiracy to take the life of Sharman and that
Luttrell's presence in
Denison on the night of the murder was in
accordance with a prearranged
programme. There were many other connecting
events and testimony of
witnesses from Lake Charles, Louisiana, who
stated that Luttrell had
confessed the whole crime to them while he was
in Lake Charles and
prior to his departure to New Orleans from
whence he went to Gonzalos,
where he was arrested. In fact the able and
retiring efforts of the
state's attorney, Cecil Smith, followed, and
laid bare too plain to
admit of the unreasonable doubt, and the jury
returned a verdict of
guilty and assessed the punishment of death.
The case of John Carlisle came on for trail next
after every effort had
failed on the part of his attorney to put it
off. The testimony hearing
on the murder of Sam Sparks in the town of
Giddings was more full and
complete in this case and his chances for
benefiting by the removal of
W.T. Sharman very forcibly brought out by the
state, as were his
visits to the shop of Sharman in Denison
some time prior to the
murder and his endeavors there to induce Sharman
to talk differently to
what he had testified at the trial in
Giddings. In this case more
pains were taken to bring out certain threats
and expressions used
while he was in Lebanon, where he first went to
reside as John Thomas.
In his case the expressing of the gun from
McKinney to Denison played
the most important part in the prosecution. The
jury in this case
brought in a verdict of guilty and assessed the
punishment of death.
Both prisoners made motions for new trials, but
were refused.
Luttrell's case was affirmed, as was Carlisle's,
but the latter got the
matter taken up again but it was ultimately
affirmed. Luttrell at the
end testifying in his own behalf and he knew
nothing of the murder when
he left Denison the morning it occurred. He did
not deny taking the gun
out of the express office but said it was at the
request of Frank Fogg,
who wished him to take it out and sell or pawn
it. That he had pawned
it, but took it out and gave it to Fogg before
the killing, and that
the first intimation he had of what had been
done with the gun was when
Fogg told him on the train he had played h--l
with "that gun."
Later on when brought into open court to receive
sentence, he stated
that he and others met by agreement at Denison,
not, as he understood
it when he entered into the agreement to do
Sharman any harm, but to
induce him to leave the country. Failing on
this, he admits he
then entered into an agreement to kidnap Sharman
into the Indian
territory and scare him into leaving. He claims
that he twice saved
Sharman's wife and child from being murdered.
Once when a member of the
party had a gun drawn and was about to fire out
of the dark on the
defenseless man, who had his child in his arms
returning from
a
neighbor's house; another instance he claims was
when he refused to
allow some dynamites bombs placed under the
house where Sharman and his
innocent family were asleep. He claimed in his
last statement that he
was not present when the last shot which killed
Sharman was fired, but
was waiting in the alley for others of the party
to decoy. Sharman out
on
the pretext they were police with some sort of
___ for him. He
claimed he was prepared for a case of kidnapping
and not murder.
The
Austin Weekly Statesman
Austin, Texas
Thursday, May 18, 1893
pg. 2
CARLISLE AND LUTTRELL HANGED IN
SHERMAN JAIL YESTERDAY AFTERNOON
With Their Death the Murderous Jim
Brown Gang of Assassins Loses
Its Prestige and Those Who Remain Are Skulking
in Terror
Special to the Statesman
Sherman, May 12 - At 1:32 o'clock the death
warrants were read to
Carlisle and Luttrell. While the warrants were
being read, both men
were smoking. At 2:08 the men were brought to
the scaffold. Both of
them had a bunch of flowers in their hands.
Carlisle had a white rose
pinned to his coat. Luttrell wore a red rose and
had a cigarette in his
mouth. When asked if he had anything to say
Luttrell said: I have been
well treated by the officers and have no
ill feeling toward any
one. I have received forgiveness for my sins,
and hope to meet you all
in heaven. Carlisle said: "I have only to say
that I have been well
treated."
At 2:10 the doomed men's hands and feet were
bound. Both were cool and
collected and shook hands with the officers.
While being bound the two
men talked to each other in a low tone. At 2:15
the black caps were put
on. At 2:16 the nooses were placed on their
necks and one minute later
the trap was sprung. Their necks were broken.
The bodies swayed for a
few moments and became still. There was no
convulsion or muscular
movements of the limbs. At 2:24 o'clock
life was pronounced
extinct in both men. In a few minutes after they
were cut down and
turned over to an undertaker. If nothing is
heard from relatives of the
dead men the bodies will be buried at the county
farm. A reporter saw
the bodies in their coffins this evening at 5
o'clock. The faces of
both men were composed and not distorted.
Luttrell had a dark blue ring
round his neck, showing marks of the rope.
Carlisle's neck was terrible
to look at. The rope had cut deep into the
flesh, the cut extending
from under one ear to the other. Both men met
death with a smile on
their faces and were cool and calm to the last.
The crime for which John T. Carlyle and Charles
Luttrell were executed today was as foul as any
recorded in history.
It was the murder of W. T. Sharman in
Denison, Tex., on the night
of April 28, 1892. Sharman was lying asleep in
his bed and beside him
lay his wife and only child. The murderers
placed a ladder against the
house, climbed to the top of the window, pushed
the barrels of a
shotgun over the top of the sash and fired,
filling Sharman's
breast with buckshot, and killing him instantly.
Luttrell's part in the crime was played for
money, and Carlisle's to
prevent an honest man from testifying against
him for a old murder
case. The story of the conspiracy which closed
today with the death of
the two men, reads like a romance and dates its
beginning many years
ago.
In the early part of the 70s, the population of
Giddings, a small town
in Lee county, Texas, was increasing by the
advent of
a sport and race
horse man named Jim Brown, the same man grown
wealthier and more
influential, who was shot and killed by a
Chicago policeman while
resisting arrest, at Garfield park a few months
ago.
When Brown came to Giddings he brought two race
horses; he at once
began to work up races over Lee and adjoining
counties and was always
successful; his enemies said that if he could
not win one way he would
another. At a race near Giddings in 1876, dated
the trouble which
brought Carlisle and Luttrell to the scaffold,
Jim Brown to his death
in Chicago, which sent the soul of Tom Sharman
into eternity and took
the lives of many others. Brown, as usual, had a
horse entered
in the
race; Sam Sparks, a jovial farmer, also had a
horse entered. Before
the race Brown and Sparks quarreled over a
trivial matter; Brown
jumped for a shotgun lying near. Sparks grabbed
the gun at the same
time and took it away from Brown and would
have shot him had not
friends interfered. Brown then wanted to make up
the quarrel, but
Sparks refused, in the following words:
"I know your game, Jim Brown. You make up your
quarrels, disarm
suspicion and your victim is soon made way by
some
of your desperate
gang. I've got you for an enemy and I want the
people to know it." From
that time forward Sparks always went
armed. Brown was elected
sheriff of Lee county about this time, which
fact did not lessen
Spark's fears. It is said that Ed Myers, a
desperate man, and who was
under obligations to Brown, was chosen to put
Sparks out of the way. An
opportunity did not come for two years, but it
came at last. Sparks had
an intimate friend in Giddings, a blacksmith by
trade, and whose name
John T. Carlisle. Sparks visited his shop
frequently. One day he took
work to the shop and came for it about 3 o'clock
in the afternoon. The
work was ready and when Sparks was about to
start home Carlisle
said to him: "Sam, you and I haven't had any fun
for a long time;
suppose we go to town and have some fun." Sparks
demurred, but finally
consented. They went to a saloon and played pool
and drank, and soon
night came on. Sparks realized that he had been
trapped and said
to Carlisle: "John, you have done me
wrong; I ought to have gone
home. Brown's men have been waiting for a chance
to kill me and now
they have it. I am afraid to go to my horse, for
they are sure to kill
me." Carlisle told him he was talking nonsense
and offered to see him
safely to his horse. Ed. Myers same out of the
saloon about this time,
and Carlisle said Myers would go with him.
This much the attaches of the saloon testified
to. In the rear of the
saloon stood a small cottage occupied by William
T. Sharman who had
lived with Carlisle for many years, and who at
the times was working
in Carlisle's shop.
On this particular night Sharman was sick and
had gone out on the porch
about 9 o'clock to get some fresh air, sitting
on the porch he hears
voices in the rear of the saloon and saw three
men walking away; he
recognized them as John Carlisle, Sam
Sparks and Ed Myers, the
men were on their way with Sparks to his horse.
Sharman heard Myers
say: "Well, boys, I'll go back." Myers then
started back, but Carlisle
went on with Sparks to his horse. Sharman saw
Myers shoot Sparks with a
pistol. Carlisle and Myers ran away together.
Sharman on his way to work next morning met
Carlisle and told him
he knew who did the killing. Carlisle was
dumb with astonishment
and said to Sharman: "I'll tell Jim Brown of
this." Ike Sparks, a
brother of the murdered man, began to hunt for
the murderers. He
followed Myers and caught him, when Myers told
him Sharman knew all
about the killing. This was the first intimation
the officers had
of Sharman's knowledge of the
killing. Before Myers' trial
Brown and his gang threatened Sharman's life and
told him to leave the
country, but two good citizens and brothers
named Scarborough guarded
Sharman and protected him. Sharman on the day of
trial gave in his
evidence and Myers was sentenced 1 to 20 years
in prison. Carlisle then
disappeared. Jim Scarborough, one of the men who
guarded Sharman, was
elected Sheriff and began the search for
Carlisle. He located and
arrested his man in Fort Worth. Carlisle gave
bond, Brown and his
friends coming to his assistance.
Carlisle was living in Collin county. He went to
see Brown, a plot was
laid, and Luttrell was selected to kill Sharman.
Luttrell had been
working for Brown. Carlisle went to Denison
where Sharman in the
meantime had moved, and tried to persuade
Sharman to leave the
country. Sharman refused and thus his death
warrant was signed. Shortly
before Carlisle shipped a shotgun to Denison.
Luttrell received and
signed for it. A few nights after this Sharman
was murdered in his bed.
His wife and child were beside him, but
neither were hurt.
A ladder standing against the house told the
story. The next day the
gun was found near the house. Sheriff McAfee of
Grayson county and
Scarborough began their search; a hint took them
to Fort Worth. The
conspirators had met there and had been
overheard. Luttrell, Carlisle
and two others were spotted and the chase began.
Luttrell had been
hired to do the work and an attempt was made on
his life, but he
escaped to fall into the hands of Lee county
officers.
Carlisle showed up for trial at Giddings for the
murder of Sparks, and
the case was dismissed. Sheriff Scarborough
immediately rearrested
Carlisle for the Sharman murder. The trial came
on in the fall of last
year, and it was proved that the gun shipped to
Denison was Luttrell's
gun and was shipped by Carlisle. It was proven
that Carlisle while
drunk had laid bare the whole scheme. Luttrell,
with two other men, was
in Denison at the time of the murder, and the
evidence showed that
Luttrell fired the shot.
Brown had been killed before the trial came on.
Carlisle and Luttrell
were without money or friends and they
were both sentenced to
death; all efforts for a new trial or a reversal
failed. When brought
out to be sentenced Luttrell made a long talk
that was sensational in
the extreme. He said in substance that "Frank
Fogg of Fort Worth fired
the shot that killed Sharman; he said that
many men, prominent in
business, social and political circles, were
implicated in the affair,
but that he would never give them away, and that
these men lived in
Fort Worth and Dallas." He cursed ex-Sheriff
McAfee and ex-County
Attorney Cecil Smith, and said he hoped their
families would die in
disgrace. In conclusion he said Jim Brown and a
prominent attorney at
Giddings killed Sparks.
Carlisle in his talk said he was "innocent, and
did not know what the
gun was was to be used for when he shipped it."
Before they were
sentenced Carlisle aided ten prisoners to escape
from the jail.
Carlisle's great size prevented him from
escaping. Since their sentence
they have given the officers in the jail much
trouble.
A few days ago they attempted to commit suicide
with knives made from
cup handles. But the attempt was unsuccessful.
A few days before his
execution, Luttrell professed to know something
about the triple murder
that was committed in Denison some time ago,
but no one placed
any credence in his story. A day or two since
both men began to read
the Bible, and have ministers to visit them. For
the past three weeks
rumors have been thick that the men who brought
the assassins to the
gallows would be murdered, but nothing of the
kind has materialized. The
threats, if they were made, apply to ex-sheriff
McAfee and Hon. Cecil
Smith, who were the means of bringing the two
murderers to justice.
Ft.
Worth Gazette
September 30, 1893
MURDER CASES
Sherman, Tex., Sept. 29 (Special) - There are
twelve murder cases
on the docket of the district court of this
county for the present terms.
In the murder cases of Frank Fogg and John
Poe,
special venues of 150 men have been ordered.
The
Fort Worth Daily Gazette
Fort Worth, Texas
Saturday, October 7, 1893
pg. 1
FRANK FOGG'S CASE
Sherman, Tex., Oct. 6 - (Special) - Some
interesting developments in
the Frank Fogg murder case have come to light
here
in the past few
days. Fogg is under indictment for complicity in
the murder of Sharman
at Denison. Carlisle and Luttrell were executed
for the crime. Fogg was
instrumental in receiving their conviction and
it was believed that he
had been promised immunity from punishment.
Today an attorney connected
with the Carlisle and Luttrell cases said to a
Gazette reporter: "There
was no evidence against Frank Fogg except the
statement of Luttrell and
Carlisle, made after they had been convicted.
Fogg agreed to assist the
state and the state agreed not to prosecute him.
Two of the parties to
the crime were convicted, whereas all would have
gone scat free without
Fogg's assistance. Now there is a disposition on
the part of some of
the officers to go back on the agreement and
push the case against
Fogg, but it will amount to nothing, for they
cannot convict him."
Frank Fogg was there a day or two since to look
after the matter. He is
under bond to appear here for trial some time
this month.
The
Sunday Gazetteer
Denison, Texas
Sunday, November 19, 1893
The
case against Poe, charged with complicity in the
murder of Sharman in
this city, was called in the district court last
Thursday, and
continued until the next term, owing to the
absence of state witnesses.
Judge Bliss notified the attorneys
that the case would probably be
forced to trial next term. This is the second
time the state has had a
continuance.
The
Austin Weekly Statesman
Austin, Texas
November 23, 1893 Thursday
pg 6
JIM BROWN'S DAUGHTER
She Returns to Her Husband and They are Living
in Texas.
Dallas, Nov. 10. - Mr. and Mrs. Hugh A. Testard,
whose sensational
domestic troubles have been noticed extensively
in the newspapers of
the country, and in which their little daughter
figured prominently,
appear to have become thoroughly reconciled, and
are living together
in Dallas and may make this their
permanent home. They are both
in Sherman, Tex., today as witnesses in a murder
trial, the case of The
State vs. John Poe, charged with being
accomplice in the murder of
Sharman, the crime for which Carlisle and
Luttrell hanged a short time
ago. Sheriff Teague of Washington county,
an attached witness in
the case, passed through Dallas today
enroute to Sherman. Mr.
Testard has withdrawn all the reflections made
upon his wife and now
declares them without foundation.
The Houston Post
Houston, Texas
Wednesday, February 14, 1894
pg. 2
THE POE TRIAL
Sherman, Texas., February 13 - The case of John
Poe, charged with the murder of Sharman at
Denison, is still on trial.
Late this evening, Frank Fogg of Fort Worth
testified that he never saw
Poe before he met him in the Grayson county jail
and that a man name
Poe once worked for him, but that it was not the
defendant. Fogg also
testified that he made an agreement with County
Attorney Smith to the
effect that he (Fogg) was not to be prosecuted
if he would furnish the
evidence to convict Carlisle and Luttrell.
The Sunday Gazetteer
Denison, Texas
Sunday, February 18, 1894
Frank Fogg Again in Jail
As will be remembered by Gazetteer
readers, Poe, Luttrell, Carlisle and Fogg were
arrested charged jointly
with
the assassination of
William Sharman in this city two years ago.
Last year Carlisle and Luttrell were found
guilty
in the district court
at Sherman and were hung in the corridor of the
county jail. The trial
of Poe was continued and, by agreement with the
state authorities, the
charge against Fogg was dropped on agreement
that he was to furnish
evidence that would convict the other men. The
agreement was complied
with so far as Luttrell and Carlisle were
concerned and
Fogg claims
that that was the end of the bargain. This week
the case against Poe
was called at Sherman and Wednesday on the
witness stand he narrated
his agreement with the former state's attorney.
Fogg also stated on the
witness stand that he had never seen Poe to know
him prior to the
meeting in the jail after the arrests. This
statement, coupled with the
fact that Fogg had failed to assist in the
prosecution of Poe, led to
his rearrest Thursday. He is again in jail and
in the present aspect he
is in a very tight box. The arrest was on an
affidavit filed by Sheriff
James Scarborough, of Lee county alleging that
new evidence had been
found in that county and that the present bond
was not sufficient.
The Sunday
Gazetteer
Denison, Texas
Sunday, February 25, 1894
THE POE TRIAL
In
another column we publish extracts from Judge
Bliss' charge to the jury
in the Poe murder case. The document is a very
long one, but we give
those particulars probably most interesting to
our readers, including
those most severely criticized
on the streets by those who are evidently
not familiar with the law. We have carefully
read the entire charge and
examined those sections of the criminal
statutes applicable to the
case, and it is clear to our mind that
the judge charged the law
strictly in accordance with the law applicable
to the case. If there is
any grounds of complaint it is applicable to
the wording of the
indictment. Poe was indicted as a principal in
the murder of Sharman,
which it seems the evidence did not sustain in
the opinion of the jury.
The statutes distinctly say that an accomplice
must be indicted as
such. According to the Eighth Texas Court of
Appeals, page 148, "If the
defendant be indicted as a principal, he
cannot be convicted on
evidence which implicates him as an
accomplice." Judge Bliss in his
charge defines very fully, in strict
accordance with the statutes, what
constitutes a principal and also an
accomplice. In the opinion of the
jury it appears that they did not consider the
evidence sufficient to
convict Poe as a principal, hence they had
nothing to do but acquit.
The penalty against an accomplice is the
same as against the
principal, and had Poe been charged as an
accomplice the result might
have been different. But the judge does not
write the
indictments, neither does he make the laws. It
is simply his duty to
instruct the jury as to the law
as it stands on the books, and they
must be governed accordingly. No one, probably
in Denison, doubts the
guilt of Poe, but unfortunately he was not
proven guilty as charged in
the indictment.