Ex Parte Jennings

240 S.W. 942, 91 Tex. Crim. 612, 22 A.L.R. 1351, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 304
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1922
DocketNo. 6987.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 942 (Ex Parte Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Jennings, 240 S.W. 942, 91 Tex. Crim. 612, 22 A.L.R. 1351, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 304 (Tex. 1922).

Opinion

LATTTMORE, Judge.

—This is an application for habeas corpus on behalf of relator Jennings, who was fined $100 and committed to the county jail of Wichita County by order of Hon. E. W. Napier, District Judge of said county, for contempt, in that he had refused to answer certain questions propounded to him by the grand jury of said county.

A serious attack is made upon the manner of selection of the grand jury in question, but in view of our disposition of this case we will not pass on said proposition.

It may be well to keep in mind certain general principles applicable herein. Chapter 2 of Title 7 of our Code of Criminal Procedure defines and outlines the powers, duties and privileges of grand juries in this State, and that body is bound and limited by the proscription of the law which calls it into existence. Art. 432 of said Chapter is as follows:

“It is the duty of the grand jury to inquire into all offenses liable to indictment of which any of the members may have knowledge, or of which they shall be informed by the attorney representing the state, or any other credible persons.”

*614 Art. 440, directing how witnesses before said body shall be questioned, is as follows:

“The grand jury, in propounding questions to witness, shall direct the examination to the person accused or suspected, shall state the offense with which he is charged, the county where the offense is said to have been committed, and, as nearly as may be, the time of the commission of the offense; but should the jury think it necessary, they may ask the witness in general terms whether he has knowledge of the violation of any particular law by any person, and, if so, by what person. ’ ’

If á witness before the grand jury refuses to answer a question, Art. 438 of said Chapter provides the procedure, and is as follows:

“When a witness, brought in any manner before a grand jury, refuses to testify, such facts shall be made known to the attorney representing the state or to the court; and the court may compel the witness to answer the question, if it appear to be a proper one, by imposing a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, and by committing the party to jail until he is willing to testify.”

So it appears that before a witness who refuses to answer any question propounded to him by a grand jury can be punished for contempt, it must affirmatively appear, in the language of the article just quoted, that the question be “a proper one.” It must be kept in mind that a grand jury is but a part of the machinery of government having for its object the detection and punishment of crime, and that when it seeks to extend its inquisition beyond that pale and into matters not in their nature criminal, its effort must be met with a denial of the right or privilege of entry therein. In Ex parte Gould, 60 Texas Grim. Rep., 445, this court, in discussing the articles above referred to, said:

“From these articles of the Code we deduce that some crime, or some person must be suspected of a crime, and that the inquiry must be directed to a discovery either of the crime or the person; and, second, that the grand jury had power to interrogate the witness brought before them with regard to any crime that may have been committed of which the witness has knowledge, as well as the person who is suspected of committing the crime; and, third, the question propounded must be material to the particular matter under investigation, and that no court has power to punish for contempt for disobeying a subpoena unless it is made to appear that the disobedience and refusal to testify is as to some matter material to the prosecution of some crime or person charged with the commission of a crime.”

Elsewhere in said opinion occurs the following:

“Under our system a grand jury has great power. Its proceedings are secret and its object is to ferret out crime, to discover the guilty party and indict all parties for the violation of the criminal laws of Texas. Its work is secret, and it is made a penal offense for the grand *615 .jury to disclose to the world the secrets of its body. Its power, however, is not unlimited and it can not be used as a place, out of idle curiosity, for prying into the domestic and financial affairs of any and everybody, but all of its inquiries must be directed to the discovery of crime, and it has power to pursue an investigation that may lead to the discovery of crime, but this investigation can not transcend beyond inquiry into matters that are material to the matter under investigation; and whenever it does so the courts are also open to redress to relieve a party from any undue oppression or investigation by them that is not relevant or pertinent to any matter about which they are investigating.”

Unless then the matter under investigation be of a violation of some law or pertain thereto, questions asked would be coram non judice and would not be such as are meant by proper questions in Article 438, supra. In Holman v. Mayor of Austin, 34 Texas, 673, we find the Supreme Court using the following language:

“If the question be ‘improper’ if the court interrogate a witness about a matter over which it has no jurisdiction, and about which it has no right to inquire, the refusal of the witness to answer the interrogatory is no contempt of court, and any order or decision which .punishes the refusal to answer as a contempt, is void.
“ ’Justices cannot, of course, give themselves jurisdiction by erroneously and capriciously deciding contrary to the truth upon the question upon which their jurisdiction depends. Justices cannot give themselves jurisdiction by finding that as a fact which is not a fact. ’ (Lawrence, J., in Welch v. Nash, 8 East. 403.)
“The subject matter of this interrogatory lies outside the boundaries which circumscribe the jurisdiction of the mayor, and he cannot bring it within his jurisdiction by calling it a contempt. '
“To require a witness to submit to answer an illegal and improper question must be regarded as the personal command of the judge, rather than the judicial order of the court.”

In the recent cases of Ex parte Copeland, No. 6934, and Ex parte Reynolds, No. 6933, decided at this term, it was made plainly to appear from the record that the grand jury before whom the relators refused to answer questions, was investigating the commission of acts criminal in their nature and to which the questions asked were undoubtedly material.

We are thus brought to the proposition as to whether it appears in the instant case that the matter under investigation by the grand jury and to which the questions asked of relator were supposed to appertain, was the commission of some crime or the violation of some law. If yea, his refusal was wrongful and his committal proper. If nay, the questions were not proper and he should be discharged. But for the importance of the matter involved we would decline to take jurisdiction of a record in the condition as that in this case. The *616

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 942, 91 Tex. Crim. 612, 22 A.L.R. 1351, 1922 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-jennings-texcrimapp-1922.