Giroux v. State

40 Tex. 97
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 Tex. 97 (Giroux v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giroux v. State, 40 Tex. 97 (Tex. 1874).

Opinion

Roberts, Chief Justice.

The defendant was indicted in Houston county for the false imprisonment of William V. Clark, and, the venue being changed, he was convicted, and a fine assessed against him of two hundred dollars. A motion for new trial being overruled, and judgment being rendered upon the verdict, he gave notice of appeal, and was admitted to bail in the sum of one hundred dollars.

The defendant was a policeman, acting under the orders of Governor E. J. Davis, of August, 1871, at and during an election held in the town of Crockett, in Houston county, in the month of October, 1871. It was held under the supervision of Giroux and other policemen, armed for the purpose, in a house wherein the voters were directed to go in one way, vote, and go out another.

Clark being in town to vote, and having, as he said, forgotten his certificate of registration, returned next day with it, hitched his mule forty or fifty yards from the house in which the election was held, and going in, he passed Turner Skidmore, a policeman, sitting in the window near where they were [100]*100voting, and holding out his hand with his registration paper and ticket, said to him, ‘I have got her all right this time;” and Skidmore replied, that it ivas not striped enough; and Clark said, “d — n his stripes, he did not care any thing about them.” Clark then voted, and Giroux said to him, “leave here;” and Clark answered, “by G — d he would leave when he got ready,” or, “when he folded up his registration paper.” Having folded it up and put it in his pocket, he went out the way he was directed, got on his mule and started home. As Clark was about to get on his mule, he said, “G — d d — n Goobertooth, I will see him after the election is over.” Upon being asked by a person between him and the house what he said, he repeated it.

It was admitted that an absent witness, Israel, would swear, if present, that Clark said, while still at the polls, “G — dd—n Giroux, I will fix him after the election,” and that Israel told Giroux of it. Clark, upon getting on his mule, went off towards home, and after getting three or four hundred yards, got off of his mule, not hitching it, stepped into the door of a blacksmith shop, and after one or two minutes conversation with a citizen of the town, Giroux and Skidmore rode up, armed with Spencer rifles; Giroux got down, put iron handcuffs on Clark, turned him over to Skidmore, who took him back to the court house, delivered him over to the sheriff, who took off the handcuffs, and Clark gave bond before a justice of the peace for his appearance the next day, and then went home. The evidence shows that Clark wept with mortification and alarm upon being handcuffed. It further shows, that while Clark was in town there was no disturbance further than as here detailed.

By the law then existing, Clark, though a citizen of the county, could not vote unless he had with him his certificate of registration, and exhibited it. Hence his remark to Skidmore upon returning with it, “I have got [101]*101her all right this time.” The order of the Governor, which was in evidence on the trial, directed that “all persons, coming to vote shall deposit their ballots with the least possible delay; and after being done, they are forbidden, under any pretext, to remain about the polls, or at the county seat (unless it is their residence), during the time of election, but shall return to their homes and usual employments ; and peace officers, State guards and militia on duty at the polls, shall see that this regulation is complied with.” This may explain why Clark was in such haste to get on his mule and start home. What did make him utter the threat against Giroux, who was then and there in command of the armed police force, which was spoken apparently in a sort of soliloquy, upon mounting his mule to start off home % It may have been the peremptory and laconic order of Giroux, when his vote was cast,. “Leave here,” which may not have been familiar to him. Or it may have been uttered to himself as a sort of relief to his humiliated manhood, in having to pass through the gauntlet of armed men to cast his vote, while he, in common with his fellow-citizens, had been disarmed. It was not shown that Clark was a quarrelsome, a dangerous, or a desperate man. Nor was it shown that there had been any antecedent occurrences as between Clark and Giroux, that would lead to any inference, or give direction to the meaning of Clark’s expression that he would “see Goobertooth,” or “fix Giroux,” after the election. What happened at the time was not sufficient to point with any certainty as to the probable meaning of the threat. It might have been an idle expression of resentment from wounded feelings, or it might have been the almost involuntary outburst of a malignant determination to inflict serious injury, by way of revenge, upon Giroux, if there had been any circumstances to have aided in giving the words that interpretation. It was a threat, under the circumstances, that indicated a design to seek an undefined [102]*102redress of some sort, upon some future occasion, but could not be understood as a serious threat to take life, or do some serious bodily harm, amounting to a felony. For that would be attaching to it the highest possible criminality, upon presumption, without any antecedent or concurrent facts upon which to base it.

The question in this case then is, did such a threat so made justify Giroux in imprisoning Clark as he did ?

“False imprisonment is the willful detention of another against his consent, and where it is not expressly authorized by law, whether such detention be effected by an assault, by actual violence to the person, bv threats, or by any other means which restrains the party so detained from removing from one place to another, as he may see proper.” (Paschal’s Digest, Article 2169.)

As neither the threat nor the conduct of Clark indicated any intention to commit a breach of the peace, or inflict any injury upon any one, or otherwise violate the law at the time, or during that day on which the election was being held, he could not be lawfully arrested or detained in the manner he was, ‘' for the preservation of order in a meeting for religious, political, or other lawful purposes,” “for the preservation of the peace, or to prevent the commission of offenses,” or upon any other grounds set forth in the code as an excuse or justification in making an assault upon or detention of a person. (Paschal’s Digest, Articles 2173, 2145.)

By the law establishing a “State police,” then en- . forced, policemen were invested with the authority of peace officers, and were bound to obey the orders of the Governor “in relation to the preservation of the public peace, or the execution of the laws throughout the State.” (Paschal’s Digest, Articles 7209, 6804. For same, see “Called Session,” 1870, p. 20, Section 8, and p. 138, Section 52.)

By reference to the Code of Criminal Procedure, Title [103]*103II., Chapters 1, 2, “Of preventing offenses by the act of magistrates and other officers,” it is made “the duty of every peace officer, when he may have been informed in any manner whatever that a threat has been made by one person to do some injury to the person or property of another, to prevent the threatened injury, if within his power; and in order to do this he may call in aid any number of citizens in his county. He may take such measures as the person about to be injured might, for the prevention of the offense.” (Paschal’s Digest, Articles 2544, 2540.)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Tex. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giroux-v-state-tex-1874.