Hatch v. State

8 Tex. Ct. App. 416
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Tex. Ct. App. 416 (Hatch v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatch v. State, 8 Tex. Ct. App. 416 (Tex. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

White, P. J.

When the case here presented was before us on a former appeal, it was reversed upon three grounds : 1. The refusal of the court to grant the defendant’s application for a continuance. 2. The refusal of the court to give in charge to the jury a special instruction asked by defendant. 3. The overruling of defendant’s motion for a new trial. 6 Texas Ct. App. 384. Each of these errors-was deemed by us of vital importance at the time, and a review of the rulings upon them, as enunciated in the opinion, only tends to confirm and strengthen the conviction then entertained, that the judgment, on account of the [418]*418gravity of these errors, was illegal, and could and should not have been permitted to stand.

We are led to make these remarks prefatory to a discussion of the main error relied on as ground of reversal of the case on this second appeal, and which error is pointed out in defendant’s first bill of exceptions as follows, after stating the case : “Be it remembered, that during the progress of the trial of the above entitled case, after the evidence had been closed, and after the jury had been addressed by the county attorney, E. T. Moore, and had also been addressed by W. M. Walton, 1ST. G. Shelley, and Beverly Matthews, Esqs., for the defence, Thomas E. Sneed, Esq, proceeded to address the jury, and after proceeding at considerable length, used the following language in substance: ‘ The truth is, gentlemen of the jury, that the defendant, Hatch, signed the name of George W. Jenkins to this transfer in pencil, which has been traced in ink by some other person since ’ (meaning the instrument charged in the indictment to be forgery). And then the counsel proceeded, after the ground for above bill was taken and granted: ‘Yes, take your bill, and as often as this case is taken to the Court of Appeals, and there reversed on some foolishness or technicality, I will, as often on a new trial as I can get the case before twelve honest men, convict him (defendant) again and again,’ and then repeated said language quoted above, and added : ‘ Take bill and repeat them ; ’ and being called to order by defendant’s counsel, and exception taken to the language used, and the bill being granted, and being admonished by the court to speak to the jury from and on the evidence alone, counsel proceeded in his address to the jury, and used the following language in substance, if not in exact words : ‘I mean to deal with these fellows (meaning men who had been indicted for complicity in land frauds), and commence with this one (meaning the defendant, Hatch), that when they know themselves to be guilty, and when they, as has this defendant, been once fairly con[419]*419victed by twelve honest men, and by a dodge and technicality had the case reversed, and now represented by able counsel, watching for an error, I will teach them to throw themselves on the mercy of the jury and the court, and not make defences which cost the State thousands. I demand of the jury, in the event you find the defendant guilty, that he be punished by the maximum of years allowed by the law. He is defending and procuring the reversal of this case, that in the progress of time witnesses may be scattered ; and that, too, when he knows he is guilty as hell itself. A taste should be put in his mouth in the shape of ten years’ punishment, and then the next land-thief who is tried will plead guilty, and throw himself on the mercy of the court and jury.’ The defendant objected, setting forth at length his grounds of objection; and the court allowed, signed, and certified his bill of exceptions, with the following statement, viz.: ‘ I deem it proper to state, in connection with this bill, that unusual caution was used by defendant’s counsel, and frequent interruptions were made to the argument of counsel, and that when allusion was made by counsel to the action had in the case resulting in a reversal I reproved the counsel and called him to order, and I further directed counsel to speak to the evidence in the case, and told the jury to disregard any and all statements made by counsel except as the same related to the evidence, or such as were the deductions drawn from the evidence in the case. E. B. Turner, judge presiding.’ ”

Our statutes provide that where a new trial has been awarded by the Court of Appeals, the cause shall stand as it would have stood in case the new trial had been granted in the court below. Pasc. Dig., art. 3216; Rev. Stats., Code Cr. Proc., art. 876. And the effect of a new trial is to place the cause in the same position in which it was before any trial had taken place. 'The former conviction shall he regarded as no presumption of guilty nor shall it he alluded to in the argument.” Pasc. Dig., art. 3139; Rev. Stats., Code Cr. Proc., art. 783.

[420]*420There can be no mistake as to the meaning of the words-used, or the intention of the Legislature in prescribing that upon a second or new trial in a criminal case a former conviction shall be regarded as no presumption of guilt, nor shall it be alluded to in the argument.” Men are oftentimes convicted illegally, and in contravention of some important right conferred by law, and it would be not only unjust but inhuman to claiip that such a conviction should weigh a single particle in the estimation of their guilt upon another trial. The fact that the former conviction has been set aside and a new trial awarded, even if done upon grounds-merely “ technical,” or upon grounds which, in the estimation of some, may appear “foolish,” does notin the slightest alter the rule, nor the reason of the rule. Every defence which the law permits to a party charged with crime, every shield which the State throws around a citizen when she seeks to hold him amenable to her violated law, every right guaranteed to him, are in a certain sense and to a certain extent “ technical,” and may, in the estimation of some, be mere “stumbling-blocks” in the way of justice, and “ foolishness ” in the way of a speedy enforcement of the law ; just as the doctrines of Christianity at first were to the Jews a stumbling-block and to the Greeks foolishness. Yet they are rights, nevertheless, such as a defendant-may always take advantage of so long as the law recognizes his right to do so, and any attempt to abrogate or deprive him of them is itself a violation of law, because they are as much a part and parcel of the law of criminal procedure as is the crime defined and punishment denounced. “ Hence it is,” says Mr. Bishop, “that before any person can be made to suffer for a crime, he must be caught and held in the exact meshes which the law has provided ; or, in other words, he must be proceeded against step by step, according to the rules of procedure which the law has ordained. It is of no avail to proceed against him according to other and better rules; the law’s rules must be pursued, or the [421]*421law’s penalties cannot be imposed upon him for his crime.” 1 Bishop’s Cr. Proc. (2d ed.), sect. 89.

A defendant has the right to avail himself of every “ technical,” as well as substantial, right which the law accords Pirn. And “ with every disposition on the part of judges to enforce the law,” so as to render certain the guilt of those convicted, “ the effort frequently fails because something is done or omitted which contravenes some arbitrary or technical right of the prisoner. Courts have no power in criminal cases to affirm a judgment merely because the judges are persuaded that upon the merits of the case the judgment is right.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Tex. Ct. App. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-state-texapp-1880.