McDaniel v. State

9 S.W.2d 478, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 837
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1928
DocketNo. 3576. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 9 S.W.2d 478 (McDaniel 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
McDaniel v. State, 9 S.W.2d 478, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 837 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

This appeal is from a judgment removing'the appellant from the office of sheriff on charges of official misconduct. Appellant was elected sheriff of Delta county for a second time at the general election in 1926. In August, 1927, Ben. D. Clower, county attorney of Delta county, filed a petition in the name of the state of Texas, charging the appellant with having unlawfully collected from the state fees in felony cases which he was not entitled to charge and collect. The amended petition, on which the case was tried, alleges, in substance, that, in making *479 out his accounts against the state for fees in felony cases, the appellant charged and collected mileage on warrants and other writs when no mileage was due, and collected excessive mileage where mileage was due; that he charged for summoning witnesses when such witnesses had not been summoned, and for approving bonds when no bonds had been made. A large number of cases in which it is alleged unlawful fees and mileage were collected are set out in detail.

Delta county is situated in two judicial districts, the Eighth and the Sixty-Second. The fees were charged for serving criminal processes issued in cases pending in the Eighth judicial district. The acounts were presented to and approved by the judge of that district. This suit was filed in the Sixty-Second judicial district.

In his answer, appellant excepted generally and specially to the amended original petition. After a general denial, he specially pleaded the action of the judge of the Eighth judicial district in approving his accounts as res adjudicata of the issues presented in this proceeding, and a bar to the prosecution of this suit. It appears from the record that by agreement the case was transferred to Hunt county, which is also situated in the Sixty-Second judicial district. A trial in that county resulted in a verdict against the appellant, upon which a judgment was entered removing him from office.

The evidence shows that two accounts against the state were presented by the appellant during the year 1027 — one for fees due at the end of the January term of the district court, and the other for fees due at the end of the June term. The account for the January term contains eleven reported cases in which it is alleged that illegal fees were claimed and collected. The June account contains eighteen such cases. The evidence offered by the state was ample to support most, if not all, of its charges. Among the witnesses called by the prosecution was the appellant himself. When interrogated about particular cases, he frankly admitted facts which showed that some of the fees charged were unauthorized by law. His testimony will be again referred to in discussing another question. Appellant justified tlie presence of the erroneous fees in his accounts by saying that the district clerk, Adams made out his accounts, and he was not familiar with many of the items inserted therein by Adams. He also testified that in several instances fees to which he was not entitled and mileage which he had no legal right to collect were included in his accounts upon the advice of the district judge, county attorney, and the county judge. He claimed that in making these charges he acted in good faith and also in accordance with a custom adopted by sheriffs in other counties.

Omitting its formal parts, the charge of the court upon the issues to be considered in this opinion is as follows:

“You are further instructed that, when a sheriff holds a warrant for the arrest of an accused, issued upon an indictment found against the party accused, and when the sheriff has arrested the person under such warrant, that he is not entitled to include in his account for services rendered in said case fees for arrest, or for bond taken or mileage incurred under warrant or other process issued out of a justice court for or against the accused prior to the indictment of the party.
“You are also instructed that,, when one is arrested upon a warrant issued upon a grand jury indictment and no bond is taken from the accused but the prisoner is committed to jail, the sheriff is not entitled to include in his account or to collect for taking bond or commitment.
“By the term ‘willful’ or ‘willfully,’ as used in this charge, means that the defendant, Ira McDaniel, placed items and claims in his account for services which he knew he was not entitled to under the law to be paid for, and that he did so for the purpose of collecting unlawful fees from the state.
“(3) If the defendant placed in his accounts, or in either of them, claim for fees which he in good faith believed he was entitled to, he would not be guilty of.willfully collecting unlawful fees, even though such fees or fee was not under the law due him, and even though he was not entitled to collect such fee or fees.
“If Carl Adams, district clerk of Delta county, made out the defendant’s account for fees claimed to be due him, and if said clerk placed any one or more items in said account for which the defendant was not entitled to be paid as fees; if the defendant did not know that the clerk placed such item or items in said account, then in such event the defendant would not be guilty of willfully collecting such fee or fees, even though he received payment therefor.
“If the defendant placed or caused to be placed in his account claims for summoning witnesses and mileage incident thereto which he believed had been summoned by his deputy, he would not be guilty of willfully and unlawfully collecting such fees, even though in fact the witnesses were not summoned.
“If in making out his account for payment the defendant placed in his account claims for services performed prior to the date of the indictment, against the same person, and caused payment to be made for such services, then such fees were unlawfully made and collected; but-in such case, if the defendant in good faith believed he was entitled to be paid such fees under the law, then he would not be guilty of willfully collecting unlawful fees in that respect.
“(4) Now, under the foregoing instructions, if you believe from the evidence in this case that in any one or more of the cases described in the plaintiff’s petition that the defendant, Ira McDaniel, placed or caused, to be placed in his account claims for fees for services, which claims under the law he knew he was not entitled to collect, and if you further believe that in such .event the defendant willfully, as that term is defined in this charge, made such claim and collected therefor, then you will find the defendant guilty of willfully collecting unlawful fees, and write your verdict according to the form here *480 inafter given you; but, unless you so find, you ■will find the defendant not guilty, and write the form of verdict hereinafter given you.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W.2d 478, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-state-texapp-1928.