McElroy v. State

172 S.W. 1144, 76 Tex. Crim. 78, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 311
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1915
DocketNo. 3400.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 1144 (McElroy v. State) 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
McElroy v. State, 172 S.W. 1144, 76 Tex. Crim. 78, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 311 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was prosecuted and convicted of negligent homicide, and his punishment assessed at ninety days confinement in the county jail.

This cause was tried and judgment entered on the 5th day of April, 1910, and yet the transcript was not filed in this court until January 12, 1915—four years and nine months after the trial of the case, and then filed in obedience to an order of this court made and entered when its attention was first called to the omission to file the transcript on January 6, 1915.

The record contains no bills of exception and no statement of facts, consequently the only ground in the motion for new trial we can review is the one that questions the validity of the information. The information properly charges the offense of which appellant was convicted, and the court did not err in so holding, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.

When our attention was called to the fact that more than four years had elapsed since the trial of the case, and no transcript had been filed in this court, and an affidavit being presented stating that a transcript had been made out in Mav, 1910, and delivered to an attorney of appellant, we caused process to issue requiring Mr. Eanev, the present county clerk, Judge Freeman, the former county clerk, and Mr. Aynesworth, the attorney to whom it was claimed the transcript was delivered in May, 1910, to appear before this court'“and show cause why the transcript had *80 not been filed in this court within ninety days after the trial of said cause, as required by law.

The present county clerk, Mr. Baney, shows that the ease was tried some three years before he became county clerk, and that he did not know that the transcript had not been filed in this court until recently. The only negligence that he has been guilty of under the evidence is that he did not promptly make out a transcript in this case and forward same to this court as soon as he learned that a transcript was not on file in this court. He, in a measure, excuses himself by showing that he could not find the papers in the ease, and that if a statement of facts was filed he has not yet been able to find same.

Judge Freeman, who was the clerk at the time of the trial, and for three years thereafter, says he made out a transcript and delivered it to Mr. Joe H. Aynesworth, one of the attorneys on the trial of the cause, in May, 1910, and that under rule 116 adopted by the Supreme Court (102 Texas, liii) he thought it was his duty to deliver it to the attorney for appellant in a misdemeanor case. Said rule reads: “The transcript of the record, where defendant has been convicted of a misdemeanor, must be delivered to the party appealing or his counsel, or if not applied for before the twentieth day before the commencement of the term of Court of Criminal Appeals to which the appeal is returnable, the clerk shall transmit the same by mail, paying the postage thereon, to the clerk of the Court of Criminal Appeals.” He swears positively he made out the transcript in this case and delivered it to Mr. Aynesworth in May, 1910, and he says he did not know the transcript had not been forwarded to this court by the attorney until in September, 1914, and he then aided Mr. Baney, the present county clerk, to search for the papers, with the intention to aid him in making out a new transcript and forwarding same to this court.

Mr. Joe H. Aynesworth, the attorney to whom Judge Freeman says he delivered the transcript, swears positively the transcript was not delivered to him by Judge Freeman or any other person; that it is true Judge Freeman made out a transcript in May, 1910, but that instead of delivering it to him, Judge Freeman had in fact delivered it to Judge Hathaway, who was appellant’s principal attorney on the1 trial of the ease; that he (Aynesworth) was only employed to assist in the trial of the case and had nothing to do with the case on appeal, and that Judge Hathaway alone represented appellant on appeal. That he knows that Judge Hathaway received the transcript, because in July, 1910, Judge Hathaway, in a conversation had with him, had said: “Mr. Freeman had left with him (Hathaway) the transcript in the McElroy case; that it was not his business to send it up and he was not going to do it,” and at the time asked him (Aynesworth) not to say anything about it, and he had not done so, until this inquiry arose, when he told Judge Freeman these facts.

J. W. Cochran, sheriff of Childress County, testifies that he had a conversation with Judge Hathaway in the summer of 1912, and he then told him he had not sent the papers up; that it was not his place to do *81 so, and when he asked whose duty it was, Judge Hathaway replied that it was the duty of the county clerk to send the transcript to the Court of Criminal Appeals. That he reported this conversation to their county clerk, Judge Freeman, and Judge Freeman claimed it was the duty of the attorneys in the case, and they turned and read rule 116 above quoted.

In this examination is the first time this court was informed that it was contended Judge Hathaway had any connection with the matter, and he was not cited to appear, and is not before the court.

This is a brief summary of the testimony heard, and it is seen there is a direct conflict between the testimony of Judge Freeman and Mr. Aynesworth—Judge Freeman swearing that he delivered the transcript to Mr. Aynesworth, and Mr. Aynesworth is equally positive that he did not do so, but delivered it instead to Judge Hathaway. It is thus made clear by all the testimony that Judge Freeman, while county clerk, did in May, 1910, make out a transcript in this ease and deliver it to Judge Hathaway or Mr. Aynesworth at that time, believing it to be his duty to do so under rule 116 hereinbefore quoted. He contends that he did not know that rule had been held invalid, and did not know so until so informed by this court on the day of this hearing. Our Constitution provides (see. 25 of'art. 5) “The Supreme Court shall have power to make and establish rules of procedure, not inconsistent with the laws of the State, for the government of said court and the courts of this State.” But it has always been the law, that the rules adopted by the Supreme Court, when inconsistent with legislative enactments, must yield to such enactments. (Johnson v. State, 49 Texas Crim. Rep., 429.) And the Legislature has provided in articles 930 and 931: “The clerk shall prepare transcripts in felony cases that have been appealed in preference to cases of misdemeanor, and shall prepare transcripts in all criminal cases appealed in preference to civil cases. As soon as the transcript is prepared, the cleric shall forward the same hy mail or other safe conveyance, charges paid, enclosed in an envelope, securely sealed, directed to the clerk of,the Court of Criminal Appeals.”

Such is the plain provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and it is made the duty of the clerk to send the transcript direct to the clerk of this court as soon as completed, and rule 116 relied on by the clerk is invalid, because inconsistent with the law enacted by the Legislature. In the case of Pilot v. State, 38 Texas Crim.

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Related

Pittman v. State
272 S.W. 148 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 1144, 76 Tex. Crim. 78, 1915 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelroy-v-state-texcrimapp-1915.