Republic of Texas v. Smith

1 Dallam 407
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1841
DocketNo. XVI
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 1 Dallam 407 (Republic of Texas v. Smith) 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
Republic of Texas v. Smith, 1 Dallam 407 (Tex. 1841).

Opinion

HANSFORD, Justice.

From the record in this case it appears that Smith, the appellant, was indicted at the spring term of the District Court for Travis County for “holding a faro bank, for the purpose of playing at faro and inviting and receiving bettors,” and at the fall term was tried, and the jury returned a special verdict of “guilty of dealing faro in the city of Austin, previous to 1840, and after the first of May, 1839.” Upon the return of this verdict the appellant, by counsel, moved in arrest of judgment, upon the ground that Austin, where the offense was alleged to have been committed at the time charged in the bill of indictment, was within the territorial limits of Bastrop County. The motion was overruled by the court; and the appellant was ordered by the court to pay a fine in accordance with the statute passed May 26, 1837, entitled “An act to suppress gambling,” of $500, together with costs of prosecution, and to remain in custody of the sheriff until the sentence of the court was complied with. From this judgment of the district court the appellant prayed an appeal to this court, and charges error in the court below in overruling the motion in arrest of judgment.

Before we proceed to the discussion of the question as to whether it was error or not in the court below in overruling the motion in arrest of judgment, we will meet and dispose of a preliminary question of paramount consideration, and that is, has the defendant in a criminal prose[408]*408cution, upon an indictment in the district court, the right of an appeal to the Supreme Court? We think that he has. We believe that such a right is in accordance with the genius and spirit of our institutions and secured to him by the Constitution and laws of this country. And it must, we think, be conceded by everyone that it is a question, whether considered with reference to the infancy of our jurisprudence yet to be perfected by subsequent adjudication and the wisdom of the Legislature, or the almost untried harmony of our institutions, political as well as judicial, which have as yet been but slightly explored and partially developed, or the sacred character of the rights to the citizens, as one involving the most grand and solemn considerations.

The word “appeal” comes from the civil law; and the nature and operation of an appeal, in a technical sense, can not be a subject of doubt in proceedings governed by that law. Indeed, it is sometimes used to denote the nature of appellate jurisdiction, without any regard to the particular mode by which a cause is transmitted from an inferior to a superior jurisdiction. In this sense it is used by Blackstone when he speaks of the Court of Exchequer as a court that hath no original jurisdiction. So also the same elegant writer denominates the House of Peers of England as the Supreme Court of the Empire. See 3 Black. Com., 56.

There are some other senses in which the word occurs in the common law, which we may pass over in silence, as they have no application to the present inquiry.

Appeal (“appellatio” in the civil law) is defined—“ab mferioris judi-éis sententia ad superiorem provicare”—the removal of a cause from the sentence of an inferior to a superior judge; or as Blackstone has expressed it, “a complaint to a superior court of injustice done by an inferior one.” Calveus has collected the definitions given by many learned civilians, but they all resolve themselves in the above. See 3 Black. Com., 312; Calveus’ Lexicon, “Appellatio;” Shepherd’s Abridgement, “Appeal.” Each of these definitions accurately states the meaning but not the mode or effect of an appeal.

The remedy by appeal—as known and practiced in England—is in a great -measure confined (for I speak not of appeals of death and of robbery, and of summary proceedings before magistrates) to courts of equity, admiralty, and ecclesiastical jurisdiction, in all of which no jury intervenes; and in each of those courts the judge is in general the sole arbiter both of the law and the facts, and the mode of proceeding is borrowed almost exclusively from the civil law.

[409]*409And it is undoubtedly true that in courts proceeding according to the course of the civil law, an appeal from an inferior to a superior tribunal removes the whole proceedings, and usually, though not invariably, opens both the law and the facts for re-examination. 3 Dallas, 321; 5 Cranch, 281.

By the eighth section, fourth article of our Constitution, we find the Supreme Court of Texas clothed with appellate jurisdiction only, which shall be coextensive within the limits of the Republic; but neither in that section or elsewhere in the Constitution do we find its appellate jurisdiction restricted to any particular class or character of actions. We search in vain in that instrument for any such restriction. It can not be found. But on the contrary, in the Declaration of Eights, it is emphatically declared that all courts shall be open, and “every man for any injury done him in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.” Dec. of Eights, sec. 11.

We think it clear then that the right of appeal from the district court to the Supreme Court in criminal prosecutions, as well as in civil actions, is secured to the defendant in such prosecution by the Constitution. But if we were of opinion that any doubt could be entertained of the clear and indefeasible right to an appeal in criminal cases, by the Constitution (and indeed we have none, but rest it upon that instrument alone), that doubt would in a great measure be removed by the act entitled “An act to establish and organize the Supreme Court, and to define the powers and jurisdiction thereof.” In the third section of that act there is a legislative declaration of the right of appeal in criminal as well as civil cases: “And the said Supreme Court shall have jurisdiction over and hear and determine all pleas, plaints, motions and controversies, civil and criminal, which may be brought before it.” And in the sixth section the same right of appeal is clearly and indisputably recognized in language which none can mistake, in the following words: “The sentence of the Supreme Court, in all criminal prosecutions brought before such court from any other courts, shall be executed in like manner in all respects as if such sentence had been rendered in the court wherein the prosecution originated; and the sheriff of the proper county shall be charged with the execution of such sentence.” Hence we see that immediately after the organization of our government, a legislative declaration of the constitutional right of appeal in criminal cases was made. But it was contended by the district attorney for the Third Judicial District and by the Attorney-General, that if indeed the Supreme Court had jurisdiction of criminal cases and could hear and determine all manner of pleas, plaints, motions and controversies, civil [410]*410and criminal, yet it could exercise that jurisdiction only by writ of error, and not by appeal; that the common law having been adopted by the Constitution in criminal proceedings became a part of that instrument, and by that law a cause was removed from an inferior to a superior tribunal by writ of error only and not by appeal; that by a writ of error, the errors of law alone could be examined in the Supreme Court, and that the usual effect of an appeal from an inferior tribunal being one that opened the facts as well as the law for re-examination, could not be admitted as a right to the defendant in the district court in a criminal prosecution, because no such right was ever known to the common law of England.

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1 Dallam 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-of-texas-v-smith-tex-1841.