Robertson v. State

142 S.W. 533, 63 Tex. Crim. 216, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 396
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 11, 1911
DocketNo. 870.
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 533 (Robertson 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
Robertson v. State, 142 S.W. 533, 63 Tex. Crim. 216, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 396 (Tex. 1911).

Opinions

*218 HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Galveston County, charged with murder; he was convicted of murder in the second degree and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for five years.

This is the second appeal in this case, the report of the former trial being found in 54 Texas Crim. Rep., 21. Since the former trial of this case one of the witnesses for the State, L. Rodriguez, had died, and another, R. Mori, had returned to Italy, and is domiciled in that country. Appellant complains that the State was permitted to reproduce the testimony of these two witnesses given at the former trial, alleging that under the Constitution he is entitled to be “confronted by the witnesses against him.” He also complains that the State was permitted to introduce his testimony on the first trial of the case, saying, as he did not testify on this trial, it should not have been permitted.

These axe all the grounds relied on for a reversal of the judgment in the motion for a new trial. The third ground—that the testimony of defendant on the first trial could not be introduced in evidence against him on a subsequent trial—has been decided by this court adversely to appellant’s contention. Smith v. State, 75 S. W. Rep., 298; Preston v. State, 41 Texas Crim. Rep., 300; Collins v. State, 39 Texas Crim. Rep., 441, and authorities cited in these cases.

The other two grounds may be considered jointly, as they present the same question—Can the testimony of a witness adduced on one trial be reproduced against a defendant on a second or subsequent trial when the witness has, since the first trial, died or gone beyond the jurisdiction of the court ? The questions here presented have been the cause of much controversy in this court since the decision in the ease of Cline v. The State, 36 Texas Crim. Rep., 320. The Cline case was overruled in the ease of Porch v. The State, 51 Texas Crim. Rep., 7, and recently the Porch case has been overruled, and the rule announced in the Cline case held to be correct in the case of Kemper v. State, 63 Texas Crim. Rep., 1, 138 S. W. Rep., 1025.

The writer did not sit in the Kemper case, having been of counsel in the trial court, and the opinion is by Judge Scott, who served as special judge. We agree with the contention of Judge Scott in that case, that the Constitution is the highest law in the land, and is binding upon all courts and legislative bodies, neither having the right to make any innovation upon that instrument; however, we hold it is the duty of the courts to construe the Constitution, and in doing so, should a different construction be placed thereon than that announced in the Kemper ease, it would not be an innovation on the Constitution, but only a correct enunciation of the language of that instrument and making it speak what it -was intended it should speak. The Constitution of 1876, in the Bill of Rights, provides in section 10 that the accused “shall be confronted by the witnesses against him.”

The Constitution of the Republic of Texas, in 1836, when, after *219 the battle of San Jacinto and defeat of Santa Anna, a republican form of government was here instituted, this exact language was used. Again in 1845, when, after knocking at the door, Texas was admitted into the sisterhood of States, this same language was brought forward in the organic law, and was also reiterated in the Constitutions adopted in 1861, 1866 and 1869. The language has been the same in each of these instruments.

The sixth amendment to the Constitution of the United States provides that the accused shall have the right to be “confronted with the witnesses against him,” and this same language is written into the supreme law of almost every State in the Union, and was embodied in the Constitution of the United States, and the different States of the Union prior to the date of the organization of the Republic of Texas, and at the time of its admission into the Union. Consequently Texas but borrowed or copied this provision from the Constitutions and laws of the different governments of the English speaking people. Owing to the different constructions placed on this provision of the Bill of Bights by this court at different periods of its existence, we have given the question more than usual consideration, and have searched not only the decisions of our own State, but those of the courts of the United States and of the courts of last resort of the different States, and have also burrowed into the rule of construction and the construction given this language by the courts of England, prior to the Declaration of Independence by the colonies. It is recognized by all courts that this provision was a part and parcel of the English law at the timie of the revolt of the colonies and the establishment of this Union, and we, in adopting this clause, but reiterated what was the law in the colonies prior to our Independence. So, when Texas adopted this clause, it was no announcement of a new right to a person accused of crime, but was simply a preservation of a right that was a part of the law of England, of this Union, and of almost every State therein, and in arriving at a proper construction thereof, and to give tire language its proper meaning, we must look to the decisions of England, of the United States and the courts of the different States in the Union, for, of such of them as were in existence at the birth of the Texas Bepublic, they h'ad long had this principle embodied in their system of government, and it is a well-known rale of law that when we adopt a phrase or borrow a provision from the Constitution Or laws of another State or country, we adopt that clause with the construction placed thereon by the courts of that State or country. In speaking of the Constitution of the United States and the amendments thereto, the Supreme Court, in Brown v. Walker, 161 U. S., 591, says: “As the object of the first eight amendments to the Constitution was to incorporate into the fundamental law of the land certain principles of natural justice which had become permanently fixed in the jurisprudence of the mother country, the construction given to those principles by the English courts is cogent evidence of *220 what they were designed to secure ‘and of the limitations that should be put upon them. This is but another application of the familiar rule -that, where one State adopts the laws of another, it is also presumed to adopt the known and settled construction of those laws by the courts of the State from which they are taken.” In 1831, prior to the timie Texas was admitted into the Union, the United States Supreme Court had held: “The statutes passed in England before the emigration of our' ancestors, which were in amendment of the law, and are applicable to our situation, constitute part of our common law.” (Patterson v. Winn, 5 Pet., 233; Taylor v. Thompson, 5 Pet., 358). And in the case of Cathcart v. Robinson, 30 U. S., 264, it is held: “The construction which British statutes had received in England at the time of their adoption in this country, indeed to the time of the separation of this country from the British empire, may very properly be considered as accompanying the statutes themselves, and forming an integral part thereof.” These opinions and enunciations of the law were written by such eminent jurists as Chief Justice Marshall and Mr. Justice Storey. In a later case, 110 U. S., 619, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 533, 63 Tex. Crim. 216, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-state-texcrimapp-1911.