Smalley v. State

127 S.W. 225, 59 Tex. Crim. 95, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 233
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 19, 1910
DocketNo. 406.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 127 S.W. 225 (Smalley 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
Smalley v. State, 127 S.W. 225, 59 Tex. Crim. 95, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 233 (Tex. 1910).

Opinions

McCORD, Judge.

Appellant was indicted and convicted in the court below of the- offense of bribery and his penalty assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for two years.

Appellant seeks a reversal complaining that the court below erred in refusing to grant him a continuance. The application for a continuance omits to state whether it is the first, second or third application for a continuance. The judge’s explanation to the bill of exceptions, taken to the action of the court in overruling the application for continuance, states :• “On the hearing of defendant’s motion for new trial the State filed a contest to defendant’s application for continuance, containing, among other things, affidavits of T. W. Rags-dale and Dave Watson, showing that the witness Elmer Knight testified contrary to the allegations in defendant’s application for continuance, while the witness Elmer Knight was before the grand jury during the investigation of this case, and I here refer the court to all of such contest in the transcript in passing on this bill of exception. This case had been continued before for these two witnesses and no diligence was shown whatever by the defendant to secure the witnesses or their testimony.” The case was tried at the August term, 1909, *97 of the District Court of Fannin County. The application for continuance shows that the last subpoena issued for the witness Knight was issued on the 16th day of February, 1909, which subpoena showed that it never had been served. The application fails to. show any diligence whatever to secure the witness Lee Osborn. It simply states that several subpoenas had been issued for the witness Osborn and that appellant had learned for the first time two days ago that the witness lives near the town of South McAlester, Oklahoma, and that he, appellant, has not had time to procure his depositions. We think there is a total lack of diligence to secure the attendance of these witnesses and the application, not showing whether it is the first or second, and being addressed to the discretion of the court and the said application having been reviewed on motion for new trial by the court below, the court did not err in refusing to grant the continuance.

2. Counsel earnestly insist in this court that the case should be reversed because of the fact that the State failed in the court below to prove that there was a case pending in the County Court of Fannin County. In the trial of the case in the court below, which was predicated upon an indictment which charged that appellant, on the 20th day of June, 1907, in the county of Fannin, State of Texas, did then and there unlawfully, wilfully and corruptly offer to pay one Tom Hall the sum of $25 in money to disobey a subpoena which had been issued for said Tom Hall in a certain criminal ease Ho. 6677, upon the docket of and pending in the County Court of Fannin County, wherein the State of Texas was plaintiff and appellant was defendant, which said subpoena had been issued by the clerk of the County Court of .Fammi County and had been legally served upon the witness Tom Hall, the State offered in evidence the subpoena issued out of said County Court of Fannin County. This subpoena was issued on the 17th day of April, 1907, for Tom Hall, and directed to the sheriff of said county to summon the said Tom Hall to appear before the Honorable County Court of Fannin County on the first day of July, 1907, in the town of Bonham, to testify in behalf of the State in a certain suit now pending in said court wherein the State of Texas was plaintiff and Frank Smalley, defendant, the number of said suit being 6677. It was further proved that the said sheriff had executed said subpoena by reading it to the witness Hall. The State also proved that there was an affidavit filed in the County Court of Fannin County, Ho. 6677, charging appellant with violating the local option law and endorsed on said affidavit was the name of Tom Hall as a State’s witness. The State also offered a bond executed by the appellant for his appearance to answer a charge of violating the local option law which was filed in the County Court of Fannin County in a case Ho. 6677, wherein the State of Texas was plaintiff and appellant was defendant. The State in the trial of the case in the court below failed to introduce the information. Appellant in the court below objecte’d to the intro *98 duction of the affidavit on the ground that an affidavit in the County Court charging appellant with violating the local option law, does not make a ease pending in the County Court and that there is no case pending in the County Court until the information is filed in the case. The court overruled this objection and it is earnestly insisted in this court that the State failed to make out a case because it failed to show an information was filed in the case in which the subpoena hád been issued. The word “pending,” legally speaking, means a matter undecided. As to when a case is said to be “pending,” under our decisions, is not free from difficulty. Article 26 of White’s Penal Code, says: “A 'criminal action,’ as used in the Code, means the whole, or any part of the procedure which the law provides for bringing offenders to justice; and the terms, 'prosecution,’ 'criminal prosecution,’ 'accusation’ and 'criminal accusation,’ are used in the same sense.” Article 467, Code of Criminal Procedure, provides that: “An information shall not be presented by the district or county attorney until oath has been made by some credible person, charging the defendant with an offense. The oath shall be reduced to writing and filed with the information. It may be sworn to before the district or county attorney, who, for that purpose, shall have power to administer the oath, or it may be made before any officer authorized by law to administer oaths.” In the case of Evans v. State, 36 Texas Crim. Rep., 32, it was held: “It is no ground to quash an information that the defendant has been arrested upon the complaint before any information was filed.” The complaint may be filed before the information has been filed or presented. It has been held by this court that a case will not be dismissed because an information is insufficient, but that the case will be reversed and remanded. In the case of Lum Wood v. State, 27 Texas Crim. App., 538, this court, speaking through Judge Will-son, stated, the information being defective, the conviction must be set aside, “but the complaint being in all respects a sufficient one, a valid information may be presented upon it and the prosecution will not, therefore, be dismissed, but the cause is remanded that another information may be presented should the county attorney see proper to so do.” The affidavit in this case showing the same to be a filed paper and being filed at, a time previous to the issuance of the subpoena and the execution of the bail bond, it may be stated that the prosecution had commenced in the County Court and was pending. This court in the case of Leal et al. v. State, 51 Texas Crim. Rep., 425, held that where a complaint was filed for a misdemeanor in the County Court and a copias issued thereon and bail bond given by the defendant before an information was filed upon such complaint, the clerk acted without authority to issue copias and .file bond, and the County Court had no jurisdiction to forfeit the bail bond. In the case of Coleman et al. v. State, 32 Texas Crim. Rep., 595, this court held that a coinplaint filed in the County Court may form the basis of the bond, that is, when a complaint has been filed in the County *99

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.W. 225, 59 Tex. Crim. 95, 1910 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smalley-v-state-texcrimapp-1910.