Speer v. State

2 Tex. Ct. App. 246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Tex. Ct. App. 246 (Speer 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
Speer v. State, 2 Tex. Ct. App. 246 (Tex. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

Winkler, J.

One of the principal grounds relied on by the appellant for reversal of the judgment rendered against him in the district court is that he was deprived of a right guaranteed to him by law, by being compelled to go to trial without having had one day’s service of a copy of the names of persons summoned under the special venire facias issued in the case, and from which a jury was to be selected for the trial.

The law directs as follows: “No defendant in a capital [248]*248case shall he brought to trial until he has had one day’s service of a copy of the names of persons summoned under a special venire facias, except when he waives the right. But the service may be made at any time after indictment found, whether before or after arraignment.” Code Cr. Proc., Art., 554 (Pasc. Dig., Art. 3022).

The record discloses that a copy of the special venire facias ordered to be issued June 2, 1876, returnable June 17, 1876, was served on the defendant June 17, 1876, at half-past one o’clock, p. m.

Hie case was called for trial, and the judgment recites that the state announced ready, and that the defendant asked time to file an application for continuance, which was granted; that the application for a continuance was presented to the court, and, being considered insufficient, was overruled, and an exception noted to the ruling of the court. In this connection the judgment recites as follows : “ Service-of copy of indictment having been waived, and of copy of venire by proper and legal service upon the defendant, came a jury of- good and lawful men,” etc.

A bill of exceptions taken by the defendant states, among other things, “ that on May 18,1876, at three o’clock, p. m., the cause called for trial, counsel still objecting, and reserving their exceptions, on the ground that defendant nor his counsel had been served as the law required with a copy of the names of persons summoned under the said special venire facias, ordered as aforesaid to try this cause, for one entire day, but only had service- of said copy for parts of two days, to wit, from the time compassed between the hours of one and one-half o’clock, p. at., May 17, 1876, until the hour of three o’clock, p. at., May 18,1876 ; which objections of defendant’s counsel were overruled by the court, on the ground that the defendant had been served with said copy in the manner prescribed by law, and for a longer period than one day; the objection of defendant’s [249]*249•counsel was purely technical, and not sustained by the statute ; and the cause was ordered to proceed to trial, which was accordingly done.” This bill of exceptions, embracing other matters, was allowed and signed by the presiding judge, and is set out in the transcript.

The record presents this question : Was the service of the copy of the special venire upon the defendant at half-past one o’clock, p. m., on May 17, 1876, sufficient to hold the defendant to trial at three o’clock, p. m., of the succeeding day ? In other words, did the service answer the demand of the law as above quoted, that no defendant in a capital case shall be brought to trial until he has had one day’s service, etc.?

There is something said in the record about a waiver of service of the special venire, and some controversy between the clerk and a deputy sheriff and one of the counsel for the defendant, as to whether service had not been waived by one of the counsel, or had not been made on another, which appears to have been settled by ordering service on the defendant. There is no pretense that the defendant waived this service, or that service was made upon him until half-past one o’clock, p. m., on the 17th, as above stated.

We know no rule of law or legal mode of computing time by which we would be warranted in holding that parts of two days make a day. It must have been the idea of the court below that the time intervening between the time of service and the time the trial commenced satisfied the law as to the time of service.

The Code of Criminal Procedure lays down its own rules of interpretation, and by these rules courts must be governed in the interpretation and application of its several provisions, so far as they are applicable.

Article 25 provides that the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure shall be liberally construed, so as to attain the objects intended by the legislature; and Article [250]*25027 provides that, whenever it is found that this Code fails to provide a rule of procedure in any particular state of case which may arise, and is therefore defective, the rules of the common law shall be applied and govern.

Now, keeping the provisions of the Code in view, and bearing in mind the twofold purpose of the law, to punish the guilty on the one hand and the protection of the innocent on the other, and invoking whatever of aid we may obtain from other Articles of the Code, and, when it is silent, having resort to the common law, what is the correct construction and application of that provision of the Code-which states that no defendant in a capital case shall be brought to trial until he has had one day’s service of a copy of the names of persons summoned under a special venire, facias, in its bearing upon this case as it is disclosed by the record?

As a general rule the law takes no account of fractional parts of days. O'Connor v. Towns, 1 Texas, 107; 4 Kent. Another general rule of computation is that, when time is to be reckoned from the time of the act done, the day upon which'the act was done is to be excluded from the computation. Dowell v. Vititor, decided by this court at the present term, and authorities cited.

The following quotations embodied in the opinion in O'Connor v. Towns, in reviewing Lester v. Garland, 15 Vesey, 246, throw some light upon this subject: “In his opinion the master of the rolls makes the following observations : ‘ It is not necessary to lay down any general rule-upon this subject, but upon technical reasoning I rather think it would be more easy to maintain that the day of an act done, or an event happening, ought in all cases to be excluded than that it should in all cases be included. Our law rejects the fractions of a day more generally than the civil law does. The effect is to render the day a sort of indivisible point, so that an act done in that compass of it is not [251]*251referable to any one rather than to every other portion of it, but the act and the day are co-extensive, and, therefore, cannot properly be said to be passed until the day is passed.’ ”

This reasoning sustains the general idea that fractions of a day are not taken account of, and, so far as we have had time and opportunity for investigation, seems to lie very near the foundation of the other general rule that, in computing time from an act done, or an event occurred, the day on which the act was done, or upon which the event happened, is to be excluded. We may also obtain further light upon the subject from a consideration of the adjudications of our own and other courts of last resort, in construing statutes of import similar to the one under consideration.

In a very early case it became necessary for the supreme court of Texas to construe a particular section of an act passed in 1836, which Avas as folloAvs :

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2 Tex. Ct. App. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speer-v-state-texapp-1877.