Willard v. State

87 S.W.2d 269, 129 Tex. Crim. 384, 1935 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 483
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 19, 1935
DocketNo. 17627.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 269 (Willard 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
Willard v. State, 87 S.W.2d 269, 129 Tex. Crim. 384, 1935 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 483 (Tex. 1935).

Opinions

LATTIMORE, Judge.

Conviction for issuing and circulating counterfeit cigarette stamps; punishment, twenty years in the penitentiary.

In this case venue of the offense is laid in Travis county, Texas. It is substantially alleged in the indictment that one H. F. Stribling, in Travis county, Texas, issued and circulated one hundred thousand counterfeit stamps, * * * in this, to-wit: that the said H. F. Stribling did then and there sell said stamps to Earl E. Bower, etc. The indictment was attacked as ambiguous and indefinite, and also on the ground that the words used, viz: issue, — circulate,—sell,—were not the same in meaning, or synonymous, or equivalent, and that the averment that Stribling issued and circulated said stamps was not sustained or borne out by the further allegation that by selling them, he thereby issued and circulated same. It is manifest from an inspection of the act creating the offense alleged to have been committed here, — that it does not make selling such stamps eo nomine a violation of the law, but does make the issuance or circulation of such, stamps a crime. We are reluctantly compelled to agree with appellant’s contention in regard to the indictment.

According to the lexicographers a thing is issued when it *386 is sent out, or caused to go forth or to be delivered; with other meanings not applicable. Also a thing circulates when it passes, — as from one person or place to another person or place, — or spreads, as a report or tale. The word “Sell” has no such meaning, nor is either of these three given as a synonym of any of the others. If the averment in this case had been of a sale and delivery, a different question might be presented, but to allege a mere sale does not carry the necessary idea of the physical presence of the thing sold, or its movement from one to the other. Flocks of sheep in distant pastures, herds of cattle on absent ranges, and unmeasured quantities of goods of all sorts are sold without immediate manual delivery.

In other words, we are of opinion that to aver that A sold B certain spurious stamps, could not be held to necessarily mean that A has theretofore issued the stamps, nor that his sale was equivalent to a circulation of same. He could have sold them and completely transferred all of his right, title and interest without manual delivery. As said by Coke, J., in Cleveland v. Williams, 29 Texas, 204: “The buyer acquires not a mere jus ad rem, but an absolute jus in re, and he may demand delivery at once on tender of the price, and sue for the goods as his own if delivery be refused.”

If we could believe that the allegation of the thing actually alleged to have been done by Stribling, viz: the sale to Bower of the stamps in question, — necessarily carried with it the inference of the actual issuance of the false stamps by Stribling, or their physical delivery to Bower, — our conclusion would be different.

The State cites Loicano v. State, 72 Texas Crim. Rep., 518, and Stokes v. Paschall, 243 S. W., 611. In the Loicano case, supra, the use of the word “beer” was but the descriptive of a liquor already judicially known and determined to be intoxicating, and hence within the terms of the offense charged against the accused, to-wit: selling intoxicating liquor without obtaining a license therefor. In the Stokes case, supra, the Court of Civil Appeals of the Second Supreme District approved the holding in Cattlemen’s Trust Co. v. Turner, 182 S. W., 438, in effect, that stock in a corporation which was not delivered, — was not issued; also a holding in the case of City of Austin v. Valle, 71 S. W., 415, in effect, that certain municipal bonds could not be said to be issued until actually sold and delivered. We are not led to believe either case fairly usable as a precedent here.

*387 We feel constraind to call attention to another phase of this case which we regard as serious. As stated, it is alleged that everything done by this appellant and others involved, was done in Travis county, Texas, the reason and excuse for such averment being found in Sec. 12 of the law as set out in Chap. 90, Acts First Called Session, 43rd Legislature, which reads as follows: “Sec. 12. Venue of a prosecution under the preceding section shall be in Travis County.” Section 11 of said act, as amended by Chap. 6, Acts Second Called Session, 43rd Legislature, contains the law here alleged to have been violated by this appellant. Under the provisions of said Sec. 12 the State contends that it has sufficiently charged the offense when it alleges, — as is done here, — that all the acts of the accused were done in Travis County.

Appellant does not contend that venue of the prosecution is not properly laid in Travis County, but he insists that since what he did, and what others involved did in this transaction and conection, was done in Bexar County, the indictment should have so alleged. Appellant raises the point by a requested charge presented to the court when the evidence was all in, asking that the jury be told to acquit because of a variance between the allegations and the proof; also by objections to the introduction of testimony as to transactions occurring in Bexar County, which were alleged to have been done in Travis County. In Chivarrio v. State, 15 Texas Crim. App., 330, the indictment laid the venue of the offense in Webb County, in which county the prosecution was maintained and the conviction secured. The evidence set out in the bill of exceptions shows that the offense was actually committed in Encinal County, an unorganized county attached to Webb for judicial purposes. This court held on appeal that though Webb County could properly try and convict one guilty of an offense in the attached unorganized County of Encinal, still the State was not absolved from charging the fact that the offense was committed in Encinal County, and that same was attached to Webb County for judicial purposes. It seems to us that the principle there announced holds good in the instant case. Suppose in the case at bar the accused had been charged in ten or a dozen similar indictments, all alleging, as in the one before us, that the things done by the accused and those with him, were all done in Travis County, the reason given for such action being solely that the place of trial of said cases was fixed by statute in Travis County. It would necessarily follow that if there be no distinguishing or descriptive averments in *388 the several indictments, the accused, — who may have understood that he was actually to be confronted upon the first trial with the facts of some one of these.ten or dozen violations in widely separated parts of Texas, — could not know from the indictment which case of the number he would be first called on to defend, and therefore could not know what witnesses to summon, or how to prepare for trial, — a situation, to say the least, decidedly embarrassing to one who under our practice and law is presumed to be innocent until his guilt has been established beyond a reasonable doubt. It might develop upon the trial that he was charged with an offense committed at Dalhart, and he might have brought witnesses from Beaumont expecting to be tried upon a transaction occurring there. This is but an illustration.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 269, 129 Tex. Crim. 384, 1935 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-state-texcrimapp-1935.