177 S.W.2d 68 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1944
Appellant was charged with the theft of eight pillow cases. He entered a plea of guilty before the court and was fined $25.00 and sentenced to confinement in jail for one day.
The record is before us upon one bill of exception which presents a most unusual situation.
A plea of guilty properly accepted generally carries with it an admission of the presence of criminative facts which constitute the offense charged. See Bennett v. State,
The trial judge undertook to qualify the bill but the qualification was excepted to probably because it apparently states the facts of which the court could not have judicial knowledge but relates occurrences that took place in the office of the County Attorney and not in the presence of the court. We think the court overlooked the effect of the exception to his attempted qualification. See Dowd v. State,
"We have repeatedly held that such an exception destroys the qualification, and that the bills in such cases must be considered as if no such qualification had been attached." (Winfrey v. State, 124 Tex.Crim. R.,
An examination of the many cases referred to will point out the proper procedure when a defendant declines to accept the *557 proposed qualification. We must, under the consistent holding of the court, consider the bill as though no qualification had been attempted, and so considered, we have no option but to reverse and remand the case, and it is so ordered.