165 S.W.2d 718 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1942
This is an action to be determined upon the record presented with the application for the discharge of Arthur Louis Brown from confinement in the State penitentiary.
The relator is held in the State penitentiary under a commitment issuing from the District Court of Walker County in Cause No. 9732. The conviction in Walker County was for robbery by firearms, and sentence was five years in the penitentiary.
The relator is also held by the respondent under a commitment issued by the Criminal District Court of Tarrant County in cause No. 35,946. In this cause the relator was convicted of the offense of burglary and his punishment was fixed at life in the penitentiary because of the finding by the jury in this case that he had previously been three times convicted of felonies. The relator contends that the judgment which was entered in the Criminal District Court of Tarrant County in 1934 is void. The basis of his contention is as follows:
1. The judgment is void because the relator was not found guilty of any offense against the laws of the State of Texas, because the verdict rendered by the jury is so indefinite and uncertain that no legal and valid judgment and sentence could have been passed.
2. The sentence and the judgment are void for the reason that one of the previous convictions assigned was a conviction for robbery by firearms which is a capital offense; and the habitual criminal statute applies only to previous convictions for felonies less than capital.
3. He contends that the conviction is void because the indictment fails to allege that the other convictions assigned were previous and prior convictions for felonies committed prior to the conviction in the last case.
Cause No. 35,946 was appealed to this court and the case was affirmed by this court in 128 Criminal Reports, 321; 81 S. W. (2d) 82-, This is a collateral attack upon a judgment. A collateral attack may not be made upon a judgment unless it is wholly void, as distinguished from there being a mere irregularity, or as distinguished from the judgment merely being voidable. Ex parte Pruitt, 141 S. W. (2d) 333; Ex parte Seymour, 128 S. W. (2d) 46. The judgment is not void for, upon the original appeal of this case, it could have been reformed under the authority of Article 847, Code of Criminal Procedure. This is true because the court has the right to consider the whole record in determining what judgment should have been
Prosecution was under the terms of Article 63 of the Penal Code, which provides for the enhancement of punishment, and fixes punishment at life imprisonment where a party is for the third time convicted of a felony less than capital. The appellant contends that the judgment here is void because one of the previous convictions assigned was a capital offense, that is, robbery by firearms. It will be noted, however, that the indictment assigns, not merely two previous convictions, but three. Two of the three previous convictions assigned were for felonies less than capital, to-wit: burglary and felony theft. A finding by the jury that the relator was previously convicted of these two offenses, without a consideration of the charge that he was previously convicted of robbery with firearms, would sustain the judgment of the court fixing the punishment at life in the penitentiary. While the indictment might have been subject to a motion to quash, at least to the extent of the charge of robbery with firearms, no such motion was made and the verdict may be applied to good counts in the indictment in such a manner as to sustain the punishment fixed. This does not make the judgment void. Even if the punishment was excessive under the authority of Ex parte Pruitt, 141 S. W. (2d) 333, a collateral attack would not lie in the face of the facts alleged in the application.
It is further contended that the allegation in the indictment which set out previous convictions are insufficient because they fail to allege that the convictions were for offenses committed prior to the respective subsequent convictions alleged. Such contention would have been tenable if timely made, but the defendant would be required to reach such by an attack in the trial of said cause by a motion to quash, and the question may not be asserted in the manner attempted. Ex parte Seymour, 128 S. W. (2d) 46 and Ex parte Pruitt, supra.
It, therefore, appears that the relator is not entitled to the ■relief sought in his application and the same is accordingly denied and no writ will issue.