81 S.W.2d 706 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1935
From a judgment remanding appellant in a habeas corpus hearing, he appeals.
This appellant pleaded guilty before a justice of the peace in Bexar county to a misdemeanor charge of which said court had jurisdiction. Thereafter he gave proper bond for appeal to the county court of said county, which bond was approved and the case sent up, ultimately reaching County Court at Law No. 2 of said county. When called for trial therein appellant offered and wanted to plead not guilty, but was denied the right to so plead, — and a plea of guilty was entered for him by the judge of said court, and thereafter judgment entered reciting that appellant pleaded guilty. Article 520, C.C.P., provides that when the accused refuses to plead, the plea entered shall be not guilty. Upon this judgment appellant was taken in charge by the sheriff under the authority of a capias pro fine. He sued out a writ of habeas corpus in a district court of said county alleging the facts, and that the judgment so rendered was void. Upon hearing he was remanded, and brings this appeal. This court has jurisdiction of such appeal, the claim being that the judgment under which appellant was held by the sheriff, was void. Ex part Cox, 53 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Ex parte Gregory, 20 Texas App., 210; Ex parte Duncan, 42 Tex.Crim. Rep., and many other authorities cited on page 113 of Harris' Annotated Constitution.
Our Constitution, article 5, section 16, in specific language provides that in all appeals from justice courts to county courts, *382 there shall be a trial de novo in the county court. Article 837, C.C.P. also says that in all appeals from justice and corporation courts to the county court, the trial in the latter court shall be de novo, the same as if the prosecution had been originally commenced in that court.
We recognize that courts of other states have held that he who pleads guilty in an inferior court is bound by that plea upon appeal to a superior court. See Holsclaw v. State,
Without reviewing the statutes and constitutions of those states whose courts have held contrary to the view we entertain, we deem it only necessary to say that the language of our Constitution and statutes above quoted is so plain as to almost demand apology for an argument or any other citation. A trial de novo, literally is a trial from the beginning as if no former trial had been had. Each step taken necessary to the joining of the issue in the superior court, — just as in the lower, — must be gone through with in the superior court as if there had been no trial at all in the lower court. If we may be pardoned for saying so, the complaint must be read or waived, such plea entered as the accused sees fit, and the evidence must be heard, and the verdict and judgment rendered in accordance with law in the superior court, without regard to the evidence, plea or manner of conduct the trial took in the lower court. Shultz v. Lempert,
The giving and approval of a proper bond for appeal in such case from the justice court to the county court frees the case from any aspect of review by the court to which the case is appealed other than to ascertain the sufficiency of the bond, and puts the accused before the county court to stand or fall, after his appearance there, upon the case made by the plea entered by him in the county court and the testimony there heard and the trial had, unaffected by what might have been the evidence heard or the plea entered in the justice court. We can not conceive any possible application of a rule under our Constitution and statutes other than as we have above outlined.
We see no necessity for reviewing the case of Ex parte DeLoche,
The judgment of the trial court remanding this appellant is reversed, and the judgment of the county court adjudging him *384 bound by his plea of guilty is held to be null and void, and appellant is ordered to be released upon his appeal bond made by him in his appeal from the justice court to the county court.
Reversed and prisoner released.