OPINION ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appeal is taken from a conviction of driving while intoxicated. After trial by jury, the court assessed appellant’s punishment at ninety days confinement and a three hundred dollar fine. Both the fine and jail time were probated.
On direct appeal, the Court of Appeals found the evidence insufficient to support appellant’s conviction and, therefore, remanded the cause to the trial court with an order to enter a judgment of acquittal. Hanson v. State,
A motion to abate the appeal has been filed on behalf of appellant. Attached to the motion is a certified copy of appellant’s certificate of death. The certificate recites appellant died on February 4, 1989. The opinion by the Court of Appeals, however, was delivered on November 30, 1989.
The death, of an appellant during the pendency of an appeal deprives both this Court and the Court of Appeals of jurisdiction. See August v. State,
Furthermore, it should be noted that our abatement of an appeal under these unique circumstances should not be considered an endorsement of the reasoning or disposition employed by the Court of Appeals in the instant case.
