105 S.W. 812 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1907
On a plea of guilty appellant's punishment was assessed at two years confinement in the penitentiary on a charge of swindling.
After the verdict and judgment were entered up, but before the adjournment of the term, an affidavit in proper and legal form was filed, sworn to by a credible witness, as far as this record shows, and presented by the counsel employed by the relatives of appellant to the district judge, in which affidavit the fact is suggested that affiant was crazy at the time of filling same. Accompanying the affidavit is a certified copy of the decree of the county court of Runnels County, adjudging appellant insane, on the 29th day of January, 1907, and also the supporting affidavits of R.E. and Thomas A. Duke, relatives of appellant. The district attorney filed a motion asking the court to overrule the request of appellant for a trial on the issue of insanity; first, because the defendant had been sentenced on a valid judgment of this court, and because the court now has no jurisdiction of this cause; second, because the defendant is not probably insane as is evidenced by certificate of Dr. B.M. Worsham, which said certificate is hereto attached. Thereupon the court sustained the motion of the district attorney and refused to try the issue of defendant's insanity after conviction, and dismissed the said motion and affidavit, and the defendant by his attorneys in open court excepted to said ruling and gave notice of appeal to this court. All these matters are presented in a bill of exceptions incorporated in the record before us. Then the question for our consideration is this: Where appellant pleads guilty to a felony, and subsequent to the judgment thereon, an affidavit is filed stating that appellant is crazy, does this affidavit force the trial court to organize a jury and try the question of insanity of appellant? We answer this question in the affirmative. In the case of Guagando v. State,
In view of the above statement, we wish to make a suggestion about the subsequent disposition of the case to this effect: That when this issue of sanity vel non is tried in the lower court, if the verdict of the jury should be in favor of the proposition that appellant is sane, then appellant can be sent to the penitentiary without any further appeal to this court, since there is no appeal to this court, as stated above, from a decision of a jury holding appellant sane, but if the verdict should be in favor of the proposition that appellant is insane, appellant should be adjudged a lunatic and confined as the law requires.
Therefore, on account of the court's refusal to have the issue of appellant's sanity vel non tried, the judgment is remanded to be tried on the issue of insanity.
Reversed and remanded.
Henderson, Judge, absent.