44 Tex. 582 | Tex. | 1876
The statement of facts in this case is not approved by the presiding judge, and cannot be regarded as properly a part of the record. After the signatures of counsel to what purports to he the statement of facts, (which appears to have been filed December 2, 1875,) follows this certificate, signed officially by the district judge:
“ Jan’y 23, 1876.
“The above ‘statement of facts’ was handed to me in open court after the trial of John Keef, and was not at the time signed by me, owing to my distinctly understanding the attorney for defendant, Mr. Furguson, to say that he did not wish it signed by me. I certify, however, that the above signatures'of district attorney and defendant’s counsel are genuine, and that they had signed the statement when presented to me.”
This certificate does not appear to be designed as an approval of the statement of facts, hut rather as an explanation of why it was not approved. To hold that such a certificate given after the close of the term sufficiently authenticates the statement of facts, would, in our opinion, be substantially to dispense with the requirements of the statute.
It is to he regreted that this conclusion places it out of our power to revise this case on the facts in evidence, espe-’ cially as an inspection of the purported statement of facts induces the opinion that the conviction was probably had on insufficient evidence, and that the application for new trial, supported as it was by the affidavits of these parties, should not have been overruled.
The record contains what appears to be a copy of a paper drawn up and signed by the presiding judge and filed on the day that the motion for new trial was acted on, reciting that after argument of the motion, he directed one of the parties whose affidavit in support of the motion was filed to he brought into court, and, with the express consent of coun
Discarding this paper, we find ourselves unable, because of the absence of a statement of facts, to revise the action of the court on the motion for new trial. (Augustine v. The State, 20 Tex., 451; Land v. Miller, 7 Tex., 463.)
For the same reason the charge of the court will not he revised, unless ib he manifestly erroneous under any state of the evidence. (Koontz v. The State, 41 Tex., 570.) It is contended that the following charge given was of that class: “If from the evidence you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant fraudulently took the animal in question from its accustomed range, without the consent of the owner, with the intent to appropriate it to his own use, or that he did appropriate'it, thereby depriving the owner of its value, find him guilty and assess the proper punishment. If not so satisfied, acquit.”
The omission to follow the language of the statute in regard to the “intent to deprive the owner of the value ” seems fully supplied by requiring that the proof should
Because we find in the record no such error as justifies the reversal of the case the judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.