78 S.W. 225 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1904
Lead Opinion
Appellant was convicted of exhibiting a gaming table, and his punishment assessed at a fine of $100 and forty days confinement in the county jail; hence this appeal. *501
There is no statement of facts in the record, and only one bill of exceptions. This questions the action of the court taking into consideration in assessing the punishment the former convictions of appellant in other cases for similar offenses. The indictment charges appellant with the offense of unlawfully exhibiting a gaming table for the purpose of gaming, and then alleges that appellant had previously been legally convicted in the same court in causes Nos. 24,405, 24,259 and 24,260, being three in number, of the same offense charged in the indictment against appellant. This indictment seems to have been brought under article 1014, Penal Code, which authorizes an increase in punishment where appellant had previously been convicted of the same offense. This statute appears to have been upheld in Long v. State,
Affirmed.
Addendum
This case was affirmed at a previous day of this term (Kinney v. State, 78 S.W. Rep., 225), and now comes before us on motion for rehearing. In the disposition of the case, we held tha *502 the indictment was good as charging prior offenses under article 1014, Penal Code, for the purpose of enhancing the punishment in the case then being tried. We also held that inasmuch as the punishment assessed did not exceed the amount of punishment authorized in the case on trial regardless of the increased punishment authorized where convictions had previously occurred for like offenses, it was not necessary to discuss the other questions raised, to wit, that said offenses having previously been used to enhance the punishment in other cases, could not be again used in a subsequent case for the same purpose.
Since the original opinion was rendered, appellant's counsel has filed an able brief setting up his contentions, referring to authorities which sustain him; and we are accordingly constrained to review the former opinion. Appellant contends that the statute in question — article 1014, Penal Code, 1895 — is reformatory, and means that before a case can be used in a subsequent case to enhance the punishment, there must have been a former conviction in a case for a similar offense; and that after such conviction, appellant must have committed another offense of like character, and so on, up to and including the four offenses prescribed by statute, and that these matters must be distinctly alleged in the indictment. He further insists in this connection, that it is not sufficient for the indictment to allege "the same offense" as contained in the statute, but it must allege a preceding similar offense — that is, an offense of like character. Long's case,
Here the indictment charged as to the assumed previous offenses, as follows: "The grand jurors upon their oaths aforesaid do further present in and to said court, that heretofore, on September 5th, 1901, in the County Court of Dallas County, Texas, and prior to the commission of the offense here charged against him, the said Kid Kinney was in said court duly and legally convicted in causes numbers 24,405, 24,259 and 24,260 in said court, being three in number, of the same offense herein charged against him, the said Kid Kinney, each of said offenses being misdemeanors," etc. From this allegation the preceding offenses were all committed on the same day, with no allegation as to priority between them; and consequently the indictment in this regard could only be considered as an indictment for the second offense, and not as an indictment for the fourth offense; that is, if effect be given to article 1014, Penal Code, as a reform statute. *504
It is furthermore urged that these three same offenses were used in numbers 26,836 and 26,837 in order to enhance the punishment against appellant; that is, said cases were used not only to enhance appellant's punishment in the case on trial, but had previously been used in the two preceding cases. An inspection of the record sustains this contention. Evidently it was never intended that prior offenses could thus be made to do double duty; that is, that prior cases could be used to enhance the punishment in any given case more than once. To give the statute such an effect would be violative of the principle of former jeopardy which inhibits a defendant from being convicted more than once for the same offense. The only difference is that here the same offense was used more than once in order to enhance his punishment. The statute allows these offenses to enter into a subsequent offense for the enhancement of the punishment in as many as four cases. There is no statutory authority that prior offenses can be used more than in the four cases or contingencies mentioned. So it would follow that the judgment in this case can not be sustained because the same cases on which the enhanced punishment is predicated here had previously been exhausted. As before remarked we said in the original opinion that the judgment did not exceed the maximum authorized in one case; but an inspection of the judgment here shows that said other cases were used by the court in order to enhance the punishment. Inasmuch as such use is not permitted by the statute more than once we now hold that the judgment can not be sustained. The motion for rehearing is granted, and the judgment is accordingly reversed and remanded.
Reversed and remanded.