145 S.W. 588 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1912
The appellant was indicted and convicted of unlawfully carrying a pistol and fined $100.
By a statement of the facts, agreed to by both parties, and approved by the court "the following is a true and correct statement of all the material facts proven upon said trial, to wit: (1) The defendant admitted that he had and carried on his person a pistol in Nacogdoches County, on or about the first day of February, 1911, the day charged in the indictment.
The articles of the Penal Code, under which this prosecution and *493 conviction were had, are: Article 475: "If any person in this State shall carry on or about his person . . . any pistol . . . he shall be punished by fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than two hundred dollars, or by confinement in the county jail not less than thirty days nor more than twelve months, or by both such fine and imprisonment."
And article 476: "The preceding article shall not apply to a person in actual service as a militiaman, nor to a peace officer or a policeman, or person summoned to his aid, nor to a revenue or other civil officer engaged in the discharge of official duty, nor to the carrying of arms on one's own premises or place of business. . . ."
The appellant presents by his brief, but two questions which are the only ones we will discuss. None of the others are of sufficient importance to require further notice.
His contention is, first, "that he was a civil officer in the actual discharge of his duty, such as is contemplated by the exemptions provided in the article of the Code," last above quoted. Second, "that while engaged in the carrying and distribution of the mail as such carrier in the vehicle used by him that he was at his own premises and place of business."
As to the first contention, we know of no law of this State or of the United States that makes a rural mail carrier an officer, nor have we been cited to any. We have been unable to find any such law. No Act of Congress, of which we are aware, has ever created any such office or provided for any such officer. As a matter of fact, as we understand it, a rural mail carrier, is not an officer but merely an employee in the Postal Department of the United States.
In the brief certain questions of "instructions for the guidance of postmasters and carriers in the conduct of rural delivery service" promulgated by the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, with the approval of the Postmaster General, are quoted, which it is claimed tend to show, or shows, that a rural mail carrier is an officer. No such evidence was introduced on the trial of the case even if it had been admissible. We can not and do not take judicial notice thereof. So that on this question, we hold, first, that there is no legitimate evidence in the record to show that the appellant was a civil officer, nor is there any law making him such. Second, that even if it be conceded that he was a civil officer, he was clearly not such civil officer as was contemplated in the exceptions of the article of the Code above quoted. The language of the article specifying such persons who are not embraced in article 475, is: "Nor to a revenue or other civil officer engaged in the discharge of official duty." It is clear from this that it is not every civil officer who is exempt, because if it had been so intended by the Legislature, the Legislature would have directly said so, but it is only a "revenue" officer or "other civil officer." The doctrine ofejusdem generis especially and particularly applies in this matter. The words "a revenue or other civil officer" mean and were intended to mean *494 only a revenue officer, not civil, or other civil officer of the same kind or character, which would be in effect other civilrevenue officer. Ex parte Muckenfuss, 52 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Ex parte Roquemore, 60 Tex.Crim. Rep.. Even if appellant could be called an officer at all, certainly he was not a revenue officer, civil, military, or naval. Neither could he be called an officer of similar or like kind as a revenue officer. If merely a civil officer was intended to be exempted by this statute, the Legislature would have said so and it would have been unnecessary to have said a "revenue or other" civil officer. If the appellant could in any way be construed to be an officer and was exempt under this statute, then every other civil officer of the government would likewise be exempt, from Governor of the State down to and including every Notary Public, and trustee of every public school in the State. In fact, every officer and his deputy and assistant, except military or naval. And if every employe of the government could be construed to be an officer, then every employee of the government, would likewise be exempt. No such exemption was ever contmplated or intended by the Legislature.
As to appellant's second contention: The Supreme Court of this State, soon after the enactment of the pistol law, as it is commonly denominated, in the case of Baird v. State,
By no stretch of construction could the public roads of the State or a man in his buggy going along them be either the appellant's premises or his place of business in contemplation of this law.
The judgment will, therefore, be affirmed.
Affirmed.