122 S.W. 873 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1909
Appellant prosecutes this appeal from a conviction had in the County Court of Titus County on March 9th, of this year, wherein he was convicted of unlawfully selling intoxicating liquors in violation of the local option law.
The sole question presented, in different forms, is that the judgment ought not to be sustained for the reason that the court erred in refusing appellant's special instruction touching his plea of former conviction, and that the verdict of the jury is insufficient in that it does not dispose of such plea. These contentions cannot be sustained, among other things, for the following reasons, first, there is no special plea contained in the record, and we cannot assume that such a plea was interposed as would have required a submission of this issue to the jury. In the next place, the record does not show that the judgment of conviction, pleaded in bar in this case, was a final judgment, or whether an appeal had been taken therein or a motion for new trial therein granted. While article 750 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, requires and provides that where a special plea is interposed, that the jury must in their verdict say whether matters therein alleged are true or untrue, it has been uniformly held that where no evidence has been introduced in support of such plea, the court is neither required nor is it its duty to submit such plea to the jury. Johnson v. State,
Finding no error in the record the judgment is in all things affirmed.
Affirmed.
Brooks, Judge, absent.