202 S.W. 88 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1918
Appellant's conviction was for murder and his punishment assessed at confinement in the State penitentiary for twenty years.
The homicide took place in Tarrant County in November. The grand jury returned into the District Court of the Sixty-seventh Judicial District a bill of indictment charging appellant with murder. At that time the Hon. Geo. E. Hosey was assistant county attorney, and pursuant to his duties as such assisted the grand jury in investigating the case and wrote the indictment returned. At the succeeding term of *171 court, on December 4, 1916, the court organized a grand jury, which was composed of the same, or substantially the same, men that composed the grand jury for the November term, and which returned the indictment mentioned, and appellant was reindicted for the same offense; and about ten days later the first indictment found was dismissed. After the organization of the Criminal District Court of Tarrant County the cause was transferred to that court, and Hon. Geo. E. Hosey became judge thereof.
Appellant makes the point that his connection with the case as assistant county attorney operated as a disqualification of Judge Hosey to sit in the case. The Constitution, article 5, section 11, provides, among other things, as follows: "No judge shall sit in any case where . . . he shall have been counsel in the case." Article 617, Code of Criminal Procedure, provides: "No judge . . . shall sit in any case . . . where he has been counsel for the State or the accused." Articles 426, 427 and 428, Penal Code, prescribe the duties of the county attorney with reference to the grand jury, providing in substance that he may be present except when the matter of finding indictments is under discussion or the grand jury is voting on the same; may examine witnesses, advise as to the proper mode of interrogating, and with reference to the question of law. This authority has been construed to extend to the assistant county attorney. Moody v. State,
We find in the record this statement by the county attorney of Tarrant County: "After the Hon. Geo. E. Hosey, the present judge of this court, was appointed, I suggested to him that he was disqualified in this case by reason of the fact that he was a member of the county attorney's force at the time defendant was indicted for this murder, and, therefore, he would be disqualified to try the case." This, we think, is the proper construction of the law. The exact point on similar facts was decided by this court in an opinion by Judge Hurt in Terry v. State, 24 S.W. Rep., 510, where the facts alleged were that the district attorney took the complaint, reduced it to writing and caused it to be sworn to and attested. This was the beginning of a prosecution under which the appellant, Terry, was afterwards convicted of a felony. The court said: "If it should appear that he has received the complaint, reduced it to writing, had it signed and sworn to, and attested same, the law requiring him to do these things as counsel for the State, his official acts as attorney for the State having relation to this particular case would make him of counsel for the State in this case, and the motion should have been sustained." See also Graham v. State,
The trial judge having announced his intention to change the venue of the case upon his own motion, the county attorney having suggested the propriety thereof on the ground of previous trials the appellant opposed the action of the court upon various grounds set out in writing. The court heard evidence upon this opposition, disregarded it, and ordered the venue changed, appellant excepting.
The action of a disqualified judge with reference to an order such a *172
judge can not make, is void. Chambers v. Hodges,
This court, in the case of Fellrath v. Gilder, reported in 1 Ct. of Appeals, Civil Cases, p. 599, sec. 1060, discussing a similar question, expressed itself as follows: "A certiorari granted by a county judge thus disqualified is a null and void act. The disqualification of the judge extends to all such judicial orders, judgments or fiats as involve the exercise of the power which is conferred upon the judge to hear and determine upon the rights which may be involved in the case which shall be presented for his action."
A distinction between ministerial acts, or acts not involving judicial discretion, which may be done by a disqualified judge, and acts involving judicial discretion which he can not perform, is referred to in Rains v. Simpson,
In State v. Burks,
Article 626, Code of Criminal Procedure, is as follows: "Whenever in any cause of felony the district judge presiding shall be satisfied that a trial, alike fair and impartial to the accused and to the State, can not, from any cause, be had in the county in which the case is pending, he may, upon his own motion, order a change of venue to any county in his own, or in an adjoining district, stating in his order the grounds for such change of venue." It has been held that the discretion thus given to change the venue on his own motion is an act of judicial discretion, not an arbitrary or personal one. Mayhew v. State,
The Assistant Attorney General concedes that the order changing the venue in this case is void because it was made by a disqualified judge. Other cases illustrating the point are: Taylor v. State, 81 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Garrett v. Gaines,
One of the issues developed on the trial of the cause was the general reputation of the deceased as to whether he was a dangerous man or otherwise. In cross-examination of one of the witnesses who testified to the good reputation of the deceased in this respect, it was developed that deceased had killed a man, shot another and had a number of fights. Appellant sought to interrogate other witnesses for the State who testified to the good reputation of the deceased in the respect mentioned, whether they had heard of these occurrences or knew of them. This testimony was excluded upon grounds suggested by the court and made by the prosecuting attorney. The State's witness having testified to his knowledge of the good reputation of deceased and there being evidence upon which to base the inquiry, we think it within appellant's rights in cross-examining the witness to inquire whether or not he had *174
heard of the incidents, for the purpose of testing the knowledge and credibility of the witness. From Wharton's Crim. Ev., vol. 1, p. 1013, we quote as follows: "So a character witness who has testified as to the good or bad character of the witness whom he is called upon to sustain or impeach may be cross-examined as to his knowledge of the acts that contradict his testimony, not for the purpose of establishing such acts, but to test the witness' credibility, so the jury may be assisted in determining the weight to be given his testimony." This text is supported by the opinion of this court in Forrester v. State,
Under these authorities we think there was error in the limitation placed upon the cross-examination.
Because of this error and that involved in the change of venue by the disqualified judge, a reversal of the judgment of the lower court is ordered.
Reversed and remanded.
PRENDERGAST, JUDGE, absent.