1 Tex. Ct. App. 206 | Tex. App. | 1876
The appellant, William Rich, and James "Rich were indicted and tried in the criminal district court of McKinney City for the murder of one Jeremiah Rich, alleged to have been committed in the county of Collin on the 16th day of August, 1875.
The accused were put upon their trial in said court jointly, the trial resulting in a verdict of not guilty so far as James Rich was concerned, and he was discharged by the court. As to William Rich, the appellant, he was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment fixed by the verdict of the jury at six years and seven months’ •imprisonment in the state penitentiary.
The appellant, William Rich, moved for a new trial, based, 1st, upon errors in the charge of the court; 2d, error in the court in not instructing the jury as to the law of manslaughter; 3d and 4th, that the verdict is contrary to the evidence; and the 5th set out in these words : 6 6 That the evidence of James Rich, one of the co-defendants in the trial, since his trial and acquittal, has been discovered to be
The motion for new trial was overruled, and to this ruling the defendant excepted, and gave notice of appeal. The defendant, William Eich, took a bill of exceptions, in which he sets out substantially the several grounds alleged in his motion for new trial, which was allowed and signed by the judge. The case comes before us on this bill of exceptions, and without either an assignment of errors or any brief or oral argument on the part of the appellant, or brief or argument on the part of the state. In this state of the case this court is placed in the embarrassing condition of examining the record without errors assigned, and, unaided by argument of counsel, to grope its way through the record, in order to determine whether the judgment should be affirmed or reversed. In a civil case, or even in a case of misdemeanor, we might excuse ourselves from responsibility by saying that, inasmuch as the appellant has not seen proper to point out any substantial error, we do not feel called upon to search in the record for grounds upon which to reverse the judgment. But in a case of felony the practice of the supreme court of this state, before the organization of the court of appeals, has been, as we understand it, to look to the record, and, if satisfied that the accused has not been convicted according to law, will reverse the judgment, though the error be not assigned, when the error is-of such a character that it cannot be considered as waived or cured by judgment. Sutton v. The State, 41 Texas, 513. This rule has been followed in several cases decided by this court at the present term. See Trammell v. The State, ante p. 121; Lewis White v. The State, post p. 211.
In looking into the record we find what we deem to be errors, committed on the trial of the appellant, which we
The record on the subject, and which is the only guide we have, is as follows. After stating the case as The State of Texas v. James and William Rich, the entry is : “ This day this cause being called for trial, thereupon came the parties, by their attorneys, and announced themselves ready for trial. The defendants, being duly arraigned by the court, and after the reading of the indictment, entered a plea, each for himself, of not guilty. Whereupon the court impaneled the following jury: David Doyles, L. J. Powell, T. B. Scott, Wm. King, Jrio. George, A. Brown, W. P. Wolf, J. P. Coffey, J. L. Montgomery, W. P. Lamb, and C. C. Frost," and •proceeded with the investigation of this cause ; and, the day having been consumed in the investigation, the court adjourned until to-morrow morning at 8 1-2 o’clock.” And. the records show that the investigation was continued on the next day, and, this being Saturday, it seems the court met-on Monday and continued “the investigation of the above entitled cause” to its termination and the rendition of the verdict, as above mentioned. The record nowhere shows that the jury were sworn in any manner. It may be said that the expression “ the court impaneled the following jury ” necessarily implies that the jury were sworn, but we have examined Bouvier and Webster, and have been unable to find a definition of the word empaneled or impaneled which would authorize this construction. In American practice the word impaneled is used of a jury drawn for trial of a particular case by the clerk, as well as a general list of jurors returned by the sheriff.
“ Empanel: A list of jurors.”—Webster.
“ Impanel: To write or enter, as the names of a jury, in a list, or on a piece of parchment, called a panel,” etc. —Webster.
Or it may be contended that the court would not have overlooked so important a feature in the trial of so important a case as the swearing of the jury. We concede that it is not probable that so important a fact was omitted, but it is the very object of making the record to perpetuate the transactions, and, the record purporting to state the transaction precisely as it occurred, what right have we to presume that it occurred in some other way? Again, the law requires that a jury for the trial of one accused of a felony shall be composed of twelve men. Now, when the record states that “the court impaneled the following jury,” and then goes on to give the names of eleven, and but eleven, persons, can we presume in the face of the record that the jury was composed of twelve good and lawful men?
We might, perhaps, be warranted in presuming that each of the jurors named was a competent juror; or, if the record had stated that the jury was composed of twelve competent jurors, we might be authorized to presume the clerk had omitted a name in transcribing the record; but, in the absence of any such statement, can we, by presuming, supply the omission?—and which we must do in order to come to the conclusion that the appellant has been deprived of his liberty by due course of law, as set out in the Bill of Rights. “ The judgment of the court cannot depend on speculations or probabilities as to the correctness or accuracy of the transcripts upon which we are required to act. If they are erroneous, it is the duty of the parties interested in, or to be affected by, them to point out their errors, and take the proper steps
As to the motion for a new trial, we are not prepared to :say that the court did not err in refusing it. The acquittal of James Eich, who made the affidavit as to his knowledge of the rencounter which resulted in the killing of Jeremiah Eich, made him a competent witness. No diligence could have procured his testimony until after the trial which resulted in his acquittal. As to its materiality, we do not •deem it proper to say anything, in view of the disposition we propose to make of the case. We do not feel authorized in presuming anything contrary to the record, in this case or in any case, against the life or the liberty of the citizen.
For the several reasons above set forth the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
jReversed and remanded.