Sola v. State

188 S.W. 1005 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1916

Appellant and his wife were charged, in separate complaints, with making an assault on Beatrice Williams. Appellant being a man, the complaint against him charged aggravated assault. His wife and the assaulted party both being women, the complaint against her charged simple assault.

Both complaints were pending in the County Court at law at the time of this trial. When appellant's case was called he did not ask that his wife be first tried, but announced ready. When the State rested he tendered his wife as a witness in his behalf; the district attorney objected, she being charged in a separate complaint with being a principal in the offense for which the appellant was then being tried. The court sustained the objection, and all the bills of exception in the record relate to the correctness of the court in so ruling. Appellant contends that article 91 of the Penal Code, and article 791 of the Code of Criminal Procedure only disqualifies those who may be indicted *114 as principals, and does not disqualify those who are only prosecuted by complaint and information. He contends that the word "indictment" has a well defined legal meaning, and does not embrace prosecutions by complaint and information. It is true that the term "indictment" has a technical legal definition which only embraces "a written accusation against one or more persons presented by a grand jury legally convened." (Bouvier's Law Dic. and cases therein cited.) But our Penal Code provides (article 10) that words not defined in the Code "are to be taken and construed in the sense in which they are understood in common language." In common everyday language any person legally charged and held for trial is understood to be indicted, and when we say one is "held under indictment" charged with an offense, all that is meant is that there is a legal accusation pending against him in the courts of his country. In the Century Dictionary the word is there defined: "The act of indicting; accusation; formal charge or statement of grievances; formal complaint before a tribunal." This is the generally and commonly accepted meaning of the word, and not the technical legal definition.

These articles of our Code are of long standing, and it has been the universal rule, so far as we are informed, when two or more persons are charged by complaint and information with being principals in the commission of an offense, they are incompetent as witnesses for each other. Jordan v. State, 29 Texas Crim. App., 595; Davis v. State, 45 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Sparkman v. State, 61 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Baldwin v. State, 39 Tex. Crim. 245; Robertson v. State, 63 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Oliver v. State, 65 Tex.Crim. Rep..

As both complaints were pending in the County Court at Law when the objection was made, the court had judicial knowledge of the pendency of the complaint against the wife, and there was no error in refusing to permit her to testify in behalf of appellant.

The judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.