J. M. WALTRIP V. THE STATE
No. 19361
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
Delivered March 3, 1938
State‘s rehearing denied March 23, 1938
The record is before this Court without a statement of facts or bills of exception. All matters of procedure appear regular.
No error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
HAWKINS, JUDGE. - Upon the same authorities cited in opinion on rehearing in No. 19401, N. Thomas v. State [page 200 of this volume], the motion for rehearing in the present case is overruled.
Martin & Shipman, of Abilene, for appellant.
Esco Walter, County Attorney, of Abilene, and Lloyd W. Davidson, State‘s Attorney, of Austin, for the State.
HAWKINS, JUDGE. - Conviction is for possession of intoxicating liquor for the purpose of sale, punishment being assessed at one hundred dollars fine and sixty days confinement in the county jail.
It was charged against appellant in the first count of the complaint and information that in Taylor County, Texas, he unlawfully possessed for the purpose of sale whisky containing in excess of one-half of one per centum of alcohol by volume.
It was further alleged in language which we think sufficient that an election had been held in said county in 1911, which prohibited the sale of intoxicating liquor in Taylor County. Appellant assailed the State‘s pleadings upon the ground that the averments as to the present status of prohibition in said county were not sufficient. We are not inclined to think there is merit in said complaint.
After alleging the present offense, it was averred in the State‘s pleadings that “prior to the commission of the aforesaid offense by the said J. M. Waltrip, to-wit: on the 26th day of April, 1937, in the County Court of Taylor County, Texas, the said J. M. Waltrip was duly and legally convicted in said last named court of an offense of like character as that hereinbefore charged against him in this cause, upon information pending in said last named court, and of which the said court had jurisdiction and which judgment of conviction is a final
The court permitted proof of the prior conviction and same was used as a predicate for the jury to increase the punishment in the present case. This error itself demands a reversal of the judgment.
On the evening of May 28, 1937, an officer had in his possession a warrant authorizing the search of a filling station. Before searching the filling station the officer followed appellant to his home. As appellant entered the driveway with his car the officer drove in behind him and saw appellant breaking bottles in his car, and found therein the remains of three or four bottles of whisky, and found one full bottle of whisky unbroken in the car. Appellant lived some seven blocks from the filling station. The officer had no warrant for appellant‘s arrest and no search warrant for the car or for appellant‘s home, or the premises connected therewith. After arresting appellant he searched him and found a key which fit the lock at the filling station, and upon searching the filling station found sixteen cases of beer and about thirty pints of whisky, in pint and half-pint bottles. When appellant observed that the officer had found this beer and whisky he made the statement, “I had every cent I had in the world tied up in that stuff. This will ruin me.”
Appellant complained that under one count in the information the State had proved two transactions, the one revealed by the officer as occurring at appellant‘s home and the other at the filling station, and requested the court to require the State to elect upon which transaction it would rely. We find it unnecessary to discuss this point because in our judgment the evidence of what occurred at appellant‘s home was inadmissible, and was ad-
Appellant‘s objection to proof by the officer of the statement he made at the time the liquor was discovered at the filling station is without merit. It was a res gestae statement and properly admitted.
For the errors pointed out the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
ON STATE‘S MOTION FOR REHEARING.
GRAVES, JUDGE. - The county attorney of Taylor County has filed a motion for a rehearing, and in an interesting brief presents matters that we will now consider.
We held in our original opinion that the allegation in the complaint and information was insufficient to predicate an enhanced punishment upon in a misdemeanor case, the allegation so held being that “the said J. M. Waltrip was duly and legally convicted in said last named court of an offense of like character as that hereinbefore charged against him in this cause.” The vice in this portion of the pleadings being that it should have gone further and said, in substance, “in to-wit,” giving the number and style of the cause, and a general description thereof, so that the character and kind of said prior convictions would be made known in the complaint and information itself, although it would not be necessary to plead the previous charges
We still adhere to the previous decisions relative to the necessity of not relying alone on the pleading of “the same offense,” but have read into that statute by judicial construction the phrase “of like character,” it being obviously impossible for one to commit the same offense more than once.
With what we have said above, this motion is overruled.
