Appellant was convicted in the County Court of Brown County, on a charge of violating the local option law and his punishment assessed at a fine of $100 and confinement in the county jail for sixty days. During the trial the court submitted to the jury at the request of appellant, six special charges relating to various issues in the case, most of which are pertinent and some of which were indispensable, considered in connection with the court's general charge, to have been given. None of these special charges were verified, or in any manner authenticated by the court, nor were they signed by the trial judge as such.
1. The court's general charge contained the following clause: "You are the exclusive judges of the facts proved, and the credibility of the witnesses and of the weight to be given to the testimony, but you are bound to receive the law from the court which is herein given you and be governed thereby." The fact that the court had not signed the charges seems not to have been discovered by counsel for appellant until after the verdict of the jury was rendered. The facts, however, show that these charges were by counsel handed to the court and were not thereafter in their possession until after the verdict was rendered. They were read to the jury by the court, with a verbal statement that they would be considered in connection with the court's general charge. Article 718, of our Code of Criminal Procedure, is as follows: "The general charge given by the court, as well as those given or refused at the request of either party, shall be certified by the judges and filed among the papers in the cause, and shall constitute a part of the record of the cause." This court held in the case of Logan v. State,
2. On the trial, over the protest and objection of appellant, the State was permitted to prove by the appellant that he had been engaged in the club business in Brownwood, Brown County, Texas, for eight months since the alleged commission of the offense charged in this case; and was further permitted to prove by appellant and by Frank Emison, sheriff of Brown County, Texas, that the place of business in which defendant conducted said club business had been raided by the sheriff of Brown County, Texas, under and on the authority of a search warrant provided for and issued under the Act of the Thirtieth Legislature of the State of Texas, approved April 5, 1907, more than a year since the alleged commission of the offense charged in this case. The introduction of this testimony was objected to on the ground that same was wholly irrelevant and immaterial to any issue in the case and related to business transactions and conduct of the defendant after the alleged commission of the offense charged in this case, and tended to prejudice defendant's case before the jury and to inflame and prejudice their minds against him. This testimony was objected to and a reversal of the judgment is sought on the authority of the cases of Harris v. State,
Reversed and remanded.
Brooks, Judge, absent.
