Mitchell v. State

MORROW, Presiding Judge

(Dissenting). — The proof was to the effect that appellant, using a pistol, shot and killed U. J. Thompson. According to the appellant’s testimony, he was the possessor of a truck by means of which he made a livelihood in doing hauling for hire; that in the course of his business he had been mistreated by officers who, he claims, had destroyed the tires on his truck by shooting them; that his life had been threatened by officers. He referred to several instances in which the utility of his tires had been destroyed by shots from guns in the hands of officers and that he had been otherwise abused; that at one time he had appealed to the Governor of the State to protect him against mistreatment of which he complained. Prior to the occasion of the homicide appellant owned a pistol and made an agreement with the owner of another pistol to the effect that an exchange would be made provided appellant would pay the difference of five dollars between the two. Shortly before the homicide appellant made the exchange and took the pistol which he had acquired, together with cartridges to fit it, and walked out upon the street. Without stating details, the evidence justifies a finding by the jury that appellant was unlawfully carrying a pistol at the time of his arrest. Whether the deceased unlawfully assaulted the appellant or otherwise transcended his authority in attempting the arrest of appellant was made a controverted issue of fact by the evidence. Appellant claimed that as he started to open the door *630of his car some one called him; that when he turned around he was confronted with a “pretty good-sized man,” who demanded the appellant’s pistol. Upon complying with this request appellant was struck with a pistol. The parties clinched and both fell to the ground. From the appellant’s testimony we quote:

“He knocked me down and he went down on top of me. I didn’t know he was an officer. I didn’t observe any badge or anything else about him that would indicate that he was an officer. He just said, ‘Hand me that gun.’ He had his gun in his hand. He didn’t say he was an officer. He didn’t advise me that he had a warrant for me. I handed him my gun because he had the advantage of me and I couldn’t do anything else. When I was knocked down, Mr. Thompson went down on top of me and I had hold of his gun.”

Appellant claims that in the scuffle the deceased was accidentally shot. Upon that subject the evidence is conflicting. It was submitted to the jury, as above stated, in an adequate charge. It is the appellant’s contention that the shot which killed Thompson was accidental so far as he (appellant) was concerned. The State’s testimony presented the theory that appellant was the aggressor and the jury solved that question in favor of the State. We are not prepared to say that in doing so the evidence would not justify their conclusion.

In his motion for rehearing appellant insists that his Special Charge No. 1 should have been given. The charge in substance is that if appellant was unlawfully carrying a pistol, he could not be convicted if the jury believed that in the encounter with the deceased the appellant acted alone upon his necessary self-defense. The subject of self-defense was adequately presented in favor of the appellant in a number of instructions given to the jury, notably, in paragraphs 14, 15, 16, 27 and others' of the court’s charge.

The defensive theories are presented in paragraphs 10, 12, and 13-B. In paragraph 10 the jury was instructed that unless malice aforethought was proved there could be no conviction for a greater offense than murder without malice. Paragraph 11 defines murder without malice in an appropriate manner. Paragraph 12 elaborates the defensive theory of the absence of malice. Paragraph 13 further warned the jury that there could be no conviction for a higher penalty than murder without malice unless malice aforethought was adequately proved. Paragraph 13-B admonishes the jury that there could be no conviction of the appellant unless he, with malice, voluntarily killed the deceased by shooting him with a pistol, and that if upon *631that subject there existed a reasonable doubt, he should be acquitted.

Paragraph 14 adequately charged the law of self-defense and apparent danger and that there would be no necessity of retreating.

Paragraph 15, in a very comprehensive and correct manner, sets forth the appellant’s right to act in self-defense and advises the jury that if deceased was making an attack with a weapon which, in the manner of its use, might be reasonably calculated to produce death or serious bodily harm, the law presumes that the deceased intended to murder or inflict serious bodily injury upon the accused.

Paragraph 16 charges the jury that appellant was justified in firing the first shot, if he did so, and that he was justified in striking the deceased with a pistol as long as danger, real or apparent existed as judged from the standpoint of the appellant.

Paragraph 17 instructed the jury fully upon the subject of accidental killing and embraced the legal elements of reasonable doubt in favor of the accused. Likewise, the subject of accidental killing was charged in favor of the appellant in paragraph 18 of the charge.

Paragraph 24 of the charge again admonished the jury in terms favorable to the appellant, in substance, that on the failure on the part of the deceased to advise appellant that he was an officer, unless that fact was known to the appellant, he would have had a right to resist arrest and death, if necessary, to protect himself against death or serious bodily injury, real or apparent, as viewed from his standpoint.

• In Paragraph 26 the jury was instructed as to the appellant’s legal rights in thé event of an illegal arrest.

Paragraph 27 presents the appellant’s right to resist an arrest, which, from his standpoint, appeared to be made without authority. Likewise, if the officer used excessive force in making the arrest, the rights of the appellant were protected. The same subject is embraced favorable to the appellant in paragraph 20 of the court’s charge.

Embraced in the charge of the court is the following: “You are further instructed that if you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had made threats prior to the time of the homicide, said threats would not deprive him of his right of self-defense if he did or said nothing at the time of the homicide which was intended to induce the deceased to attack him.”

Appellant refers to the above in his brief, but we find no ex-*632exception made to it at the time of the trial. All the other paragraphs of the charge upon which there is criticism in the brief were preserved by exceptions during the trial.

It seems that the appellant was indicted for murder on July 27, 1933. On the 31st day of that month he presented to the judge of the District Court of McLennan County (in which the prosecution was pending) an application for a writ of habeas in which he sought the privilege of bail. A hearing was set by the court for August 7, 1933. Upon the hearing of the application the district judge denied bail from which order the appellant appealed to this court. The date on which bail was denied was August 18, 1933, at which time the Court of Criminal Appeals was. in vacation and was without power to decide the appeal, under article 5, section 5 of the Constitution of Texas. At the beginning of its term the court, on October 11, 1933, rendered its decision in favor of the appellant’s right to bail. Before going to trial in the district court, appellant sought a delay to await the decision of the Court of Criminal Appeals on his appeal. Delay was denied and due exception preserved to the refusal of the district court to postpone the trial awaiting a decision of the appellant’s appeal on the question of bail. After the motion to continue was denied, appellant was put to trial against his will and while in custody. A verdict assessing his penalty at life imprisonment was rendered against him. His appeal from that judgment is discussed in the beginning of this opinion and the conclusion is expressed that aside from the question of bail his complaints of the procedure are untenable.

This court, as above stated, on October 11, 1933, reversed the judgment of the district court denying bail and ordered a new trial. Later, the State’s attorney sought a rehearing which was granted. Appellant complained in a motion for rehearing, which was overruled, and on this appeal on the merits of his conviction, he challenges by proper procedure the legality of his conviction on the ground that against his will he was illegally put to trial while in custody when he was entitled to release on bail.

In Art 1., Sec. 11 of the Constitution of Texas, it is said: “All prisoners shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, unless for capital offenses, when the proof is evident; but this provision shall not be so construed as to prevent bail after indictment found upon examination of the evidence, in such manner as may be prescribed by law.”

A capital offense is one for which the highest penalty is death. In the present instance, appellant was charged with murder, which is a capital offense. The penalty assessed against *633him in the trial court was confinement in the penitentiary for life.

The State’s attorney assumes that because the verdict of the jury embraced a penalty which would ordinarily not be bailable, that the error of the trial court in requiring appellant to stand trial while in custody demonstrates that the rights of the appellant were not transgressed. The right to be free from custody during the trial of one accused of crime is of such value and importance that its unauthorized denial may seriously impair his defense and do him irreparable injury. It has been said that the fact that one charged with an offense, who is brought back in and out of court in the custody of an officer, may be regarded by the jury as implying that the accused on trial is so affected with guilt that bail has been denied. That such impression could not fail to be harmful has often been stated in judicial opinions. Moreover, one who is put on trial for his life or liberty may be hampered in conferring with his counsel and with his witnesses. The,subject has been so often discussed and its ill effect so definitely determined that further discussion seems superfluous. The inquiry in the present appeal, as in others of the same nature, is whether the valuable right mentioned was improperly denied. That is to say, was the accused illegally denied the right to bail and put to trial while in custody, while under the law he should have been allowed bail and enabled to appear as a free man ? On the subject this court has often spoken as is reflected by its reported decisions. See among others Choice v. State, 52 Texas Crim. Rep., 285; Streight v. State, 62 Texas Crim Rep., 453, and precedents cited.

Appellant quite properly asserts that his conviction may have been influenced by the fact that he was illegally held in custody during his trial. His contention seems difficult to refute. That at the time of his trial his case was not a capital one in which the proof was evident is demonstrated by the result of his trial and by the opinion of this court in his habeas corpus appeal. At the time he was put to trial his right to bail was guaranteed by the Constitution of the State. That in refusing bail the trial court erred is made evident by the result showing that his case was not a capital one. The fact that the verdict fixed his penalty at more than fifteen years in the penitentiary supports rather than detracts from his claim that his constitutional right to bail was denied. This for the reason that if he had been accorded the privilege of bail the verdict might have been more favorable. In the opinion of the writer, when one accused of crime demands in a proper manner the *634right to bail, the only discretion possessed that may be exercised by either the trial or the appellate court is to determine whether the evidence shows the charge to be one of proof evident of a capital case, as that term is defined in the Constitution to which reference is made above. Unless it is a capital case in the opinion of the court, whether it be the trial or the appellate court, the Constitution demands that the right to bail be not denied.

The terms of the district courts are fixed by the Legislature and changeable at its will. By legislation the district courts have the power to operate in special sessions. The term of the appellate court is fixed definitely by the Constitution. It is without power to entertain an appeal during its vacation. The procedure followed in the present appeal, namely trying a case in which the trial court denies bail during the vacation of the appellate court, assumes the power of the Legislature by the trial court to annul the right of appeal or to destroy the authority of the appellate court in a case in which the accused on trial seeks and is denied bail. That no such right is given or is to be implied by the Constitution seems obvious.

At the time of affirming this case, the writer entertained and expressed the view that in forcing appellant to trial pending his appeal on the question of his right to bail no wrong was done him. Since then my study of the provisions of the Constitution of this State touching the right to bail, except in criminal cases where the “proof is evident,” convinces me that it was the imperative duty of the trial court to refrain from forcing the accused to trial while there was pending upon appeal the question of his right to bail, and that when, as in the present instance, such right was disregarded and he was put to trial while in custody, when, as a matter of fact, in the opinion of the appellate court, he was entitled to bail, there is no alternative consistent with the Constitution other than to grant a new trial.

Entertaining the opinion mentioned, I am constrained to enter my dissent from the order of my associates in their disposition of the motion for rehearing.