At the July term, 1878, of the District Court of Busk County, James Brown, the appellant, was tried and convicted for an assault with intent to murder, with two years in the penitentiary assessed for his punishment.
On August 3, 1878, during said term, his motion for a new trial was overruled, and excepted to, with notice of appeal duly given and entered upon the minutes of the court. A certified transcript of the record for purposes of appeal was duly made out by the district clerk, and transmitted by mail to the clerk of this court, who received it September 24, 1878, and filed and docketed the same as case No. 409, on the fourth assignment, to which assignment appeals from the county of Busk properly belonged. After this court convened at this place at the present term, but before the time for taking up and disposing of cases on the fourth assignment, a motion was filed by the assistant attom'ney-genei’al, oim October 30, 1878, to dismiss the appeal because appellant had escaped from custody and was then at large. In support of this motion, and as part thereof, he exhibited to the coui't the affidavit of the sheriff of Busk County, substantiating the facts therein stated; which evidence proving satisfactory, the appeal was, by this court, dismissed on the said last above-mentioned date, namely, October 30, 1878, ammd judgment emmtered accordingly. These proceedings were based upomm the “ act to amend article seven hundred and twenty-one of the Code of Grim*128inal Procedure,” approved August 21, 1876. Gen. Laws Fifteenth Legislature, 217.
On November 18th, appellant, by counsel, filed his motion to set aside the order and judgment of dismissal, and to reinstate the case on the docket for hearing on the appeal. 3?his motion was based partly upon the affidavits of two deputy-sheriffs of Rusk County, stating that on November 1, 1878, the appellant voluntarily returned and surrendered himself up, was placed in the county jail of Rusk County, and is now there held in confinement. The other grounds of the motion are, in substance:
1. That the order and judgment dismissing the appeal were erroneous, because made before the time for taking up and disposing of causes on the do’cket of the fourth assignment.
2. Because the act of August 21, 1876, upon which the case was dismissed, is unconstitutional and void.
3. Because of the voluntary return of appellant before the call of the fourth assignment in this court.
This court has heretofore been called upon to pass upon the constitutionality of the act in question, and the validity and efficacy of the act has been upheld and vindicated. See Gresham v. The State, 1 Texas Ct. App. 458 ; Young v. The State, 3 Texas Ct. App. 384.
Between the Young case and the one at bar there is a striking similarity in the facts. Only one additional question to those there raised is submitted here, and that is the dismissal of this case before the assignment was reached to which it properly belonged, and the further fact that the appellant’s voluntary return in this instance was before the day upon which the docket for cases appealed from his county was assigned for trial.
Now, the law is “ that all appeals to the Supreme Court [Court of Appeals] in cases of felony may be heard and *129determined by the Supreme Court [Court of Appeals] without regard to their position on the docket.” Gen. Laws 1873 (Thirteenth Legislature) ; Pasc. Dig., art. 3207. Assignments, or the times fixed for taking up and disposing of criminal causes from different localities, are simply conventional arrangements, made before each term by the presiding officers and judges of the court, to subserve the convenience of attorneys representing the parties appealing on the hearing of the cause. Pasc. Dig., art. 1585. They were never intended in any manner to abridge or restrict the right of the court to hear and determine a case at any time when it might be in condition to be finally disposed of.
The language of the act above referred to is, “ that in case the defendant shall make his escape from prison during the pending of the appeal, then the jurisdiction of the appellate court shall no longer attach in the case; and upon the fact of such escape being made to appear, the court shall, on motion of the attorney general, or counsel for the State, dismiss the appeal.” Gen. Laws Fifteenth Legislature, 217. It follows that a party who has appealed in a felony case, and who effects his escape during the pendency of his appeal, does so at his peril. He, by his own act, deprives this court of its jurisdiction of his case; and when that fact has been made to appear, and his case has been dismissed, this court has no further power or control over it.
The motion to set aside the order to dismiss the appeal in this case and to reinstate it upon the docket for hearing is overruled.
Ordered accordingly.