Ex parte Guffee

Clark, J.

It is believed that the provisions of art. 879 of the present Code of Criminal Procedure, and the verbal changes in art. 290, do not essentially vary the law as it existed before the adoption of the recent revision relating to criminal procedure after reversal upon appeal. The first-named article was designed simply to supply a casus omissus in the law aforetime, and to furnish a speedy remedy to that class of persons under indictment who, having been denied bail in the first instance, and being subsequently tried and convicted of a bailable offence, should prosecute appeals to this court and secure reversals. In that event, public policy demands their speedy liberation on bail, without the delay that in many portions of the State might be incident to a hearing on habeas corpus, even if that remedy was available (Code Cr. Proc. 189) ; and it was well to invest this court with the power to order a release upon bail, upon a proper showing to that effect. And under the general authority conferred by the provision of the article, a like order may be made by this court in any case of felony where bail has not been fixed and given before the trial and conviction of the defendant in the court below. If it was the intention of the law-making power to entirely change the rules of procedure as they had existed for a long time, *411and to require new bail in every case of felony where the defendant has been brought to trial and conviction and the judgment has been reversed, it is reasonable to suppose that apt and explicit terms would have been employed to convey that exact idea, and those charged with the administration of the law would not have been left in doubt as to the legislative purpose.

The change in the statutory provision relating to the construction and effect of recognizances and bail-bonds (Pose. Dig., art. 2735; Eev. Code Cr. Proc., art. 290) is not of a material character, and does not tend to militate against the application before us. The former statute provided that a recognizance or bail-bond, entered into by a defendant, and which binds him to appear at a particular term of the district court, shall be construed to bind him and his sureties for his attendance upon the court from term to term and from day to day until his final acquittal or conviction and sentence. The change in the law provides that he and his sureties shall be so bound for his attendance until discharged from further liability on the bond according to law. The concluding phrase in the new law is more comprehensive than in the old, and the change was necessary in view of the change made in the time of passing sentence upon a prisoner. Had the law remained as it was, a sentence of the principal might have absolved the sureties from liability, notwithstanding the defendant might prosecute his appeal and obtain a new trial.

The question seems to be fully settled in favor of the applicant by those provisions of our Codes which prescribe that where the Court of Appeals awards a new trial to the defendant, the cause shall stand as it would have stood in case the new trial had been granted by the court below, and the effect of granting a new trial in the court below is to place the cause in the same position in which it was before any trial had taken place. In cases of mistrial, new trial, or reversal, the defendant is remanded by the law to the *412custody of his sureties, and their surrender of his person for purposes of trial does not operate, in either case, as a discharge of their liability upon the recognizance or bond.

The writ of habeas corpus will therefore issue as prayed for, returnable before the Hon. Joe Abbott, judge of the Twenty-eighth District, at the town of Cleburne in Johnson County, on Saturday, the twenty-fourth day of April, a. d. 1880, at eleven o’clock a. m. ; and the clerk of this court is directed to forward immediately to the honorable district judge aforesaid, at the town of Hillsboro in Hill County, a certified copy of this opinion for his information and guidance.

Ordered accordingly.