An affidavit for a continuance, if prematurely made, and under circumstances tending to sho'w that the grounds of the application by the use oí ordinary diligence between the date of the affidavit and the trial might, have been obviated by the affiant, is unquestionably insufficient. (Lewis v. Williams, 15 Texas, 48; Parker v. McKelvain, 17 Texas, 158; Parker v. Campbell, 21 Texas, 763.)
Such, however, is not the case before us, nor is the rule invoked applicable. This case-was regularly reached and called for trial in the evening between the hours of four and five o’clock p. m. Announcement of ready was made by the county attorney, when defendant’s counsel stated that he could not, at-that time, announce because he had attachments out for two witnesses who might come in by next morning; whereupon the-court requested defendant’s counsel either to be ready by next, morning or have his application for continuance ready. Next, morning when the case was again called, defendant’s counsel, stated that his witnesses were not present, that he had two-pages of his application for continuance written, and he asked the court to give him an hour’s time within which to complete it. This the court declined to do, but proposed to give him twenty-five minutes, which counsel declined, and the court ordered the case to proceed to trial; which was immediately done.
Prom this statement, taken from the bill of exceptions, it is. apparent that the adjournment of the case over until morning was for the purpose of having the witnesses or the application for continuance ready at that time. There would have been no. impropriety in defendant’s preparing his application then and there, to be used or not as occasion required on the next morning, and an application prepared under such circumstances, in case it had been offered, certainly could and would not have been rejected by the court upon the ground that it was premature, especially when the court had admonished defendant to have it. prepared and ready for submission in case the witnesses should not be on hand when the case was called. As shown by the bill. *519of exceptions, the question, so far as it pertained to the absent witnesses, was not one of diligence, and so far as it pertained to defendant was not one of premature action. Having called the case for trial the evening before, and given ample time for the preparation of the application for continuance, defendant had no right to claim a further indulgence, to the the delay of the other business of the court. If he has been injured he lias no one to blame but himself.
But can it be even probable that he has been injured ? This it is impossible for xis to answer, since the bill of exceptions wholly fails to show what the witnesses were expected to prove. Had the bill under the facts therein exhibited been entirely meritorious, we should have hesitated in acting upon it in the absence of an additional statement of the facts proposed to be proven by the absent witnesses, because, though all diligence to procure them might have been used, if their evidence would be immaterial the application should not have been granted. In addition to the facts stated in the bill of exceptions, all other facts essential to the sufficiency of the application for continuance were requisite to enable this court to pass intelligently upon the only question which can arise in connection with a defendant’s application for continuance under the law as it now exists, and that is, has defendant been injured by the ruling of the court in refusing his application ? To discuss questions purely incidental and collateral, under the present status of the law, when entire conformity with its requirements does not make the-application a matter of right, without knowing whether or not defendant is or may be able to comply with those requirements, appears to us a work of supererogation. A bill of exceptions-should contain all the facts necessary to a full understanding of the question to be determined.
■ A motion to quash the indictment, comprising eight grounds,, was made and overruled. The main ground insisted upon is that, the overt act of delivering the watch in pledge to secure the money borrowed being the gravamen of the offense in thiscáse, the delivery of the pledge should be averred clearly, affirm - ; atively and positively, and not by way of argument or inference. 'In support of this proposition we are cited to Button’s case, 14 Texas Court of Appeals, 518. Unquestionably the rule is as contended for.
But is the indictment here obnoxious to the rule? Most clearly not, in our opinion. It alleges, “and the said Hash, then and *520there believing the said false pretenses and fraudulent representations so made as aforesaid by the said Buntain, and being deceived thereby, was induced by reason of said false pretenses and fraudulent representations, so made as aforesaid, to loan said Buntain, and deliver to one John F. Swayne, at his request and for his use, and did then and there loan to the said Buntain and deliver to said Swayne, at said Buntain’s request and for his use and benefit, upon the security and pledge of the said watch, then and there by the said Buntain delivered to the said Nash as such security and pledge for said loan, the sum of fifty-five dollars and forty-five cents,” etc. If this is not a direct, affirmative and positive allegation of the delivery of the pledge, then we do not understand the allegation. Taking into consideration the complicated nature of the transaction, in our opinion, the accuracy and skill the pleader has displayed in preparing his bill is worthy of commendation, and if any necessary allegation has been omitted, counsel has not pointed it out when we subject the indictment to the test of his objections, and we, on our part, have failed to discover it. Having alleged a delivery of the watch in pledge to Hash, it was not error to permit Hash, to prove the delivery.
This was not a case of circumstantial evidence, and the court was not required to charge the jury with a view to such testimony. Hash swears positively to the facts connected with the delivery of the watch to him in person by the defendant, and Schaff, the owner, positively identifies the watch as his. The facts going to implicate and criminate the defendant with the theft of the watch may depend upon circumstantial testimony, but the swindling of Hash, the offense for which he was indicted, tried and convicted, is as near a case of positive testimony as can well be conceived. If a court were required to charge the law of circumstantial evidence in all cases where reliance was had upon circumstances to establish any particular fact, then indeed there would be but few if any cases in which tuch a charge would not be required. But such is not the rule. Á charge upon circumstantial evidence is only required when the evidence of the main facts essential to guilt is purely and entirely circumstantial.
Again it is contended, “ If defendant intended to refund the money and redeem the pledge at the time he obtained the money, then he is not guilty of swindling,” and that it was error in the charge of the court that the jury were not so instructed. The *521crime denounced by the statute is the obtaining by false pretenses. As was said in The State v. Thatcher. 35 New Jersey, 445: “The defendant’s ability or his ultimate intention to do what the law would compel him as the principal debtor to do cannot save him.” (See same case in 1 Green’s Crim. Beps., 562.) And the language of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts is equally explicit: “ The intent to defraud is the intent by the use of such false means to induce another to part with his possession and confide it to defendant, when he would not otherwise have done so. Neither the promise to repay nor the intention to do so will deprive the false and fraudulent act in obtaining it of its criminality.” (Comm. v. Tenny, 97 Mass., 50; Comm. v. Mason. 105 Mass., 163.) “The offense is complete when the property or money has been obtained by such means, and would not be purged by subsequent restoration or repayment. Evidence of the ability to make the repayment is therefore immaterial and inadmissible. The possession of the means of payment is entirely consistent with the fraud charged.” (Comm. v. Cole. 115 Mass., 481; S. C., 2 Green’s Crim. Reps., 222; 3 Hawley’s Amer. Crim. Repts., 91 and 92; note to Fay v. The Commonwealth; 28 Gratt, 912; see also Desty’s Amer. Crim. Law, sec. 149g.)
Opinion delivered March 5, 1884.Another objection urged to the charge is that it failed to submit specifically to the jury as an issue made by the evidence, whether the watch pledged to Nash was the watch stolen from Schaff. Under the charge as given, it is impossible that the jury could have found the defendant guilty unless they had first found this fact. In other words, the charge of the court necessarily involved and covered this issue. If the defendant desired a more specific or explicit presentation of the question, he should have submitted special, requested instructions. In the absence of. such special, requested instructions, it is only where the charge wholly fails or is radically defective in presenting the law applicable to the various phases of the case that we would hold it insufficient.
We have discussed all the material questions raised and argued in this case. We have found no reversible error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.