Withers v. State

White, Presiding Judge.

The first question to be determined • in this case is as to whether or not Article 434 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, providing for the substitution of an indictment which has been lost, mislaid, etc., is in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution, and also of Article 1, Section 10, of the Bill of Rights of our State Constitution.

This question is suggested but not decided in Schultz v. The State, 15 Texas Court of Appeals, 258. In that case the original indictment was lost after the defendant had pleaded to it, and *211when the loss was ascertained the district attorney suggested its loss, moved to substitute it, and the indictment was substituted. The reasoning of Chief Justice Brickell in Bradford’s case, 54 Alabama, 830, is quoted at length, and it is said: “We think the reasoning of Chief Justice Brickell in Bradford’s case is sound and unanswerable, and, in so far as that case holds that the indictment may be substituted after the defendant has pleaded to it, we fully endorse it. We hold, therefore, in the case before us, that the court did not err in permitting the lost indictment to be substituted.” In the subsequent case of Gillespie v. The State, 16 Texas Court of Appeals, 641, the question is again raised, but still undecided, as to whether an indictment can be substituted at all before the trial.

In the case before us and now under consideration, the question is fairly and squarely presented. Appellant had not pleaded to the indictment before it was lost. After its loss the loss was suggested under the statute (Code Crim. Proc., Art. 434, supra), and a substitute for the same was made, and the defendant was required to go to trial under said substitute, over his objection that he could not legally be tried under the same.

In the case of The State v. Rivers, 58 Iowa, 102, we find a very able opinion by Rothrock, Judge, in which he elaborately discusses this identical question, reviewing all the leading authorities, including Ganaway v. The State, 22 Alabama, 772; Bradshaw v. The Commonwealth, 16 Gratt., Virginia, 507; The State v. Harrison, 10 Georgia, 542; Mount v. The State, 14 Ohio, 95; Buckner v. The State, 56 Indiana, 208; Bradford v. The State, 54 Alabama, 230; and The State v. Simpson, 67 Missouri, 647.

In Rivers’s case, whilst the point decided was that, “ when a defendant has been arraigned upon an indictment, and it is afterwards lost or abstracted, the court may, upon motion, substitute a copy and proceed upon the copy thus made, the same as upon the original indictment,” the court indulges in these further reflections upon the main question, in connection with the review of the above authorities. It says-: “It will be seen that in Ganaway v. The State, and The State v. Harrison, the power of substitution is denied, and in the other cases, while it may be said the question does not fairly arise, the power is affirmed. Both of the last named cases are based upon the same reasoning, which is, that the court, having no power to present or make an indictment, can not substitute a copy for one which is lost, and the question is treated the same as though it *212involved the amendment of an indictment. Here, we think, is the vice of the opinions in these. cases. It is not a question of the amendment, nor of the creation or presenting or making of an indictment. Of course, it must be conceded that a court can not amend an indictment by adding to, or striking out any of its allegations., But the substitution of a lost record is an entirely different thing. It can not be that a court must lose its jurisdiction of a cause because part of the record has been lost or abstracted. There is an inherent power in the court to preserve and protect its jurisdiction when it has once attached, and, to that end, we can see no good reason why it may not substitute any of its records which may be lost, by properly authenticated copies.”

We are of opinion that this reasoning is conclusive, and that the power to substitute a lost indictment would be inherent without any statutory authority. The power to substitute a lost indictment is recognized in 1 Bishop on Criminal Procedure (3 ed.), section 1400. We do not think that Article 434 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, allowing lost indictments to be substituted, is in conflict with either the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, or of section 10, Article 1, of the Bill of Rights of our State Constitution. The court, therefore, did not err in allowing the indictment to be substituted, and in requiring the defendant to go to trial thereon.

But we are of opinion that the judgment will have to be reversed because the allegations in the indictment are unsustained by the evidence. The charge, as alleged in the substituted indictment, is that P. C. Withers, etc., did then and there keep and exhibit, for the purpose of gaming, a certain gaming table, said gaming table “being then and there kept and exhibited in the city of Denton.” Two witnesses testify in the case, both of whom say they saw the defendant dealing cards in Denton county, over Paschall’s saloon. Neither of them state that it was in the city of Denton.

Now, it was unnecessary for the pleadqr to allege that this gaming table was kept and exhibited in the city of Denton, but, having so alleged it, the allegation restrains and limits the offense so charged, and becomes a necessary part of the descriptive identity of the offense. It can not be treated as surplusage. The rule is that “no allegation, whether it be necessary or unnecessary, whether it be more or less particular, which is descriptive of the identity of that which is legally essential to the charge *213in the indictment, can ever be rejected as surplusage.” (3 Sumn., 15.)

Opinion delivered April 22, 1886.

“In still other words,” says Mr. Bishop, “ wherever there is a necessary allegation which can not be rejected, yet the pleader makes it unnecessarily minute in the way of description, the proof must satisfy the description as well as the main part, since the one is essential to the identity of the other.” (1 Bish. Crim. Proc., sec. 485; Warrington v. The State, 1 Texas Ct. App., 168; Id., 400; 3 Texas Ct. App., 257; Id., 382; 5 Texas Ct. App,, 463; 7 Texas Ct. App., 382; 8 Texas Ct. App., 360; 10 Texas Ct. App., 681; 11 Texas Ct. App., 411; 12 Texas Ct. App., 424; and 16 Texas Ct. App., 524.)

Because there was no proof that the bank was kept and exhibited in the city of Denton, as alleged in the indictment, the evidence fails to sustain the conviction, and the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.

Reversed and remanded.