Abb Barham v. The State.
Case No. 2064
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
Volume 41 Texas Criminal Appeals Reports page 188
October 25, 1899, Decided
History: Appeal from the County Court of Delta. Tried
below before Hon. W. S. Banister, County Judge.
Appeal from a conviction of local option; penalty, a fine of $ 25 and twenty
days imprisonment in the county jail.
No statement necessary.
Affirmed.
Phillips & Wood, for appellant.
Robert A. John, Assistant Attorney-General, for the State.
Davidson, Presiding Judge.
Opinion
Davidson, Presiding Judge. — Appellant was convicted
of violating the local option law. The State introduced in evidence
a certificate of W. S. Banister, county judge of Delta County, entered
upon the minutes of the Commissioners Court on March 8, 1899, reciting
that on the testimony of C. C. Dunagan, who was county judge of Delta
County during the years 1897 and 1898, and J. H. Boyd, publisher of
the People's Cause, a newspaper published in said county, and from a
personal examination of the papers on file in said J. H. Boyd's office,
the order of the Commissioners Court of said Delta County, on the 27th
day of October, 1897, declaring the result of an election held in that
county of the 16th of October, 1897, for the purpose of determining
whether or not the sale of intoxicating liquor should be prohibited
within the limits of said county, was duly published in said People's
Cause, a weekly newspaper, etc., which had been selected by said county
judge for that purpose, for four successive weeks, stating the dates
of the publication. It was objected, first, that this order was made
a year and a half after its publication, and is made upon the information
of others, and was therefore hearsay; and, generally, because this was
not such an entry as was contemplated by the law. That this entry was
made a year and a half after the actual publication of the order is
not a valid objection. (other cases cited). That it was made by Banister,
the successor of Dunagan, as county judge, does not vitiate the order.
(other cases cited.) Nor is it a valid objection that W. S. Banister,
then county judge, made the order upon information. See same authorities,
supra. If, instead of placing the duty on the county judge, the law
had required the commissioners court to publish said result, a proper
judgment nunc pro tunc could have been entered by that court, upon satisfactory
proof being made of such publication. In this particular instance it
was the province and duty alone of the county judge, made so by the
statute. The failure of his predecessor in this respect authorized him
to make such entry upon satisfactory proof that such publication had
in fact been made. There would have been no question that the commissioners
court had the authority to enter a judgment nunc pro tunc declaring
the result of the election, if they had omitted to do so. This matter
underwent a thorough investigation in Ex Parte Burge, supra. We do not
think there is any error in this matter.
At the instance of the county attorney, the following charge was given: "Before
you can find the defendant guilty, you must find the law prohibiting the sale
of intoxicating liquor in Delta County was in force and effect in said county
at the time said sale was made." Exception was reserved on the ground
that it was a charge upon the weight of the evidence. We do not believe this
contention sound. The idea of the county attorney seemed to have been that
the court should have given such a charge for the benefit of defendant; but
whether this view of it is correct or not, we do not think that the charge
assumes that defendant made a sale, especially in view of the court's charge
in regard to the question of sale.
Nor do we think there is any merit in the contention that the evidence is insufficient
to support the conviction. So far as the State's evidence is concerned, it
is direct and positive that defendant did make the sale, and the jury had a
right to credit or discredit the evidence. We are not authorized to disturb
their finding. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.