Jones v. State
Jones v. State
Opinion of the Court
A motion is made by the Assistant Attorney General to dismiss this appeal for the want of a proper recognizance.
The appellant, having been found guilty in the lower court of an aggravated assault, gave notice of appeal. . The record contains an instrument, signed and executed by appellant and his sureties, which is a literal copy of the statutory form of a recognizance provided by act of the legislature, approved the 26th of April, 1871. Acts first session Twelfth Legislature, 61, 62; 2 Pase. Dig., Arts. 6599, 6600. This instrument is indorsed, “ examined and approved,” by the county judge, and appears to have been filed in court.
The Code of Criminal Procedure furnishes us the rules of practice in all cases which are bailable on appeal, as follows:
Pasc. Dig., Art. 2727: “A recognizance is an undertaking entered into before the supreme or district court, by the defendant to a criminal action and his sureties, by which they bind themselves respectively, in a sum fixed by the court, that the defendant will appear for trial before the proper court upon the accusation preferred against him. The undertaking of the parties in such case is not signed; but made a matter of record in the court where the same is entered into.”
Pasc. Dig., Art. 3186: “When the defendant appeals in any case of misdemeanor, he shall be committed to jail, unless he enter into recognizance before the district court, to abide the judgment of the supreme court.”
The act of the first session of the twelfth legislature, p. 61 (2 Pasc. Dig., Arts. 6599, 6600), above cited, prescribes the form for recognizances in all cases bailable on appeal; and these rules are made applicable in appeals from the county court to the court of appeals by act approved 18th August, 1876. Acts of Fifteenth Legislature, 172, 173.
The instrument set out in the transcript in this case,
“ The law requires a recognizance, which must be taken in open court.” Herron v. The State, 27 Texas, 337. The instrument here presented is simply a bond, and a bond will not do. Bacon v. The State, 10 Texas, 98.
The motion of the attorney general is granted, and the appeal in this case is dismissed for want of a proper recognizance.
Appeal dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.