Dodd v. State
Dodd v. State
Opinion of the Court
We know of no other mode by which objections to an indictment on account of erasures or interlineations can be urged under our Code of Procedure than by exceptions to the form of the indictment. Code Crim. Proc. art. 488. Such exceptions are permitted for the want of any requisite or form prescribed by art. 420. Under art. 420 we imagine that such exception might be based upon subdivisions two or three, which provide with regard to the sufficiency of the indictment that “it must appear therefrom that the same was presented in the District Court of the county where the grand jury is in séssion,” and “it must appear to be the act of a grand jury of the proper county.” If the interlineations or erasures were made after the indictment was presented by the grand jury, then indeed it might well be claimed that such indictment was not presented in the District Court by, and was not in fact the act of a grand jury. If, by reason of erasures and interlineations admitted to be made by the grand jury, the objection could be maintained that the offense was not set forth in plain and intelligible words, exception based upon that ground might also be reached under subdivision 7 of art. 420. It is manifest from the Code of Procedure itself that objections of such character are not and do not come within either the designation or purview of. motions to set aside indictments (Code Crim. Proc. art. 523), nor of the special pleas which are the only ones which can be made and heard for a defendant. Code Crim. Proc. art. 525. Under this latter article only
In the case we áre considering the erasures and interlineations urged against the validity of the indictment are presented in what appellant’s counsel denominates a plea in abatement, which plea they also claim was a special plea, and if a special plea that then it raised a question of fact which should have been tried by the jury, and not, as was done in this instance, by the judge alone. The plea was not a special plea, because, as we have seen, no such special plea is provided for or allowed by law. If not a special plea, then the question of fact was not one which the law required should be submitted to the jury, and consequently could be tried and determined by the court. Though called a plea in abatement, the objection was in fact, and could only be treated as an exception to the validity of the indictment; and the question, and only question, raised by the exception was — not whether there were interlineations and erasures — but whether they were made before or after the indictment was returned by the grand jury. If made before, and the language of the indictment, with the erasures and interlineations, was still plain and intelligible, the exception would be worthless, and should, as we shall hereafter see, have been overruled, as was done in this case. As declared by Mr. Bishop, the rule is, “ The court and not the jury is to decide what are the words of an indictment or other pleading. If there is doubt which of two words is meant, the sensible rendering will be accepted. Bad handwriting, if legible, is not ground of legal objection. Erasures and interlineations will not necessarily render it bad.” 1 Bish. Crim. Proc. (3d ed.) sec. 338.
To the same effect it was held in French v. State, 12 Ind. 670, that “if an indictment is conveniently legible it will not be held bad because it contains interlineations, an l in the absence of anything appearing upon the face of a written instrument, or being shown extrinsically, tending to prove that interlineations were made subsequently to its execution, it will be presumed that they were made before or at its execution.”
And in May v. State, 14 Ohio, 461, it. was held that “a letter added to a word in an indictment in pencil mark before the indictment is found by the grand jury does not vitiate the indictment.” And so also in the Comm. v. Fagan, 15 Gray’s (Mass.) R. 194, the court hold that “erasures and interlineations in an indictment, without any note or certificate to show when or by whom they were made, afford no ground of arresting judgment.”
Now, though our statute provides that an indictment shall be prepared by the attorney representing the State, and shall be delivered to the foreman of the grand jury
Whilst it is true the district attorney in this instance swears the interlineations and erasures in the indictment we are considering were made after he had prepared the same, and were not in his handwriting, he does not say, nor does any witness attempt to prove, that they were made after the indictment was returned to and filed in court by the grand jury, nor that they were not the act of the grand jury themselves, done and made before such return and filing. That they were not the act of the grand jury and done before the return and filing, it was the duty and burden of the defendant to show and establish by irresistible proof. This was not done to the satisfaction of the court below, and we are of opinion the ruling of the court was correct,— the evidence failing to show any ground of suspicion even that the grand jury had not, as was their right, made the changes complained of, to conform to their findings.
There was no error in refusing to exclude the paroi evidence of ownership after such evidence disclosed an ownership claimed and held under a written bill of sale. To sustain an accusation of theft of animals, ownership can be proven independent of a bill of sale, and exclusive possession, care, management and control of such property is sufficient proof of ownership. Crockett v. State, 5 Texas Ct. App. 527; Turner v. State, 7 Texas Ct. App. 396; Pippin v. State, 9 Texas Ct. App. 269; Alexander v. State, 9 Texas Ct. App. 48.
It only remains for us to say, with regard to the charge of the court, that the objections urged to it are not tenable; it was a fañ and full exposition of the law. With
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.