Schultz v. State
Schultz v. State
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
It appears from the record that the indictment was read to the jury on the trial, the defendant having entered a plea of not guilty thereto.
When the jury returned their verdict into court the indictment was missing. It was shown by the affidavits of the clerk of the court and of the prosecuting attorney, that when the jury retired to
The verdict was written upon a bail bond which was a paper in the case. When the loss of the indictment was ascertained, the district attorney suggested its loss to the court, and moved to substitute it, which motion was granted and the indictment was substituted. The motion in arrest of judgment was made by the defendant, and overruled by the court, which motion was based upon the ground that, there was no indictment before the jury or in the court at the time the verdict was made and retured into court. The court then proceeded to enter judgment upon the verdict, and after motion for new trial being made and overruled, and after the court had pronounced judgment upon the defendant, he appealed to this court.
It is argued by the defendant’s counsel that. Article 434 of the Code of Criminal Procedure providing for the sustitution of an indictment is violative of the XIY amendment to the constitution of the United Slates and also of article 1, section 10 of our Bill of Rights. This article of our code was not contained In the original code, but was engrafted thereupon by amendment by act of February 15, 1858. Prior to the adoption of the original code, we had a statute, however, which provided for the substitution of a lost indictment, though it was not so full and explicit in prescribing manner and requisites of such substitution as is article 434 before cited and did not permit the substitution to be made except by the grand jury. Hart. Dig. Art. 464; State vs. Elliot, 14 Texas, 423. But in the State vs. Adams, 17 Texas, 242, it was held that an indictment might be substituted under the statute providing for the sustitution of lost records in civil cases. Pas. Dig. 4969, 4970.
That was a case'wTTere the indictment was for a misdemeanor, and no question was raised as to the constitutionality of the law with reference to indictments. In the State vs. Ivy, 33 Texas, 646, which was also a prosecution for a misdemeanor, it was held that it was proper to substitute an indictment, and that the substitution need not be made by the grand jury presenting another indictment, but might be made by the district attorney. There was no question raised in Ivy’s case as to the constitutionality of the statute. We have
It is therefore an open question in this state, and in the opinion of the writer, is by no means free from difficulty.
By section 10 of our Bill of Rights, no person shall be held to answer for a criminal offense, which is a felony, unless on indictment of a grand jury. Is a paper which has been substituted for the in dictment by the act of the district or county attorney in the manner provided by the statute, an indictment of a grand jury ? If it is not, then is it within the power of the Legislature to provide that any person shall be held to answer for a felony upon it ? But we are not called upon by the facts in the case to determine the question as to the constitutionality of the statute relerred to, and we have adverted to it mainly for the purpose of calling- the attention óf prosecuting attorney to the subject ami suggesting to thorn that it is much the safer and better practice, whenever it can be done, to substitute a lost indictment by having another one returned by the grand' jury, which was the common law practice, and is the only mode of supplying a lost indictment in most of the States. 1 Bish. Cr. Pro. Sec. 1400.
In the case before us the defendant was called upon to answer the original indictment, which was the act of the grand jury, and he pleaded to_it as such, thereby admitting its genuiness. He was put upon his trial therefore “on an indictment of a grand jury,” incompliance with the requirements of our Bill of Rights, and upon due process of law as required by section 1 of the XIY amendment to the constitution of the United States. It was not until after the defendant had pleaded to the indictment, that it was lost and substituted. This being the case the constitutional question raised by the defendant’s counsel is not properly in the case. We find these questions ably discussed in two Alabama cases, where the difference between the substitution of a lost indictment before trial and its substitution after plea to the merits is clearly pointed out. In the first case, Ganaway vs. The State, 22 Alabama, 772, an indictment was
Accordingly the court in that case held that the indictment could not be substituted. In Bradford vs. State, 54 Ala., 230, the indictment was lost after the trial had commenced and after the defendant’s plea of not guilty thereto had been entered, and upon discovery of the loss of the indictment was substituted pending the trial of the ease. Bradford’s case being a parallel case to the one before us with reference to the question we are discussing, we shall extract from the able opinion of Chief Justice Brickell at length. The opinion says : “Courts of record, independent of express Legislation have power to substitute any of the files or records which may be lost or destroyed. The power is matter of necessity whether the loss occurs while the cause is in fieri before it has progressed to final judgment, or after such judgment has been rendered, and whether the loss is of the whole record or of papers which, when it is finally made up, will constitute part of it. In reference to civil cases the statute now provides, “if an original pleading be lost or witheld by any person, the court may order a copy to be filed in place of the original.” In Ganaway vs. The State, 22 Ala,, 772, the majority of the court recognizing this
Neither plea would be proper or authorize the rendition of judgment unless interposed to a genuine indictment. * * * * Of
If the opinion from which we have so largely copied, announces the correct practice, it is applicable here as is Alabama, and when applied to the case in hand is authority in point for sustaining the action of the court in sustaining the indictment. We think the rea
This is permissive only and not mandatory. Nor is there any' requirement that the verdict of the jury shall be written upon the indictment, but only that it shall be in writing and signed by the foreman. C. C. Pro. Atr 70§, 706.
But it is further contended, by defendant’s counsel in this case, the indictment was not substituted in the manner required by the statute, and the decisions of this court. We find in the record a written suggestion of the loss of the indictment, setting out the facts and asking the court for leave to substitute, accompanying the same with a paper which is certified by the district attorney to be a substantial copy of the lost indictment, and following this motion for a proposed substitute indictment is an order of the court granting the district attorney leave to substitute and showing affirmatively that the substitution was made.
We are of the opinion that the record shows a substantial and sufficient compliance with the statute and with the decisions of this court. Clampete vs. The State, 3 Texas Ct. App., 638; Turner vs. The State, Texas Ct. App., 596; Beardall vs. The State, 9 Texas Ct. App., 262; Rogers vs. The State, 11 Texas Ct. App., 608.
But if the substitution had not been made in compliance with the statute but was made under the direction and manner satisfactory to the court, we are of the opinion that in a case like this, where the substitution is after plea to the indictment, it would beheld sufficient independent of the statute.
There are several other assignments of error some of which we find are not supported by the record, and these that are supported by the record are not, in our opinion, tenable. We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.