Judges: Clark
Filed Date: 7/1/1879
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
It has been held by this court, after full consideration of the various constitutional and statutory provisions relating to the jurisdiction of County Courts, that said courts are vested with jurisdiction, concurrent with courts of justices of the peace, to try and determine all cases of misdemeanor, save such as involve official misconduct, even though the penalty prescribed may be by fine of less than $200. Woodward v. The State, 5 Texas Ct. App. 296 ; Jennings v. The State, 5 Texas Ct. App. 298; Solon v. The State, 5 Texas Ct. App. 301; Leatherwood v. The State, 6 Texas Ct. App. 244. It follows, therefore, that appellant’s plea to the jurisdiction was properly overruled, and that such action was not error.
The application for continuance by appellant was essentially defective in that the evidence sought could not have been material on the trial of the cause, and because no diligence was shown. The application shows that the absent witness resided in the county of Galveston, and that appellant had caused him to be served with a subpoena by the deputy-sheriff of Brown County about one month before trial. It was requisite under'the law that appellant, if he desired this testimony, should apply for and obtain an attachment for the witness; failing in which, he cannot complain of the action of the court in refusing his motion. Pasc. Dig., arts. 2908, 2987.
Appellant proposed to prove by the absent witness, substantially, that he was travelling in the frontier counties of the State, which were exempt by proclamation of the governor from the operation of the act regulating the carrying of arms, and that, on approaching the town of Brownwood, he inquired of some unknown person “ whether or not the pistol-law was in force in (this) Brown County,” and the reply of said unknown citizen was ‘ ‘ that it is not; ’ ’ that,
The object of this testimony, as fully disclosed in the record and in the briefs of counsel, was to sustain appellant’s defence that he, at the time of carrying the pistol, was laboring under a mistake of fact, and that such mistake did not arise from a want of proper care on his part. Pasc. Dig., arts. 1649, 1650. We cannot concur with counsel in their ingenious presentation of this argument, but are of opinion that if appellant was laboring under any mistake at all, it was a mistake of law, and not of fact. The peculiar provisions of the act of 1871, under which this conviction was had, allows it to become operative or inoperative in counties liable to Indian incursions, at the discretion of the governor. That officer is authorized to designate by proclamation such counties on the border as are liable to such incursions, and upon such designation the provisions of the law became inoperative in those counties. As incursions cease, the same officer is authorized by proclamation to withdraw the exemption, and thereupon the statute becomes operative in the designated county as in other portions of the State. 2 Pasc. Dig., art. 6515 ; The State v. Clayton, 43 Texas, 410.
No distinction is perceived between the existence and operation of the law in a county once exempt from its operation, but which exemption is revoked, and that of any other public law. The citizen is bound at his peril to take notice of the law, and cannot be heard to excuse himself for its violation on the ground of ignorance. As well could he plead ignorance of the provisions of any other public statute in force. The court did not err in overruling appellant’s motion for continuance, nor in refusing the instructions asked to the same effect.
But the authorities cited, with many other’s that might be named, are uniform to the effect that, in case of such repeal, offences under the repealed law may still be punished if such has been the declared legislative intention. We are not left to conjecture as to the legislative intention in this matter, as that expression is unmistakable. The new Penal Code, which may be considered a part of the system of Revised Statutes, provides that “ no offence committed, and no fine, forfeiture, or penalty incurred under existing laws, previous to the time when this Code takes.effect, shall be affected by
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.