DocketNumber: No. 22669.
Citation Numbers: 175 S.W.2d 87, 146 Tex. Crim. 360
Judges: Beauchamp, Davidson
Filed Date: 10/20/1943
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellant was confined in jail, satisfying, in default of payment, a pecuniary fine and costs, assessed against him, by a justice court judgment, in a misdemeanor case. While so confined, he was carried before the county court, where he was convicted of other misdemeanors and his punishment assessed at confinement in jail for 180 days. He was immediately thereafter returned to jail, where he remained confined for the period of time mentioned. At the expiration of that time, appellant sought his release from custody by writ of habeas corpus, contending that, by such confinement in jail, he had satisfied both judgments.
The appeal is from an order denying the relief prayed for and remanding appellant to the custody of the sheriff until the remainder of the justice court fine and costs had been fully satisfied.
If appellant be entitled to be credited on the justice court fine and costs with the sum of $3.00 per day for each day served in jail, as provided by Art. 739, C. C. P., he has more than satisfied that judgment. On the other hand, if the time served in jail after the rendition of the county court judgment is to be applied only to satisfying that judgment, then appellant has not fully satisfied the justice court judgment, and is not entitled to be discharged. *Page 362
The issue for our determination, then, is whether or not the time served in jail is to be applied in satisfaction of both judgments. The pivotal point revolves around the fact that, at the time appellant was convicted in the county court, he was then undergoing and satisfying the punishment assessed by the justice court. This fact appears to be a material distinguishing feature.
Art. 787, C. C. P., provides that, upon the rendering of a judgment of conviction in a misdemeanor case, when a pecuniary fine is assessed, the defendant shall be imprisoned in jail until "discharged as provided by law." The term "discharged as provided by law" means either to pay the fine and costs assessed, to lay it out in jail, or to have same remitted by an authority having that power. Art. 785, C. C. P. Appellant not having paid the fine and costs, and same not having been remitted, his confinement in jail was, under such circumstances, the only alternative.
Whether the county court was authorized to make its judgment cumulative of the justice court judgment does not enter into the matter, because no such order was entered. Moreover, it is not the State's contention that appellant first served the time necessary to satisfy the justice court judgment before he began serving the time fixed by the county court judgment. The State's contention is that, upon the rendition of the county court judgment, and appellant's imprisonment in jail thereunder, he began serving that judgment, inasmuch as confinement in jail was the specific punishment assessed, whereas, under the justice court judgment, the confinement in jail was not the punishment affixed by that court but was only a method of paying or satisfying that judgment. In analyzing this position, it must be borne in mind that appellant did not, by any act on his part, interfere with his satisfying the justice court judgment by confinement in jail. He was satisfying that judgment when the State carried him into county court to inflict further punishment upon him, resulting in the jail sentence.
As supporting its contention, and the trial court's ruling, the State relies upon the case of Ex parte Williams, 1
The State also contends that the cases of Ex parte Dockery, 38 Tex.Crim. R.,
We fail to see wherein such rule is controlling here. The fact situation is entirely different. The State's contention cannot be sustained upon the language used in the Dockery case, to the effect that "The statute seems to contemplate that the imprisonment (in jail) shall be first enforced, and afterwards the pecuniary fine discharged in some of the ways provided by the Revised Statutes," because, in the Stephens case, supra, such language was held to be obiter dicta and not a correct principle of law.
We have reached the conclusion that this case is controlled and governed by the rule announced in the case of Ex parte Lawson, 98 Tex.Crim. R.,
The situation here presented is analagous, especially in view of the fact that, as we have heretofore pointed out, when appellant was convicted in the county court, he was in jail, satisfying the justice court judgment. *Page 364
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the appellant is ordered discharged.
The foregoing opinion of the Commission of Appeals has been examined by the Judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals and approved by the Court.