Court Opinion

ID: 7193466
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:59:41.778222+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:16:15.103248
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Todd, J.
The defendant was convicted of stealing- a caddy of tea from the Texas and Pacific Railway Company and sentenced to one year’s imprisonment at hard labor, and appeals.
His complaint- is that no proof was made on the trial of the existence of such a corporation; or in other words we are asked to relieve him because he was convicted, as ho alleged, on insufficient evidence.
Considering that our jurisdiction does not extend to questions of fact in criminal cases, it is difficult to perceive how we can determine the issue thus presented.
Upon the trial of the case no question was raised as to the admissibility or sufficiency of the evidence on this point. It was only in a motion for a new trial that the alleged omissions was first urged and sought to be established.
In order to give this matter a proper judicial consideration we would first have to address ourselves to a question of fact, that is whether there was any proof upon the trial touching the existence of this corporation, and if from an examination of the evidence we found that there was no evidence or insufficient evidence on this point, then we would be in a position to determine the next question—whether the absence or insufficiency of this proof invalidated the verdict.
We are satisfied that under the constitutional restrictions we cannot go into this inquiry with respect to the fact in question with the record as it now presents the matter at issue. State vs. Polite, 33 Ann. 1016.
Nor do we see how the legal question which we are asked to determine can be properly considered by us in the absence of any proceeding or motion during the trial to so shape the matter as to make it present but a question of law for the determination of this Court.
This we conceive could only have been done by asking the trial judge, to instruct the jury that, unless the, existence of the alleged corporation in which the' ownership of the goods was laid was proved, the jury must acquit. Had such instructions been asked and refused, and a bill of exceptions taken to such refusal, a legal question would have been properly before us for decision.
We have no power to go into an examination of the evidence to arrive at the fact upon which this question of law purports to be founded. And under the circumstances we are powerless to afford the relief asked.
Judgment affirmed.