Court Opinion

ID: 3957373
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:18:22.369225+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:53:05.046807
License: Public Domain

The record having been perfected, the judgment of dismissal is set aside, the appeal is reinstated and the case considered on its merits.
It was charged in the complaint and information that appellant who was then and there a person of robust health and strength made an aggravated assault upon E. C. Greer who was then and there an aged person. In meeting the allegation that the injured party was an aged person the State contented itself with showing that he was 66 years old, five feet and eight inches tall and that he weighed 124 pounds. The only evidence in addition to that just mentioned relative to the injured party being aged was brought on cross-examination by appellant. In response to questions by appellant the injured party testified:
"I am in good health. I am not sick. I don't farm any. I can't do what I used to. Now I have somebody else do the farming. I can't do any hard work. I am healthy. I have had a couple of operations. I am about to have another performed. However, these do not disqualify me from light work."
The meaning of the term "aged" is quite indefinite. With few exceptions, so far as its judicial interpretation has come to our attention, it grew out of some property right determined in a civil proceeding. The only criminal statute that has come to our notice is *Page 103 
Art. 1147, P. C., declaring an assault aggravated "when committed by a person in robust health upon one who isaged or decrepit." The few prosecutions under the statute where the State relied upon the averment that the person was an "aged person" alone have failed for want of proof of that averment. See Black v. State, 67 S.W. 113; Hall v. State, 16 Tex.Crim. App. 6; Little v. State, 135 S.W. 119. In Black's case, supra, the court said:
"We understand the word 'aged' as used in said statute means that the party has reached that degree of weakness which characterizes declining years. One might be quite old, and yet not aged, within the meaning of the statute."
Art. 6, P. C., 1925, declares inoperative a penal statute which is so indefinitely framed or of such doubtful construction that it cannot be understood, either from the language in which it is expressed or from some other written law of the State. Art. 8, P. C., declares that words are to be taken and construed in the sense in which they are understood in common language, taking into consideration the context and subject matter relative to which they are employed. To illustrate the variety of opinions and circumstances which bring one within the term "aged" considered in its legal sense, reference is made to the notes in Corpus Juris, Vol. 2, p. 402. The statutes having fixed no measure by which to determine the meaning of the term in the connection used and the decisions declaring that the application does not depend upon years but upon the degree of weakness which accompanies declining years, the opinion is expressed that the use of the word "aged" in the statute is not sufficient to comply with the legal requirement that an offense be definitely defined before a conviction under it can be sustained. Reference is made to the following analogous cases: Ex parte Slaughter, 92 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Griffin v. State, 86 Tex.Crim. Rep.; M. K.  T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. State, 100 Tex. Rep. 424.
The judgment is reversed and the prosecution ordered dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed.
 ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.