Court Opinion

ID: 5013048
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-01 03:09:45.016591+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:17:30.144234
License: Public Domain

BEAUCHAMP, Judge.
The appeal is from a conviction for violation of the liquor law with a penalty of nine months in jail and a fine of $750.00.
The evidence shows that appellant was apprehended in the City of Mineral Wells, at four o’clock in the morning, while driving on -the streets, with three cases of liquor containing seventy-.two pi-nts. Appellant plead guilty before a jury on the 10th day of August, 1948. The State, thereupon, introduced evidence -showing the circumstances of -the arrest and the quantity of liquor in his possession, as stated above. The jury, on the same day, returned its verdict assessing what is alleged to be an excessive punishment.
The appellant was not satisfied and filed his motion for new trial. In this he alleges that John Crabtree, one of the jurors, was employed by the county and worked in and about the court house; -that ■he knew of the former convictions of the defendant and that he took i-nto- consideration in fixing the penalty in this cause su-ch former convictions and was influenced by such knowledge; that, thereby, he was not h fair and impartial juror. When the mo-*689tio-n .for new trial was heard; Crabtree was the only juror called to -testify. He stated that ‘he did not know the accused at the time he was selected to try the case and he did not know that the defendant had ever before been convicted of violating the liquor laws of the State of Texas until they had received the case and were in the jury room deliberating. He said that one of -the jurors stated to the jury, while in the room deliberating on this case and before they arrived at a verdict, -that the accused had been convicted a number of times of violation of liquor laws in Palo Pinto County. He did not remember -the name of the juror who made such statement. He says that was the first that he knew of his former convictions.
It will be observed that the allegations set out -in the motion for new trial were to the effect -that Crabtree himself was an unfai.r juror. It is -not shown that he, or any other juror, was questioned regarding his qualifications as a juror before he was accepted. Appellant was not misled by any statement which this juror -made on voir dire examination and it is not proven that he was an unfair juror. The matter upon which appellant now relies is foreign to the allegations in his motion for new trial. Consequently, we think that the rule stated in Harvey v. State, Tex.Crim.App., 201 S.W.2d 42, is controlling.
Finding no reversible error, -the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.