Cruz v. State
Decision Date | 11 March 1925 |
Docket Number | (No. 8711.) |
Citation | 272 S.W. 486 |
Parties | CRUZ v. STATE. |
Court | Texas Court of Criminal Appeals |
Appeal from District Court, Gonzales County; Lester Holt, Judge.
Filimeno Cruz was convicted of manufacturing intoxicating liquor, and appeals. Reformed as to sentence, and affirmed.
Midkiff & Green, of Gonzales, for appellant.
Tom Garrard, State's Atty., and Grover C. Morris, Asst. State's Atty., both of Austin, for the State.
Appellant was convicted in the district court of Gonzales county of manufacturing intoxicating liquor, and his punishment fixed at three years in the penitentiary.
There are but two bills of exception, one taken to the refusal of a continuance applied for before the trial actually began, and the other applied for while the trial was in progress. Each is sought because of the absence of the same witnesses, to wit, Jesus Munos and Agroda Garcia.
The case was tried on January 21, 1924. The allegation and proof of the date of the alleged offense was November 22, 1923, or two months prior to the date of trial. It thus appears from the said return that the absent witnesses had removed from the place where they lived in Caldwell county, if they ever did, two months before the date of the offense. The record thus strongly suggests the proposition that the actual residence of said witnesses was unknown and they did not live in Caldwell county on the date of the issuance of the subpœna to that county for them.
In the first application for continuance, it is stated that appellant expected to prove by said witnesses that each of them was present at the home of appellant at the time the state will prove that officers found a still, mash, spirituous, vinous, and malt liquor, capable of producing intoxication, on the premises occupied by defendant, and that said witnesses would testify that said still and mash were
A raid on appellant's place was conducted by two officers on the 22d of November, 1923. In a garage or auto shed adjacent to appellant's house the officers found a still in operation, consisting of a gasoline stove with two burners, on each burner being a large can of boiling mash or other liquid content, from each of which cans a coil extended through a large candy bucket of water, and from the end of which coil whisky was dripping into a jar. The officers found in this room appellant and one R. Mayo. Outside this room near by they found Candelario Cruz and Jose Gomez. They both testify that they saw no other men in or around the premises. They also testfy that appellant was actually engaged in the manufacture of the liquor at the time they discovered him, one of them saying that he was pouring oil into the stove on which the boiling can set, and the other testifying that he was working around there. Both of them testified that when they went into the room, and appellant saw that he was discovered, he seized a jar into which the whisky was dripping and drank a good portion of its contents, and that it made him very drunk. Candelario Cruz and Jose Gomez were present at the trial and were not used as witnesses. It was shown that the indictments against them had been dismissed. No effort to use them by appellant appears in the record. Appellant introduced no testimony except as to his character. He did not take the stand, nor did he attempt by any other witness to show the presence in and around the premises at the time of said raid of either of the two absent witnesses named in his application for continuance. The trial was on the date above mentioned, and the motion for new trial was presented and acted upon two weeks later, and no affidavit of either of the alleged absent witnesses was appended as supporting the proposition that they would give the testimony said to be within their knowledge.
Aside from the fact that the residence of the witnesses appears to be dubious, we observe, relative to their testimony, several questions are raised. It is held that a continuance is properly refused where it is improbable that the absent witnesses would testify as claimed, or that their testimony would not probably be true. Johnson v. State (Tex. Cr. App.) 35 S. W. 387; Pilgrim v. State, 59 Tex. Cr. R. 231, 128 S. W. 231; Bost v. State, 64 Tex. Cr. R. 464, 144 S. W. 589; Giles v. State, 66 Tex. Cr. R. 638, 148 S. W. 317. It is the duty of the trial court, in passing on a motion for new trial, to consider the probable truth of the testimony expected from the absent witnesses in the light of the evidence adduced on the trial, and such issue is to be determined, not by an arbitrary, but by a sound discretion. Harris v. State, 18 Tex. App. 287; Irvine v. State, 20 Tex. App. 12; Turner v. State, 20 Tex. App. 56; Frazier v. State, 22 Tex. App. 120, 2 S. W. 637; Bronson v. State, 59 Tex. Cr. R. 17, 127 S. W. 175. When the facts as stated in the application for continuance are considered in connection with the evidence adduced and do not appear to be probably true, a new trial should not be granted. Cunningham v. State, 20 Tex. App. 162; Harvey v. State, 21 Tex. App. 178, 17 S. W. 158; Browning v. State, 26 Tex. App. 432, 9 S. W. 770; Green v. State, 36 Tex. Cr. R. 109, 35 S. W. 971; Singleton v. State, 57 Tex. Cr. R. 560, 124 S. W. 92.
In the light of these decisions, it must appear manifest that the trial court did not abuse his discretion in the refusal of the application. Two men who were present at the time the officers made the raid, and...
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