Ex Parte Fisher
Decision Date | 12 November 1947 |
Docket Number | No. A-1328.,A-1328. |
Citation | 206 S.W.2d 1000 |
Parties | Ex parte FISHER. |
Court | Texas Supreme Court |
Looney & Clark, Everett L. Looney, Edward Clark, and R. Dean Moorhead, all of Austin, and Collins, Dies, Williams & Garrison, J. J. Collins, and Martin Dies, all of Lufkin, for petitioner.
Robert W. Hillin, Dist. Atty., of Jasper, for District Judge.
This is an original habeas corpus proceeding in which the relator, Honorable Joe Fisher, seeks his release from an order of the district court of Jasper County, adjudging him in contempt of court, assessing a fine of $100 and a jail sentence of three days, and committing him to the custody of the sheriff.
The contempt order arose in the trial of a workman's compensation suit in which the relator was attorney for the claimant. The suit was by Anderson Godfrey, claimant, against the Texas Indemnity Corporation for compensation for injuries to claimant's left foot. His weekly wage rate and the compensation due per week were agreed upon by the parties. The only issues remaining in controversy were those with reference to the extent and duration of the injury, and these were submitted to the jury. These issues inquired: (1) if the claimant sustained total incapacity; (2) when the total incapacity, if any, began; (3) how long it has or will continue; (4) whether claimant sustained a partial loss of the use of his foot; (5) when the partial loss of use, if any, began or will begin; (6) how long the partial loss of use, if any, has continued or will continue; and (7) what was the extent or degree of partial loss of use, if any? In the first portion of the charge the trial court gave the usual admonitory instructions to the jury, among which were that the jurors would receive the law from the court as contained in the charge and that they must not discuss what effect any of their answers should have upon the rights of the parties nor of the judgment to be rendered by the court. Thereafter, the court defined "preponderance of the evidence," "natural result," "injury," "total incapacity," and "partial loss of use."
During his opening argument to the jury the relator began to explain the difference between a general injury and a specific injury, and stated that claimant's injury was a specific injury to his left foot for which the maximum compensation provided by law was one hundred and twenty-five weeks. He continued:
At that point Honorable Joyce Cox, counsel for the insurance company, objected because the jury was not concerned with the computation since such issues were not submitted. Thereupon, the following discourse occurred in open court:
The above proceedings occurred in open court at 9:30 A.M. on June 7, 1947. Ten minutes later there was filed with the district clerk an order of contempt which was signed by the trial judge. No commitment was issued on that order. However, the sheriff held the relator upon the verbal order of the trial court until an amended order was filed between three and four o'clock P.M., of the same day. This amended order contained a full recitation of the above proceedings and was accompanied by a formal commitment. That order and commitment were in effect at the time we issued our temporary writ of habeas corpus, and it is upon these latter instruments that we base our decision.
In a habeas corpus proceeding of this character this court has only limited powers. The inquiry before us is whether or not a citizen is restrained of his liberty without due process of law. In determining this matter we are restricted to the question of jurisdiction, the lack of which would render the judgment void. In passing on the court's authority we look to the jurisdiction of the subject matter involved in the alleged contempt, jurisdiction of the person, and the power of the court to render the particular judgment. Whether he committed the act charged is conclusively determined by the order or judgment of the trial court in the proceeding wherein he is adjudged in contempt, provided that court possessed jurisdiction. We may consider the facts only for the purpose of determining whether they constituted acts sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the court to make the particular order. Ex parte Testard, 101 Tex. 250, 106 S.W. 319; Ex parte Olson, 111 Tex. 601, 243 S.W. 773; Ex parte Lipscomb, 111 Tex. 409, 239 S.W. 1101; Ex parte Duncan, 127 Tex. 507, 95 S.W.2d 675; Ex parte Hughes, 133 Tex. 505, 129 S.W.2d 270; Ex parte Genecov, 143 Tex. 476, 186 S.W.2d 225, 160 A.L.R. 1099; Ex parte Norton, 144 Tex. 445, 191 S.W.2d 713; Ex parte Dulaney, Tex.Sup., 203 S.W.2d 203; 25 Am.Jur. 212, Sec. 92; 39 C.J.S., Habeas Corpus, § 36.
In the Testard case, supra, in discussing our powers in proceedings of this character, this court said [101 Tex. 250, 106 S.W. 320]:
That particular language from Judge Williams was quoted with express approval by this court in both the Duncan and Norton cases, supra, wherein in each case similar rules of law were applied.
With these principles in mind we must determine whether the conduct of the relator was such as to invoke the jurisdiction of the court to enter the particular order herein involved. In passing on this question we must consider the proceedings as a whole and not merely isolated portions thereof. If there is any conduct or behavior of the relator contained in the whole proceedings sufficient to constitute a contempt which was within the power of the court to punish, our inquiry comes to an end. Of course, if from our examination of the entire proceedings it appears that the trial court exceeded its powers in making the order which the relator disobeyed or where the act charged was not one which it had the power to punish as a contempt, the alleged misconduct would not as a matter of law constitute a contempt, and the relator would be entitled to be discharged.
From the judgment of contempt it appears, as above indicated, that the relator began to explain to the jury that his client had suffered a specific injury to his foot for which he stated that the maximum compensation provided by law was one hundred and twenty-five weeks. He further informed the jury that such amount was all his client was asking, which he said meant "one hundred and twenty-five weeks times the average weekly compensation rate." Objection was made to that argument on the ground that the jury was not concerned with the computation since those issues were not submitted. The objection was sustained. The relator responded that he thought it was material "to tell the jury what the average weekly compensation is of this claimant so they can tell where he is." The court replied that the jury was not...
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In re Reece
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