Full opinion text
PRENDERGAST, J. By complaint, and information thereon, tbe appellant was charged with resisting arrest under “a valid legal warrant for bis arrest.” They charged that theretofore be bad been charged with a misdemeanor, to wit, with slander, and that said warrant bad been issued by tbe county clerk of Delta county, copying it literally and fully in both tbe complaint and information. It is unnecessary for us to copy this warrant of arrest in full. It was regular on its face, and in substantial, if not in literal, compliance with article 266 (new), 254 (old), of tbe Revised. C. C. P., except in this particular: In describing tbe offense with which he is charged, on which the warrant of arrest was issued, it said, “wherein said defendant is charged with the offense of a misdemeanor,” instead of, as required by subdivision 2 of said article of the O. O. P., “it must state that the person is accused of some offense against the laws of the state, naming ihe offenseThis precise requisite is also prescribed for a warrant of arrest in article 975 (new), 940 (old), C. O. P. The acts the defendant did in resisting the arrest were properly charged in said complaint and information. The appellant made a motion to quash the information, because it did not charge him with having committed any offense. This motion was overruled by the court, to which defendant properly took his bill of exceptions. In addition thereto, he also presented the same question more fully in his motion for new trial, which the court overruled. The appellant was tried, convicted, and his penalty affixed at a fine of $5. Under the view we take of this question, it is- necessary to pass upon only the one question raised, as stated above. The statute under which this prosecution and conviction was had is as follows: “If the party against whom a legal warrant of arrest is directed, in any criminal case, resist its execution, when attempted by any person legally authorized to execute the same, he shall be fined not exceeding five hundred dollars. * * * ” P. C. art. 344 (new), 238 (old). This article of the Code seems to have been enacted in precisely the language it now is when our Penal Code was first adopted, and has never been amended at any time. It is under the same title and chapter of the Code, and seems to have so been all the time, as articles 339, 340, and 341 (new), 235, 236, and 237 (old). Article 339 is: “If any person shall willfully oppose or resist an officer in executing or attempting to execute any lawful warrant for the arrest of another person in a case of felony, he shall be punished,” etc. Article 340 is: “If any person shall willfully oppose or resist an officer in executing, or attempting to execute, any lawful warrant for the arrest of another person in a case of a misdemeanor * * * he shall be punished,” etc. Article 341 is: “If any person shall willfully resist or oppose any officer in executing or attempting to execute any process in a civil cause, he shall be fined,” etc. It will be noticed that in articles 339 and 340 the language is, “any lawful warrant.” But in article 341 it does not require that the process in a civil case shall be lawful or legal, but says “any process.” Then the language in article 344 is “a legal warrant.” The statute under which this prosecution and conviction was had has been construed several times by this court. In the case of Fulkerson v. State, 43 Tex. Cr. R. 588, 67 S. W. 502, the warrant there charged to have been resisted was, in effect, the same as the warrant in this case, except that therein the offense named was “wherein the said B. H. Fulkerson is accused of the offense of gaming." This court, through Judge Brooks, in that case, after quoting articles 238 and 254 (old) as we have quoted them above, said: “It will be noted article 238, supra, makes it a prerequisite to a violation of the law that the party shall resist a legal warrant of arrest; and article 254, supra, designates what are the legal requisites of a warrant. We think the court erred in refusing to quash the information, since the warrant of arrest as copied in the information does not state any offense against the laws of this state. Gaming, eo nomine, is not an offense under our law; and, it being a prerequisite of a warrant of arrest that it should state an offense, and gaming not being an offense, it follows that the warrant of arrest was not a legal warrant, within the contemplation of the statutes under which this prosecution was instituted. Toliver v. State, 32 Tex. Cr. R. 444 [24 S. W. 286].” (Italics ours.) This court has also, in other cases, so construed these statutes. See McGrew v. State, 17 Tex. App. 613; Toliver v. State, 32 Tex. Cr. R. 444, 24 S. W. 286; Graham v. State, 29 Tex. App. 31, 13 S. W. 1013. See, also, Hill v. State, 43 Tex. 329; Alford v. State, 8 Tex. App. 545; Pierce v. State, 17 Tex. App. 232; Lee v. State, 45 Tex. Cr. R. 95, 74 S. W. 28. The writer of this opinion would not construe these statutes in this case as they have been construed by the cases above cited, but under the peculiar language of the various articles of the statute cited above, and of the decisions of this court heretofore thereon, the Legislature not changing the statute after the courts so construed said acts, and the new Revised Code copying them literally as they have been heretofore, he feels bound by such construction, and believes he would not be Justified in overruling the said decisions and now construing the statutes as he believes they' should have been. We therefore, in this case, follow the said decisions above cited, and hold that the complaint and information are insufficient, and that appellant’s motion to quash, and ground of the motion for new trial attacking them, should have been sustained. The judgment in this case will therefore be reversed, and the complaint ordered dismissed. DAVIDSON, P. X, not sitting.