
    Ex parte O’FIEL.
    (No. 6947.)
    (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
    Jan. 10, 1923.)
    1. Contempt <§=8 — Filing offensive paper is. constructive contempt.
    The filing in a court proceeding' of a paper offensive to the court is a constructive contempt.
    2. Contempt <§=>52 — Refusal to withdraw offensive paragraph lieid not to warrant final judgment for-contempt without notice and hearing.
    Refusal of an attorney who is before the court in obedience to a verbal request to withdraw an offensive paragraph contained in a motion for a new trial is not such an act in the presence of the court as of itself would justify the entry of a final judgment of contempt without notice and hearing.
    3. Contempt <§=8 — Writing charging court with partiality held contemptuous if untrue.
    A paragraph in a motion for a new trial, which in strong language charges the court with partiality, setting forth acts and conduct during trial constituting such prejudice, is contemptuous if untrue.
    4. Contempt <§=52 — One guilty of constructive contempt for filing offensive paper entitled to hearing before final judgment
    Where contempt, if any, consists in the filing of a paragraph as part of a motion for new trial which charges the court in strong language with partiality, the party filing such paper is entitled to a hearing after summons and notice for determining the truth of the charges before a final judgment for contempt is entered against him, notwithstanding the acts complained of were committed in the court’s presence, and it was within his knowledge whether they were true or not.
    Original application by David O’Fiel for a writ of habeas corpus. Writ issued, and relator discharged.
    Brooks, Hart & Woodward, of Austin, and David E. O’Fiel, of Beaumont, for appellant.
    R. G. Storey, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.
   LATTIMORE, J.

This is a direct application to this court for the issuance of a. writ of habeas corpus. Relator was the attorney for one Anderson, who was upon trial for a felony in the district court at Beaumont, Tex., and following conviction thereof said attorney filed his motion for a new trial, one paragraph of which charged the trial court in strong language with partiality toward the state, and acts and conduct in detail during the trial in the presence and hearing- of the jury, which, as alleged in said paragraph of said motion, greatly prejudiced the rights of relator’s client and made it impossible for him to obtain a fair and impartial trial. Said motion was presented to the court for his action by another member of relator’s law firm. When the objectionable paragraph was reached and read, the court halted further proceeding, ascertained that relator had written and filed said motion, sent for him, and ashed him if he had so written and filed same, and upon ■ affirmative answer said court directed the withdrawal of said paragraph from the motion, and upon the refusal of relator so to do entered an order and judgment of contempt against him, remanding him to the custody of the sheriff until a fine in the sum of $100 should be paid. Upon the usual allegation of illegal restraint this court issued its writ of habeas corpus.

From the agreed statement of facts on file it appears that the judgment of contempt was excepted to by relator upon the ground that he had been served with no notice of any charge of contempt, nor given any opportunity to present testimony in support of the truth of the facts set out in said paragraph of his said motion, nor had he been accorded any trial upon the merits of the matter of the alleged contempt. From the facts appearing in said agreed statement, we are led to believe this exception to rest upon good ground.

That the filing of an offensive paper in a court proceeding is a constructive contempt seems held in Ex parte Ireland, 38 Tex. 357; Ex parte Kilgore, 3 Tex. App. 253; Ex parte Landry, 65 Tex. Cr. R. 440, 144 S. W. 962; Ex parte Duncan, 78 Tex. Cr. R. 447, 182 S. W. 313, 2 A. L. R. 222. Many authorities are collated in support of this proposition in Ruling Case Law, vol. 13, O. J. p. 5. We do not think the fact that relator came to the courthouse in obedience to the verbal request of the court below, and there in person declined to withdraw the offensive paragraph, would be held such act in the presence of the court as of itself would justify the summary entry of a final judgment of contempt, but are of opinion that, the matter having thus been' brought directly to the attention of the trial court, at least a judgment nisi could have been entered, followed by summons, notice, and hearing, before the court could properly have entered such final judgment. Crow v. State, 24 Tex. 12; Ex parte Kilgore, supra.

That the matter stated in said paragraph of said motion was contemptuous if untrue seems to us to be plain; but in Ex parte Green, 46 Tex. Cr. R. 581, 81 S. W. 725, 66 L. R. A. 727, 108 Am. St. Rep. 1035, we said:

“As stated above, we gather from the current authorities, both those cited and others, that there can be no constructive contempt of court with reference to publications reflecting on the court or the judge thereof, unless the publication is not only of a defamatory character but is untrue.”

In the opinion of said case it is stated that the trial court declined to permit the introduction of testimony on the part of the relator showing the truth of the alleged contemptuous utterance, the reason for such refusal being that the matters and facts referred to in said utterance were all done and said in the presence of the court, and that the court knew that the charges contained in said utterance were untrue.

It appearing without controversy that the contempt, if any, in the instant case was constructive, and that no notice or summons was served upon relator, and no opportunity given him for the presentation of testimony supporting the truth of the matters set out in said motion, it follows that in our opinion the judgment of contempt herein is void.

The matter is of grave importance. Utterances such as those appearing in said motion for new trial are of a character most seriously reflective upon the courts, and should not be tolerated except upon the hypothesis that they áre' true and present a condition whose existence should be shown as a part of the defense of a citizen on trial for his liberty. If true, the matters alleged in said motion may be stated in respectful language; and, even though the trial court be of opinion that within his knowledge such allegations are false, opportunity should be afforded for the presentation of relator’s side of the controversy, to the end that he may purge himself or show cause as best he can why he should not be held in contempt. The more honorable the trial court, the more keenly he is apt to be affected by such charges, and the more care he should exercise lest his disposition of the supposed offender be touched by the feeling naturally aroused.

For the reasons above indicated, the judgment of contempt is held void, and relator ordered discharged. 
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