
    Ex parte SMITH.
    (No. 3319.)
    (Supreme Court of Texas.
    June 28, 1919.)
    1. Habeas Ooeptjs <&wkey;22(l) — Questions Re-vie wable — J UD GHENT.
    Judgment committing applicant to sheriff’s custody, not shown to be void, cannot be reviewed on habeas corpus proceeding.
    2. Habeas Corpus <&wkey;92(l) — Question—Defenses.
    Where applicant does not contend that he was adjudged guilty without evidence being heard, and does not bring up all the evidence, the court’s refusal to sustain his defenses is not reviewable on haaeas corpus proceeding.
    3. Mandamus <&wkey;186 — Violation op Writ-Service — Actual Knowledge.
    Where applicant for habeas corpus disobeyed mandamus judgment with knowledge of its terms, he cannot complain that mandamus writ was not actually served on him.
    Habeas corpus .proceeding by O. M. Smith. Applicant remanded to custody of sheriff.
    A. C. Van Velzer, of Houston, for applicant.
   GREENWOOD, J.

In this case an original •writ of habeas corpus was granted, on the petition of the applicant, O. M. Smith, alleging that he is illegally detained in the custody of the sheriff of Harris county, under a commitment on a judgment of the district court of the Sixty-Eirst judicial district of Texas adjudging applicant guilty of contempt for failing and refusing to perform a previous judgment of that court, as well as a prior judgment of the district court of the Fifty-Fifth judicial district.

. It appears that on May 19, 1917, John H. Orooker, after a hearing at which all parties appeared, recovered a judgment in the district court of the Fifty-Fifth judicial district of Texas, awarding him a peremptory writ of mandamus directed to the applicant, G. M. Smith, as clerk of the corporation court of the city of Magnolia Park, in Harris county, Tex., requiring him to tax as costs, in each case of a prosecution in said court for a violation of a penal law of Texas, or for a violation of an ordinance involving an offense, made penal by state law, a fee in favor of John H. Orooker, as criminal district attorney of Harris county, of $5 on each conviction on a plea of guilty and of $10 on each conviction on a plea of not guilty.

It further appears that the Court of Civil Appeals of the First Supreme Judicial District of Texas, on writ of error, affirmed the foregoing judgment in favor of John H. Orooker and against the applicant on November 14, 1918. Monk v. Orooker, 207 S. W. 194.

On December 28, 1918, John H. Orooker filed an affidavit in the district court of the Fifty-Fifth judicial district of Texas, averring that the applicant, had been at all times and still was clerk of said corporation court, j and yet had wholly failed and refused to perform the judgment awarding said writ of mandamus, and had failed and refused to tax or collect the fees required by the judgment. The disqualification of the district judge having been regularly certified, the Governor directed Hon. Henry J. Dannenbaum, judge of the Sixty-First judicial district of Texas, to exchange with said disqualified judge and try the cause, and thereafter the same was transferred to the district court of the Sixty-First judicial district, by an order made by Judge Dannenbaum, as expressly authorized by section 8 of the act of February 16, 1903.

After the said O. M. Smith had been duly cited and had appeared and answered, the district court of the Sixty-First judicial district of Texas, on April 9, 1919, having heard evidence and argument of counsel, adjudged that O. M. Smith do make, prepare, and file in said cause a true and correct statement of all criminal cases on the docket of the corporation court of the city of Magnolia Park, involving violations of the penal laws of the state, and showing the proper' fee taxed in favor of John H. Orooker, and that said statement be filed within ten days, and that should the said O. M. Smith fail and refuse to comply with said judgment on or before April 20, 1919, then that he appear at 10 o’clock on that date and show cause why he should not be adjudged in contempt.

On May 26, 1919, the said Smith having appeared and filed an additional answer, but offering no evidence save that heard on April 9, 1919, the court, being of the opinion that no excuse had been shown for his failure to observe the judgments previously entered, adjudged that the said O. M. Smith was guilty of contempt, and commitment was ordered to issue to the sheriff of Harris county, commanding him to take and keep the said Smith in his custody in the county jail until such time ás he should have purged himself of his contemptuous conduct, or until such time as the court might order his discharge.

Since the applicant has wholly failed to show that the judgment committing him into the sheriff’s custody is void, he cannot have same reviewed in this proceeding. Ex parte Tinsley, 37 Tex. Cr. R. 517, 40 S. W. 306, 66 Am. St. Rep. 818; Ex parte Siebold, 100 U. S. 375, 25 L. Ed. 717. The transfer of the cause to the Sixty-First judicial district was authorized by the statute and was not open to collateral attack. There can be no doubt about the jurisdiction over both subject-matter and parties in the suit, wherein the judgment was entered and affirmed, granting the peremptory mandamus, and it appears to be a fact that the applicant has refused to obey the judgment without substantial excuse.

Since the applicant does not contend that the district court adjudged him guilty without hearing any evidence, and since he has not brought before us all the evidence introduced at the hearing, he is clearly not entitled to have us consider his complaints with respect to the refusal of the court to sustain his defenses. As said in the opinion of Judge Williams in Ex parte Testard, 101 Tex. 254, 106 S. W. 320:

“This is not an appeal from the judgment of the district court, but an application for the release of the relator, which can be sustained only by making it appear that the judgment is void. An attack based upon the charge that a hearing was denied, or that a conviction was adjudged without any evidence, necessarily depends for its success upon what was done in the trial court and must be supported by a showing of all that occurred there. No attempt at such a showing has been made, and we must presume that there was a hearing, that opportunity to adduce evidence was allowed, and that there was evidence tending to support the conclusion of the court expressed in the judgment. The judgment, therefore, is valid against collateral attack, and no amount of evidence offered before this court, tending to show that the relator was in fact innocent of the charge, can now avail him. The question of his guilt or innocence was for the trial court, and was concluded by its judgment pronounced after a hearing.”

We cannot sustain the contention that the court possessed no power to punish applicant for disobedience of the judgment awarding the mandamus because no writ had been actually served upon him; it appearing that he had failed and refused to obey the judgment with full knowledge of its terms. In Bradley v. McCrabb, Dallam’s Dig. 510, it was held that service of an alternative writ of mandamus would have been “an idle and troublesome ceremony, without any conceivable advantage,” on a clerk who had recorded an order directing him to show cause why the mandamus should not issue. >

No good reason occurs to ns for prescribing a different rule in mandamus cases from that governing injunction cases, where it is settled that actual service of a writ is unimportant, where the party violating the injunction has full knowledge of the order granting it. Ex parte Young and Levine, 103 Tex. 473, 129 S. W. 599.

The conclusion that the order of the district court was valid requires that the applicant he remanded to the custody of the sheriff of Harris county; and it is so ordered. 
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