Barkley v.Tarrant County

53 Tex. 251, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 64
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1880
DocketCase No. 4024
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 53 Tex. 251 (Barkley v.Tarrant County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barkley v.Tarrant County, 53 Tex. 251, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 64 (Tex. 1880).

Opinion

Bonner, Associate Justice.

This is a suit brought by the county of Tarrant, as plaintiff, against B. F. Barkley, as former treasurer of that county, and the sureties on his official bond, for alleged breaches of the same, in this, substantially, that Barkley, as such treasurer, had received certain funds belonging to the county, and had failed to account for the same, including the amounts of sundry mistakes made against the county in two settlements with the police court, one made April 11, 1872, and the other July 21, 1872.

The defendants answered by special exceptions, general denial, and further, that defendant Barkley had not only fully accounted for and paid over all county funds which had been received by him as such treasurer, but had by mistake overpaid the same to the amount of §2,398.70, for which he asks judgment in reconvention.

During the pendency of the suit J. F. Arnold was appointed auditor, who returned into court his report showing a balance in favor of the county for §6,298.90, and on the final trial, [253]*253judgment was rendered for the county for $6,363.48, from which this appeal was taken.

The plaintiff below moved to strike out the special exceptions of defendants, filed September 26, 1879, to plaintiff’s amended original petition, filed May 26, 1879, because the same were not filed in due order, but after pleading to the merits.

This motion was sustained, and this is assigned as error.

The record shows that these special exceptions were embraced in defendant’s .third amended original answer, but the previous answers are not set out, and hence we are not advised as to the character of the same — whether simply answers of law which might be amended before finally pleading to the merits, or answers.of fact which would, as a general rule, preclude subsequent exceptions raising questions of law, unless they went to the foundation of the action. R. S., 1268; Drake v. Brander, 8 Tex., 351; Fowler v. Stoneum, 11 Tex., 478; Oliver v. Chapman, 15 Tex., 400.

As presented by the record, we must presume in favor of the judgment below, that the motion to strike out was properly sustained.

The judgment of the court refusing to sustain the sixth and tenth grounds of the motion to set aside the report of the auditor, is also assigned as error.

These grounds of this motion relate solely to alleged errors of the auditor upon questions of fact, and the evidence which was before him is not shown in the record by bill of exceptions or otherwise. The bills of exception purporting to have been taken before the auditor, are not signed by him, and hence are not so authenticated as that we can consider them.

This court will not review, for it cannot do so advisedly, the judgment of the court below, upon a motion to set aside the report of an auditor, unless the matter complained of is apparent upon the face of the report itself, or otherwise properly shown upon the record.

The defendants further assign as error the judgment of the [254]*254court overruling their objections to the introduction in evidence of the auditor’s report.

There were two objections made to the introduction of this report.

The first was, that upon its face it showed that the sum of $3,500 was allowed therein against defendants, as items of indebtedness taken from Barkley’s books as treasurer for 1872, when there was no allegation to this effect in plaintiff’s last amended petition.

If the report of the auditor was not in response to the pleadings of the parties, it should, to that extent, have been excluded, and the failure to do so would, if objected to, and assigned as error, be subject to revision in this court; but it is a sufficient answer to the objection here made, to say that plaintiff’s last amended pleading was a supplemental petition in the nature of a replication, and that in the previous pleading, and which was relied upon on the trial, there was an allegation that defendants were indebted to plaintiffs, as shown by the books of Barkley, in the sum of $4,233.58. This was a sufficient allegation to have sustained, under proper evidence, the items of $3,500, shown by the treasurer’s books, as contained in the auditor’s report.

The second objection to the report as evidence was, that the plaintiff had alleged a settlement between the police court and defendant Barkley on July 31, 1872, and it appeared that said above items were entered upon the treasurer’s books prior to said settlement, and there was no allegation that they were therein omitted. A settlement between the parties would prima facie be presumed to have embraced all prior transactions between them, relating to the same subject matter, and unless the settlement was sought to be set aside by allegations and evidence of fraud, accident or mistake, this presumption would be conclusive.

As regards this second objection, however, we are met with the same difficulty which arises in a previously assigned error — that it is not shown, either upon the face of the re[255]*255port itself or otherwise upon the record, that the objection was well taken.

Although the particular pages of the treasurer’s book are given in the report, upon which it is stated that the several items are shown, it does not appear whether the same were prior or subsequent to the settlement of July 31, 1872.

The fourth error assigned is, that the court erred in rejecting the evidence of Cross and Barkley, as shown by bill of exceptions No. 2.

This bill of exceptions shows that the defendants offered to prove by these witnesses, that sundry alleged errors shown by the report of the auditor to have been made in the first settlement of April 11, 1872, were not in facts errors, and to explain why they were not; which testimony was rejected by the court, because the defendants had not specially alleged them to have been errors in their last amended answer, or pointed them out as such, in any pleading after said report was filed.

This will be considered in connection with the fifth assigned error — that the court erred in the following part of the charge to the jury: Whenever the defendant, in his answer, has averred a different state of facts from that contained in said report (but no further), you are at liberty, if you find those facts so averred sustained by the evidence, to find at variance with the report of the auditor. In all other matters, inasmuch as the auditor’s report is in evidence before you, it will be your duty to be governed by the same.”

The auditor’s report was filed September 15, 1879. Subsequently thereto, the defendants, in addition to the motion to set the same aside, referred to above, filed also:

First. An amended original answer, in which, among other things, they pleaded a general denial, and specially that defendant Barkley had made the settlement of date April 16, 1872, with the police court, and that he did at that time pay over the whole amount of every kind of funds which he had received as treasurer to that date.

[256]*256This allegation was sufficiently comprehensive to have included the items of this settlement alleged in the report of the auditor to have been errors, and to contradict which the testimony of the witnesses Cross and Barkley was offered by defendants.

Second.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Tex. 251, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barkley-vtarrant-county-tex-1880.