Barron v. James

198 S.W.2d 256, 145 Tex. 283, 1946 Tex. LEXIS 151
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1946
DocketNo. A-934.
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 256 (Barron v. James) 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
Barron v. James, 198 S.W.2d 256, 145 Tex. 283, 1946 Tex. LEXIS 151 (Tex. 1946).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smedley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Court of Civil Appeals, in an opinion published in 196 S. W. (2d) 245, affirmed a judgment of the district court, in favor of respondent against petitioners, for damages in the sum of $3,550.00, after having declined to permit petitioners to file a supplemental transcript and statement of facts which showed the proceedings in the trial of a plea, of privilege filed by petitioners. The case was tried on the merits and final judgment rendered during the term of district court at which the plea of privilege was heard and overruled, and appeal was perfected after judgment was rendered on the merits.

Petitioner Barron was the owner and petitioner Upchurch *286 was the driver of a bus operated for hire on the public highway ■ between Navasota and Conroe. Respondent was riding his horse on the public highway in Montgomerey County. The horse and the bus collided, with injury to horse and rider. According to respondent’s allegations and evidence, the bus was driven ^gainst the horse. Petitioners contended, and offered evidence tending to prove, that the horse ran into the side of the bus.

Petitioners filed a plea of privilege in due form to be sued in Grimes County, where they resided. Respondent filed a controverting affidavit containing no allegations of fact, but stating that all the allegations of respondent’s original petition were incorporated in the affidavit as fully as if written therein, and containing the allegation that the acts of negligence alleged in the petition “were active acts of negligence, trespass and crimes committed in Montgomery County,” and that by reason thereof the court had jurisdiction of the defendants under Section 9 of Article 1995 of the Revised Civil Statutes. Petitioners’ exceptions to the controverting affidavit were overruled and, after hearing the plea of privilege before a jury, the court on March 26, 1945, overruled the plea, to which order the petitioners excepted and gave notice of appeal.

Trial of the case on the merits was begun on March 29, 1945, and following a verdict favorable to respondent, judgment was rendered on April 9, 1945. Petitioners filed a motion for new trial and an amended motion for new trial, which was overruled April 20, 1945. The term of court began February 26, 1945, and ended on April 21, 1945. Petitioners’ supersedeas bond was filed May 7, 1945, and the transcript and statement of facts showing the preceedings on the trial on the merits were filed in the Court of Civil Appeals June 26, 1945. On the same day petitioners tendered to the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals for filing a transcript and statement of facts showing the proceedings on the trial of the plea of privilege. These the clerk, on instructions from the court, declined to file. Petitioners’ motion, filed June 29, 1945, for permission to file the transcript and statements of facts as supplemental of the transcript and statement of facts relating to the trial on the merits, was overruled.

In their brief filed in the Court of Civil Appeals, after perfecting their appeal following the trial on the merits, petitioners presented many points attacking the order of the court overruling their plea of privilege and complaining of errors of the district court in the trial of the plea. As shown by its opinion, the *287 Court of Civil Appeals declined to consider these points “because they raise matters not before us,” meaning that they presented questions as to alleged errors in the trial of the plea of privilege, the proceedings with reference to which did not appear in the transcript and statement of facts which had been filed.

The Court of Civil Appeals recognized the settled rule that when a plea of privilege is overruled the court may proceed at once to trial on the merits and that in the event the case is “tried on its merits during the term of court at which the plea was overruled, the defendant can, by proper exception, have the ruling of the court considered on appeal from final judgment, without the necessity of perfecting a separate appeal from the order overruling his plea of privilege.” Smith Bros. Grain Co. v. Windsor & Stanley (Com. App.), 255 S. W. 158. See also Gray v. Adolph, 117 S. W. (2d) 122, application for writ of error refused. That court, however, adhered to its ruling, which denied petitioners permission to file the supplemental transcript and statement of facts, and held that the fight of review of the trial court’s order overruling the plea of privilege was not available to them because the only assignment of error appearing in the motion for new trial, filed after judgment on 'the merits, and attacking the trial court’s order on the plea of privilege was too general.

The Rules of Practice and Procedure work no change in the rule above quoted from Smith Bros. Grain Co. v. Windsor & Stanley (Com. App.), 255 S. W. 158. Rules 86 and 87 provide for the filing of pleas of privilege and controverting affidavits and for trial of the issues made thereby, in substantially the same language (with some changes not material here) as that which appears in Articles 2007 and 2008 of the Revised Civil Statutes. The Rules do not undertake to authorize appeals from orders sustaining or overruling pleas of privilege, but they leave in effect that part of Article 2008 granting the right to appeal. A note following Rule 87 states that Article 2008, in so far as it grants the right of appeal, is deemed jurisdictional, and hence not repealed. According to that part of Article 2008, either party may appeal from the judgment sustaining or overruling the plea of privilege. Subdivision (c) of Rule 385, taken from Article 2008, provides that' “Where the appeal is from an order sustaining a plea of privilege, transfer of the venue and trial upon the merits shall be suspended pending the appeal.”

*288 It follows from the rules to which reference has been made, from what remains of Article 2008 and from the decisions above cited that, while petitioners could have prosecuted an appeal from the order overruling their plea of privilege, they were not required to do so, but were entitled by proper exception to have the ruling of the trial court on the plea of privilege considered on the appeal from the final judgment, the case having been tried on the merits during the term of' court at which the plea of privilege was overruled.

Petitioners undertook to appeal from the order overruling their plea of privilege, but they did not perfect an appeal from that order. Rule 385 provides that appeals from interlocutory orders when allowed by law may be taken by “ (a) Filing an appeal or supersedeas bond within twenty days after the rendition of the order appealed from * * *; and (b) Filing the record in the appellate court within twenty days after the rendition of the order appealed from. * * *” Rule 385 further provides that in appeals from interlocutory orders there shall be no motion for a new tri'al. The bond filed by petitioners for the purpose of appealing from the order on the plea of privilege was filed in the district court, and the record was tendered for filing in the Court of Civil Appeals, after the expiration of the twenty day period.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.2d 256, 145 Tex. 283, 1946 Tex. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barron-v-james-tex-1946.