Bath v. Houston & Texas Central Railway Co.

78 S.W. 993, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 234, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 523
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 993 (Bath v. Houston & Texas Central Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bath v. Houston & Texas Central Railway Co., 78 S.W. 993, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 234, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 523 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

Suits were instituted' By appellant against appellees severally for damage to cotton shipped from Ennis,. Texas, to Galveston, Texas, and thence by vessel to- Liverpool, England. The suits were consolidated and the trial resulted1 in a- verdict and! judgment for appellees, from which this appeal has- been, prosecutedi

*235 We are met in the outset with an objection on the part of appellees to a consideration of the principal assignments of error on the ground that there is no statement of facts such as required by law contained in the record, and it will be necessary for us first to dispose of the question thus presented. There is what purports to be a statement of facts found in the transcript, but such statement is not signed by any attorney, and has immediately following its conclusion only the following indorsement on the part of the trial judge, viz: “Approved. Mike B. Smith, Judge.” The statement appears to have been duly filed in the trial court, and the only objections thereto are that, “The purported statement of facts in the record is not signed by the attorneys for either party, and there is no certificate of the judge that the parties disagreed and that he prepared the statement of facts, or that the statement of facts was ever presented to the attorneys of either party; the only attestation being the word ‘approved’ following the statement of facts, with, the name of the judge signed thereto, and the file marks of the clerk thereon.”

Appellant has filed in this court affidavits of his counsel to the effect-that a statement of facts had in truth been prepared by them and submitted to opposing counsel for agreement, as provided by the statute,, and that such opposing counsel declined to agree to the statement as made, and that such statement was thereupon submitted to the judge, together with certain proposed changes desired by appellee’s counsel, and that the judge thereupon adopted and approved the statement as found in the record. We have also the affidavit of the trial judge to-the effect that he took the appellant’s statement, together with corrections desired, as proposed by appellee’s counsel, and therefrom, after-correcting the same, adopted, approved and filed the statement in question.

We have no jurisdiction to consider the affidavits referred to in aid of the statement of facts, the question not being one relating to the jurisdiction of this court. Rev. Stats., art. 998; Boggess v. Harris, 90 Texas, 476; Willis & Bro. v. Smith, 90 Texas, 635. And we therefore-must determine whether, as it appears in the transcript before us, the-statement of facts in this case should be considered. In the case of Hess v. State, 30 Texas Crim. App., 477, 17 S. W. Rep., 1099, the-Court of Criminal Appeals thus disposes of a similar question: “In-the case before us the only authentication of the statement of facts is. in these words: ‘Approved. Geo. McCormick, Judge 25th Judicial Dis-. trict.’ There is no signature of the attorneys to the statement of facts,. and the judge does not certify that they had failed to agree, and that, he, therefore, had made out the statement of facts. If the indorsement. of the judge could be considered as a certificate that the above and fore-, going was a statement of all the evidence in the case, then the presumption would be indulged, and should be indulged, that the parties could not agree, and that the judge had thereupon made out the statement of * *236 facts,” citing authorities. In the case of Renn v. Samos, 42 Texas, 110, our Supreme Court-say, in declining to consider the purported statement of facts under consideration in that case: “It is not shown to be a statement of facts, either by- agreement of counsel or certificate of the presiding judge. It is not stated, in its beginning or conclusion, that it is a statement of the facts proved on the trial. It is a mere recitation of what we may infer was testimony in the case. At the end of it is found the name of counsel for appellant, and on the opposite side of the page from his signature is written ‘Approved,’ underneath which is the signature of the judge before whom the case was tried.”

While it is undoubtedly true that our statute (Rev. Stats., art. 1379), contemplates that there shall be a disagreement on the part of counsel in making up a statement of facts before the court is called upon to do so, yet neither the statute nor any case called to our attention requires such a disagreement of counsel to expressly appear from the statement itself, and we think it is to be implied from the decisions hereinbefore quoted, and also from the cases of Barnhart v. Clark, 59 Texas, 552, and Lacy v. Ash, 25 Texas, 384, that where it is to be fairly inferred from the entire statement under consideration that the facts and all of the facts proven upon the trial are contained therein, that there has been a failure of the respective attorneys to agree thereon, and that the statement has actually been approved and filed by the judge as a full statement of all of the facts, that the statement should be considered by the court. We are of opinion that, considering the statement before us in all of its parts, such is the condition in this case. It is properly entitled and numbered; its caption is as follows: “Be it remembered that upon the trial of the above entitled cause the following testimony was introduced and none other.” Thereupon follows in regular sequence the testimony preceding the judge’s signature as herein-before noted. It appears to have been properly filed in due time, and to have been approved and ordered filed by the trial judge, and we think that it is proper, under the circumstances, to indulge the usual presumption of the regularity of official acts, and to infer that before the judge so acted the counsel in fact had disagreed upon the statement. So concluding, we proceed to a disposition of the questions presented by the assignments of error.

Among other things appellant offered evidence tending to show that, when delivered to the initial carrier, the Houston & Texas Central Bailway Company, the cotton was dry and in good order; that en route to Galveston it was so freely sprinkled or wet, inferentially to avoid danger from fire, as to cause the damage charged. On the other hand there was evidence that tended to show that the cotton, on its arrival at Galveston, was received and' receipted for by the mate of the vessel as in “good order,” and that the cotton, for several months prior to the shipment from Ennis, had been exposed to the elements, considerable evidence as to the amount of rainfall being offered. Appellant offered evidence to the effect that the cotton was securely stowpd in the hold of *237 the vessel and not exposed to sea or other water on its way across the ocean, and that upon its arrival at Liverpool it was found in a badly damaged condition, several experts testifying that such damage was from fresh and not salt water. In this condition of the evidence appellant upon the trial offered' the answer of Peter Forsyth, the mate of the vessel, to the third interrogatory in his deposition, which answer among other things contained the following statements: “I remember some cotton being wet when loaded, but could not state positively that it was this lot inquired about.

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78 S.W. 993, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 234, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bath-v-houston-texas-central-railway-co-texapp-1904.