Borden v. Houston

2 Tex. 594
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 2 Tex. 594 (Borden v. Houston) 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
Borden v. Houston, 2 Tex. 594 (Tex. 1847).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wheelee,

after having stated the facts of the-[599]*599case as they are recited in the commencement of this report, delivered the opinion of the court.

A preliminary objection is now urged to the authority of the district court sitting in Harris county to entertain jurisdiction of this case. This objection is based upon the absence of anything in the record to show that the court in Galveston acted rightly in awarding a change of venue.

The objection, in effect, assumes that this court will reverse the judgment of the district court, unless it affirmatively appear that that court did not err; whereas, to authorize a reversal, it must appear affirmatively that the court did err in its proceedings and judgment.

By the statute in force at the date of these proceedings, it was made the duty of the judge to change the venue in any case in which he might be interested upon the motion of any practicing attorney. 7 Stat. 36. The proceedings of the court in Galveston touching the change of venue are not embraced in the record before us, which purports to contain only a transcript of the proceedings in Harris, not of those had in Galveston county. We are not informed, therefore, as to the grounds and merits of the application, or the course of proceeding in which the change of venue was awarded.

But we are required to indulge every reasonable presumption in favor of the action taken by the district court, it being a court not of a limited and special, but of general jurisdiction, and whose proceedings, therefore, must be taken to have been in all- things legal and correct. We must presume, the contrary not appearing, that a case was presented to the court sitting in Galveston which came within the provisions of the statute, and made it legal and proper for the court to award the change of venue in question.

The appellants had been served with process and had answered to the action before the change of venue was awarded. They must be presumed to have been in court and cognizant of the action taken in the case, and if aggrieved by it, it was incumbent on them as vigilant suitors to have contested it at the time. 4 Bibb, 397. It was competent for them to have embodied in the record all the proceedings, together with [600]*600tlieir exceptions, and if in those proceedings there was any illegality or error, for which they would reverse the judgment, it was incumbent on them to bring before us the record of those proceedings for revision; otherwise we cannot undertake to say there was error. That would be to reverse the rule which requires ns to indulge every presumption in favor of the judgment. Instead of requiring the appellant to bring up the record, and to indicate, and, in the language of a learned court, to put his finger on the error,” before the appellate court will reverse the judgment, it would be to reverse the judgment because the party, whose duty it was, had failed to bring up the record, and because, therefore, it did not appear whether there was or was not error in the judgment sought to be reversed. Every presumption is with the judgment, and the party who would reverse it takes upon himself the burden of showing that error has been committed, and in what it consists. This can be done only by bringing before the appellate court a transcript of the record of the proceedings in which the error is alleged to have been committed, properly authenticated and certified for revision. That the “transcript of the record” from Galveston, mentioned as having been produced to the court in Harris, is not before us, is not the fault of the appellee, and that we cannot revise proceedings not before us, is sufficiently apparent.

It appears that the court sitting in Harris county ordered the case to be placed upon its docket upon the production of the original papers in the cause, and “ a certified transcript of the record appertaining thereto, containing the order of transfer ” from Galveston.

This action of the court in placing the case on the docket in Harris county was manifestly correct. The court in Galveston had authority to award a change of venue. This authority it had exercised, and its action in the exercise of its appropriate jurisdiction was not subject to revision by the court sitting in Harris county, but only by the appellate court. That court had no appellate jurisdiction or supervisory authority respecting the proceedings of the court sitting in Galveston. The judge had no authority to look behind the order awarding [601]*601the change of venue to the evidence upon which it was founded, to entertain the question already adjudicated by a tribunal of co-ordinate jurisdiction, or to permit the action of that tribunal, within its jurisdiction, to be in any manner drawn in question. It was enough that he was judicially informed of the order of the court in Galveston awarding the change of venue.

Moreover, it is not pretended that the defendants, at the time, were not in fact cognizant of the order changing the venue. Nor does it appear that objection was made to the change of venue, in the court below, in either county. After the cause had been entered upon the docket in Harris county, and after one unsuccessful application for a continuance, the defendants, it is true, moved the court “ to rescind the order placing the case on the docket for trial at this term.” But there was no-application to have the cause returned to Galveston, and no resistance or objection to the change of venue in itself, but only to the trial at that term. Had the defendants been prevented or deprived of the opportunity of contesting the order in the court in Galveston, without any fault of their own, then undoubtedly upon showing this they might have urged their objections in the county of Harris, for in that case the matters submitted to the judgment of the latter court would not have been presented to or adjudicated by the former. This, however, was not done. And it has been held that where after a change of venue the defendant goes to trial, or pleads to the action in the latter court without having objected to the change of venue, his objections cannot afterwards be heard. 4 How. (Miss.) 90; 5 Blackf. 21. And where the proceedings appeared to have been commenced in one county and the trial was had in- anothe", the record not showing a change of venue, nor that objection was made to the jurisdiction of the latter court, it was held that a change of venue would be presumed. 6 Blackf. 529..

The case having been entered upon the docket of the court in Harris county, and, as appears, rightly, the only questions arising upon the record before us, and presented for our consideration, relate to the rulings of that court.

[602]*6021st. In refusing the several applications for a continuance on behalf of the defendants.

2d. In refusing instructions asked by the defendants.

1. If we regard the discretion of the court in deciding upon an application for a continuance as a legal discretion, subject to revision, it can only be in those cases which admit of the application of certain prescribed rules to regulate and control that discretion. But where there is no known rule of law or practice applicable to the case by which the right of the party may be determined, the discretion of the judge can have no other limit or control than his own moral sense of justice, and, in the nature of the case, cannot be the subject of revision.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tex. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borden-v-houston-tex-1847.