Brown v. Mataska

262 S.W. 932, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1076
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1924
DocketNo. 10669.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 262 S.W. 932 (Brown v. Mataska) 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
Brown v. Mataska, 262 S.W. 932, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1076 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J. B. B.

Brown recovered a judgment in the justice court against Chas. Mataska for $105 as damages for the alleged destruction of plaintiff’s 'crops by defendant’s stock that broke into plaintiff’s field where the crops were growing. The date of that judgment was September 26, 1921. On October 19, 1921, the defendant presented to the county judge a petition for certiorari to bring up the case from the justice court to the county court. The county judge on that date indorsed on the application the following:

“The within petition having been presented to me in open court, and having been read and fully understood,' it is ordered that a writ of certiorari do issue according to law and pursuant to the prayer of the petition, upon the execution of a bond by the petitioner in the sum of one hundred and five ($105.00) dollars. R. Loftin, Judge of the County Court of Clay Có., Tex.”

The petition with the order indorsed thereon was filed with the county clerk October 10,1921. On January 6,1923, plaintiff Brown filed a motion to dismiss the defendant’s application for certiorari for several reasons, including the following; (1) That the order for the writ of certiorari was never entered upon the minutes of the court; (2) that no writ of certiorari was ever served upon the justice of the peace trying the case; (3) that no bond for certiorari had ever been filed in the county court as provided by daw; (4) that eight terms of the county court having passed since the granting of the application for the writ, it was now too late for the order for the writ of certiorari to' be complied with.

The defendant filed a reply to that motion on February 24, 1923, in which it was alleged: (1) That the county judge who granted the writ prepared and signed an order to be entered of record on the minutes of the court at the October term, 1923, but that the clerk of the court failed to record the same; (2) that the failure to enter such order and the failure to issue and serve the writ upon the justice of the peace was immaterial, since the officer complied with the order for the writ of certiorari by making out a proper transcript from his docket and transmitting the same, together with the papers, to the county court as required by law and within the statutory period; (3) that the certiorari bond which was required by the county judge in his order was in fact filed *933 with the clerk of the county court, but through oversight he failed to indorse -his file mark thereon; and that the said clerk, also through oversight, failed t'o indorse his file mark on the papers transmitted to him by the justice of the peace; (5) that the defendant gave notice of appeal from the justice court on the day the judgment was rendered against him by that court and at the same time executed an appeal bond in the sum of $210, in terms of the statute.

The defendant also alleged that the reasop why the justice of the peace and the county clerk did not act more promptly in filing the papers and in the transmission of the papers from the justice court was that counsel for plaintiff had kept the papers in his possession during most of the time, and on account of which said officers were unable sooner to carry out the orders of the county court. The defendant prayed leave of the court to file an amended appeal bond so as to make the amount thereof $250 instead of $210, which latter sum he alleged to be the amount of the original appeal bond filed in the justice court. Defendant also prayed for leave to file an amended certiorari bond so that the amount thereof would be in the sum of. $250 instead of the sum of $105, which latter sum was alleged to have been the amount of the original certiorari bond .filed ,by him; said amended bonds to be filed nunc pro tune. Defendant also prayed for a nunc pro tunc order granting the application for the writ of certiorari and for a further order directing the clerk of the county court to file all the papers from the justice court nunc pro tune. That motion was heard by Hon. J. F. Yaden, county judge, who had succeeded in office Hon. R. Loftin, the former county judge to whom the application for certiorari was presented.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the following order was made:

“On this the 24th day of February, A. D. 1923, came on to be heard defendant’s application to have the appeal bond in this cause that was executed on the 26th day of September, A. D. 1921, filed nunc pro tunc as of date September 26, 1,921; and order granting application for writ of certiorari filed as of date October 10, 1921, nunc pro tunc; and the bbnd for writ of certiorari filed as of date October 10, 1921, nunc pro tunc; and the transcript in this cause from the justice court to be filed in this court as of date December 3, 1921, nunc pro tunc, and also to amend appeal bonds.
“And the court, after hearing the evidence, and it appearing from the evidence that said papers were duly executed on the dates and days whereof they should be filed, and were not filed on these dates because they were in the possession of counsel for plaintiff, and were not accessible to the clerk; and it further appearing that the defendant was not negligent in the perfecting of his appeal, it is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed'that all of said papers abové named be filed nunc pro tunc as of the dates prayed for, and that said appeal be in all things properly and legally perfected to this court, and the clerk hereby authorized to file said papers as of the dates specified, in oi'der that justice may be done, and it is so ordered.”

The court then proceeded to try the case on its merits and to render a judgment denying plaintiff any recovery against the defendant upon the cause of action asserted in the justice court. Plaintiff has appealed.

The following agreement, signed by counsel for both parties and approved by the county judge, appears in the record:

“It is hereby agreed, by and between the attorneys for the plaintiff and the defendant hereto, with the approval of the judge, that the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court was supported by the evidence in this said cause if the defendant was properly in the county court, the sole contention of plaintiff being that the county court of Clay county, Tex., had no jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause of action as will be shown by bill of exception No. 1.”

The assignments of error relied on by appellant for reversal present the contention that the trial court .had no jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause on its merits, in that defendant did not perfect his appeal from the justice court, and that as shown by undisputed evidence no bond for certiorari as required by statute was filed within the statutory period.

We find in the record what purports to be a transcript from the justice court with the name of Clay Coleman, jultiee of the peace, signed thereto, dated December 3, 1921, with the file mark indorsed thereon of the same date and signed officially by O. T. Liles, clerk of the county court. There is also in the record what purports to be an appeal bond from the judgment in the justice court in the sum of $225 with the names C. H. Ma-taska, John L. Fecher, W. F. Bernhardt, and Frank Holiday signed thereto. Following those signatures is this :

“Approved this 26th day of September, 1921.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 932, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-mataska-texapp-1924.