Brunner Fire Company v. Payne

118 S.W. 602, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 501, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 241
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 602 (Brunner Fire Company v. Payne) 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
Brunner Fire Company v. Payne, 118 S.W. 602, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 501, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 241 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

—T. B. Payne instituted this action against the Brunner Eire Company, a corporation, alleging in his petition that he was the owner of lots 108 and 109 in Magnolia Addition to the city of Houston, holding title from the sovereignty and. especially from one Isaac Brashear, who acquired title in 1852 and who had title under the statute of limitations of five and ten years; that lot 108 fronts 148 feet on Patterson Street, a public street, part of said Magnolia Addition, which had been regularly laid off in lots and blocks and streets; that he bought in 1894; that plaintiff was about to erect his residence on said two lots for the purpose of making his *503 home there, when defendants constructed a building twenty feet high and forty feet long and extending along Patterson Street, in the street, and within a few feet of said lot 108, thereby cutting off his entrance to said property on Patterson Street and rendering it unfit for a home. Plaintiff prayed that said building be declared a nuisance and be ordered to be removed.

Defendants made general denial, and specially denied plaintiff’s ownership of the lots; that they adjoined Patterson Street or the premises upon which the building, which was a fire station, was erected, or that there is a lot numbered 108 or 109 in Magnolia Addition. Further, it was denied that the building was in Patterson Street, or that it interfered with plaintiff’s use and enjoyment of his property. Much other matter was set out in the answer which is not material to the case as presented on this appeal.

Upon trial with a jury there was a verdict for plaintiff, upon which judgment was rendered declaring the building a nuisance and ordering its removal. From the judgment, its motion for a new trial having been overruled, defendant appeals.

It is proper that we should, in limine> dispose of the matters urged in the twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth assignments of error, which relate to the alleged refusal of the trial court to hear and consider appellant’s motion to correct the statement of facts and to correct the same, and the matters connected therewith. The corrections which it is claimed should have been made are set out in the twenty-sixth assignment.

The statement of facts in the record is certified by the District Judge as a correct statement made by him upon disagreement of counsel. On the same day it was filed, which was the last day allowed, appellant’s counsel filed with the court a motion to correct the same, and asked also that the court stenographer be required to present his notes of the testimony and be sworn as to the same. The court refused to consider the motion or to allow the stenographer to be sworn in support thereof, and refused to sign appellant’s bill of exceptions to such action. This action is shown by bills of exception in the record signed by bystanders under the statute. Uo attempt is made by appellee in the brief filed by his counsel to explain or deny the matters set out in these assignments, or to rebut the statements in the .bystanders’ bills of exceptions. He objects to their consideration for violation of the rules in their preparation and presentation. The assignments are not strictly in compliance with the rules, but the matters presented involve so grave an abuse of judicial discretion that we are not disposed to pass them by without consideration on this account. Appellant’s counsel was confronted with a novel condition, and may be pardoned from a strict compliance with the rules.

We think the court committed grave error in refusing to consider the motion, and in failing to lend appellant’s counsel all the assistance possible in determining whether there were any errors in the statement of facts, and if there were, in correcting the same so that it might indubitably present the facts as they were given in evidence. The record suggests that in some respects the statement of facts does not do this. It was at least incumbent upon appellee, notwithstanding *504 the violation of the rules in these assignments of error, to have endeavored in his brief to make some denial or explanation of the matters set up in the assignments and motion if they were not true. In the interest of fairness and a proper administration of justice, we would reverse the judgment and remand the case for a new trial but for the fact that, assuming that the statement of facts should be corrected as claimed by appellant and considering such corrections as made, the evidence still would be such that no judgment could have been rendered other than the one that was rendered. Upon the undisputed evidence the court would have been authorized to instruct a verdict for appellee. In this state of the record it would not be proper to remand the case for a new trial.

Appellant complains further, in the twenty-seventh assignment of error, of the refusal of the court to settle his eighth bill of exceptions in the form in which it was presented, and in qualifying the same. In the absence of something in the way of a bill of exceptions signed by the judge or bystanders, under the statute, we can not say that the qualification of the bill by the court was not done with consent of appellant. Without such consent the judge had no right to qualify the hill, but should have either signed it or, if not correct, should have endorsed his refusal to do so, and should then have made out and filed what he considered a proper bill, leaving appellant to his remedy of a bill by bystanders, under the statute, if he was not satisfied with such bill. The statute (articles 1367, 1368, 1369) prescribes very clearly the duty of the judge and the rights of litigants in such cases, and should be observed.

Taking up the other assignments of error in the order in which they are presented, the first, second, third and fourth assignments are addressed to the action of the court in the admission in evidence of certain maps or plats. These assignments are all presented together in a group. Each of them present a different question. What propositions there are are presented as under the four assignments. The statements under the proposition are altogether insufficient to show that error was committed, and, finally, it is not suggested in either the assignments, the propositions, or any of the statements thereunder, or in the argument upon the propositions, that any bill of exceptions to any of the rulings complained of was taken. Ho reference is made to any bill of exceptions, without which the error, if any, would not be revised. The assignments will not be considered.

The fifth and sixth assignments of error complain also of the admission of the testimony of certain witnesses. Ho bill of exceptions is referred to in the assignments, propositions, statement or argument. The statement does not show or even refer to the evidence objected to. It is not suggested 'that the ruling of the court was excepted to or any bill of exceptions taken. The assignments will not be considered.

The seventh and eighth assignments of error, presented together, are addressed to the refusal of the court to give two special charges requested by appellant. The general nature of these charges is only vaguely suggested by the assignments. The charges are not set out, either in substance or form, in either the assignments, propositions, statements or arguments. It appears probable from the brief that *505

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 602, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 501, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunner-fire-company-v-payne-texapp-1909.