Darragh v. Kaufman

2 Posey 97, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 244
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Posey 97 (Darragh v. Kaufman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darragh v. Kaufman, 2 Posey 97, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 244 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

There being in the record neither a statement of facts nor any bill of exceptions, the judgment of the district court will not be revised, unless the presumption in favor of its validity is sufficiently repelled in the record itself to dispense with those ordinarily essential means to indicate error. “ Every presumption is to be indulged in favor of the verdict and judgment of the court below, and it is incumbent upon the party seeking to reverse a judgment to evince that it is erroneous.” Campbell v. Skidmore, 1 Tex., 476. And unless the party complaining presents the case in such a manner as to show the error, the presumption in favor of the judgment must prevail. Chandler v. The State, 2 Tex., 306.

We have no evidence before us whereby we may ascertain the basis of the conclusions formed by the judge who tried .the case; it may be that the evidence before the court well warranted the judgment. The evidence on the trial [98]*98may have satisfactorily established the truth of the defense of res judicata. It may have been thus made to appear through evidence introduced by the plaintiff himself, or it may have been so established by the defendants; or, notwithstanding the record in the judgment, to which reference will hereafter be made,' that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, for reasons other than that contained in the recital, as, for instance, by reason of a failure to sustain with sufficient evidence the allegations of his petition. Where a party has had the benefit of evidence as fully as his cause of action or defense requires, because the same has been introduced and allowed in full, after erroneous rulings of the court in sustaining exceptions to his pleadings, to which such evidence referred, if there was no evidence otherwise, the abstract erroneous ruling, sustaining the exceptions to such pleading, would not require " a revision thereof. McClenny v. Floyd, 1 Tex., 159. See, also, Jones v. Cavazos, 29 Tex., 428; Blackwell v. Patton, 23 Tex., 674. The application of the principle stated to a converse state of case may as readily be supposed, and with similar results, as where evidence has been admitted on the trial, under pleadings not excepted to, and which were held to be sufficient ;• in such case a mere abstract error made by the judge in admitting relevant testimony under the issues or error in the charge, not injuriously affecting the complaining party, would not require a reversal of the judgment.

The rules applicable to those cases where the record presents a statement of facts become still more effective in support of the judgment where there is no statement of facts. The supreme court, in Blackwell v. Patton, supra, said: “We will not consume time in the consideration of questions which the parties have not taken the pains to show us to be material.” A class of cases, falling within a narrow range, however, exist where, indeed, a statement of facts is unessential, to require revision, as is illustrated in Galbreath v. Templeton, 20 Tex., 46, where the court re[99]*99vised the rulings of the court below in the rejection, of evidence on a bill of exceptions, although there was no statement of facts, the evidence going to the whole defense. The application, of the general rule which has been stated to this case has received the fullest consideration, and is made the more carefully because the appellant, perhaps, in declining to furnish the statement of facts, relied upon the recital of the judgment, and from it concluded that, under a,ny supposable evidence which may have been before the court, the judgment which was rendered was necessarily erroneous and subject to revision without a statement of facts. The entry of the judgment, after stating the ruling made upon the plaintiff’s exceptions to defendants’ plea,, and the hearing upon the law and the proofs, proceeded thus: “ And it appearing to the court that the subject-matter in controversy in this cause has been heretofore litigated in this court, it is, therefore, considered, ordered and decreed that the plaintiff, John L, Barragh, take nothing,” etc. It is to be deduced from the opinion in Chapman v. Sneed, 17 Tex., 431, that such recitals are unnecessary and only to be taken as evidence that the facts recited were in proof, but do not exclude the supposition that there were other facts proved which aided in constituting the basis of the judgment, and that in such state of case the judgment is entitled to all the presumptions in its favor which are indulged in, in ordinary cases where there is no statement of facts. In the case referred to, Chief Justice Wheeler said, “and it would be unsafe and unprecedented to revise the judgment and adjudicate the cause upon the facts when they are not before us otherwise than in an incomplete and partial state.”

And although we conclude that we may not be warranted in revising the judgment below, in view of the opinion we entertain of the merits of the question, and as from it the result to the parties would be the same, we deem it not improper to give expression to it, which is, that the court did not err in sustaining, as sufficient, the plea of the [100]*100defendants of former judgment. The cause of action, however varied by the allegations in the petitions of the two respective suits, in respect to allegations of facts, set out in either, to establish or affirm one. of the main ingredients of liability, viz., that the defendants actually received, of gross earnings of the road, sufficient to pay the debt sued on according to the terms of the certificate, or howsoever varied by allegations of transactions by defendants, in detail, tending to show that they not only realized such sums, but that by such contrivances they diverted and concealed, or sought so to do, the same from the reach or knowledge of creditors, nevertheless in both suits the issue was substantially, if not identically, the same. The defendants in each suit were sued in the same right or relation y they were sought to be held liable in each on their personal liability, and that liability attempted to be established upon the same contracts and writings. The second suit, the present one, sets up no act or fact occurring since the making of the original contract, nor since the pendency of the former suit, from which a right originated not in litigation, or which could not have been litigated in the former suit. The litigation in both was upon the same cause of action, between the same parties, sued in the same relative right, and was not varied, in so far as the issues were concerned, otherwise than as by the allegations made in the petition in this suit, whereby the plaintiff alleges the allowance, in 1867, by the circuit court of the United States, of §400,000, alleged to have been received and appropriated by defendants, and were thereby liable to pay the said indebtedness sued on; and by the allegations in the amended petition of March 30, 1876, alleging divers matters whereby the defendants diverted the substance, profits and earnings of the GL, H. & H. R. R. Co. from the payment of plaintiff’s debt. In the former suit the defendants, among other things, set up the proceedings in the United States circuit court, wherein the plaintiff alleges in this suit said $400,000 allowance was made, averring that under them a decree and sale [101]*101were made, extinguishing the corporation under which the defendants had been operating said railroad.

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Related

Aurora City v. West
74 U.S. 82 (Supreme Court, 1869)
Chandler v. State
2 Tex. 306 (Texas Supreme Court, 1847)
Chapman v. Sneed
17 Tex. 428 (Texas Supreme Court, 1856)
Blackwell v. Patton
23 Tex. 670 (Texas Supreme Court, 1859)
Jones v. Cavasos
29 Tex. 428 (Texas Supreme Court, 1867)
Cook v. Burnley
45 Tex. 97 (Texas Supreme Court, 1876)
Roberts v. Johnson
48 Tex. 133 (Texas Supreme Court, 1877)
Perkins v. Walker
19 Vt. 144 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1847)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Posey 97, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darragh-v-kaufman-texcommnapp-1880.