Dugan v. Smith

200 S.W. 548, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1918
DocketNo. 278.
StatusPublished

This text of 200 S.W. 548 (Dugan v. Smith) 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
Dugan v. Smith, 200 S.W. 548, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 44 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

The judgment of the trial court in this cause was heretofore affirmed by this court, and all costs incurred were adjudged to be paid by appellants. Among other items of cost mentioned in the bill of costs attached to the transcript is an item of $86.26 for the preparation of the statement of facts in the cause, and this item, together with all other items of cost, was adjudged to be paid by the appellants. After the judgment of this court affirming the judgment of the trial court was rendered and entered, appellants' filed their motion for a rehearing, which motion was by this court overruled, and thereupon appellants filed a motion praying this court to retax the costs adjudged against appellants, and to relieve them of the payment of the item of $S6.20 shown by the bill of costs to be charged for the preparation of the statement of facts. It is claimed by appellants in this motion that this item of cost cannot be properly and legally charged against appellants, and, after carefully considering the matter in this connection, we are of opinion that appellants’ contention must be sustained.

This cause was tried in the lower court, and final judgment was there entered on February 2, 1917, and the court adjourned on February 3, 1917. Appellants in due time and before adjournment of the trial court gave notice of appeal to this court, and 60 *549 days were allowed appellants by tbe trial court in wbicb to file a statement of facts and bills of exception.

On March 22,1917, appellants prepared and presented to the attorneys for appellees in person a statement of facts which attorneys for appellants had prepared from their recollection of the evidence adduced upon the trial,, aided by such notes as they had taken during the trial, with the request that the attorneys for appellees promptly examine such statement of facts, and that they note thereon their objections thereto, if any they might have. On March 28, 1917, the attorneys for appellees informed attorneys for appellants that they could not agree to the statement of facts thus presented to attorneys for appellees, without a stenographic report of the case as prepared by the official court reporter; that attorneys for appellees were unable to point out any particular errors in such statement of facts so prepared and presented to them by attorneys for appellants, and did not point out any specific objections thereto, but attorneys for appellees failed and refused to agree to the statement so prepared and presented to them by attorneys for appellants. Thereafter on March 31, 1917, attorneys! for appellants made a written report to the trial judge in which they stated, substantially, that they had prepared a statement of facts in the cause, and had presented the same to the attorneys for appellees for their examination and objections thereto, if any, and for their agreement, if there were no objections thereto, but that, without pointing out any objections to such statement of facts, attorneys for appellees refused to agree to same, because they were unable to determine whether such statement so prepared was a correct statement of all the facts, in the absence of a stenographic report of the evidence. The statement of facts prepared by attorneys for appellants and presented to attorneys for appellees above mentioned bore the certificate of the attorneys for appellants, over their signature, that to the best of their knowledge such statement of facts was a full and fair statement of facts proven on the trial of said cause. In their written report to the trial judge, that they had been unable to agree upon a statement of facts with appellees’ attorneys, attorneys for appellants stated to the trial judge that appellants were unwilling to incur the expense of having' the official court stenographer to transcribe his notes taken on the trial, and to prepare a statement of facts therefrom, and requested, the trial judge, in view of the inability of counsel for the parties to agree upon a statement of facts, to prepare a statement of facts and order the same to be filed as a part of the record in the cause. Thereupon the attorneys for appellees suggested to the^ trial judge that he have the official stenographer transcribe his notes, as taken upon the trial, and that the trial judge, from such notes, prepare and file a statement of facts in the cause. This suggestion on the part of attorneys for appellees seems to have been adopted by the trial judge as a proper course to pursue under the circumstances, which is shown by the trial judge’s certificate of approval to the statement of facts, as follows:

“Counsel for relators (appellants) and respondents (appellees) having failed to agree on a statement of facts in this case, and relators having so notified the court, and called upon the court to prepare a statement of the evidence admitted in the trial, I caused the court reporter, at the request of respondents, to prepare a question and answer transcript of the testimony taken in the trial, and from such question and answer transcript the foregoing narrative statement of facts, embracing 75 pages, has been prepared, and after examination thereof, I give the same as a correct statement of the evidence introduced on the trial of said cause, and hereby certify that the same constitutes the substance of the material testimony introduced in the case, and order that it be filed as the statement of facts in this cause.
“Witness my hand this 23d day of April, 1917. B. B. Hightower, Judge Ninth Judicial District.”

Appellants, in their motion to retax the costs, make the following contentions:

(1) That in no instance where a statement of facts is prepared by the trial court can there be any charge- against either party therefor, taxed as costs in the case.

(2) That, even if it could be the law that appellants were chargeable with the preparation of the statement of facts in this case, the charge therefore is expressly limited by the statute to 15 cents per hundred words, and that on the statement of facts of only 75 pages, the charge of $86.20 is greatly excessive, unjust, and unreasonable, and that $45 would be the maximum amount for which appellants would be liable in any event.

(3) That under the law appellants had the right to make up their statement of facts and present same to the attorneys for appellees for an agreement, and that, no agreement having been reached, then it was the legal right of appellants to report such failure to agree to the trial judge, together with the presentation to him of the statement of facts certified to be correct, and that then it was the duty of attorneys for appellees to present to the .trial judge a statement of fa.cts prepared by them, and, if the trial judge had- not approved either of such statements, it then became the duty of the trial judge, from his bwn personal knowledge, with the aid of such statements, to make out and sign and file with the clerk a correct statement of facts "proven on the trial, which such statement should constitute a part of the record.

After a careful consideration of appellants’ contentions, we are of the opinion that their first contention above mentioned is correct, and must be sustained.

Article 2068 of Revised Statutes of 1911, in so far as applicable here, is as follows:

“After the trial of any cause, either party may make out a written statement of the facts given *550

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 548, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dugan-v-smith-texapp-1918.