Dunn v. Cravens, Dargan & Co.

97 S.W.2d 242
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 1936
DocketNo. 3401.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 242 (Dunn v. Cravens, Dargan & Co.) 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
Dunn v. Cravens, Dargan & Co., 97 S.W.2d 242 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

WALTHALL, Justice.

This case presents an appeal from an order of the district court of Dallas county sustaining a motion to enter a judgment nunc pro tunc. On June 5, 1928, the ap-pellees in this proceeding secured a pér-sonal judgment in the Fourteenth district court of Dallas county against appellants and M. L. Moore, A. L. Delcambre, and A. L. Beason. The original judgment was rendered, a note made on the docket of its rendition, but the judgment was never entered on the minutes of the court. Appel-lee’s motion to now enter the original judgment, as of June 5, 1928, was filed in the Fourteenth district court in April, 1934. The motion was heard and sustained on August 9, 1935.

On August 17, 1935, appellants filed their motion for a new trial, which motion the court overruled September 10, 1935, and appellants appeal.

Opinion.

Appellants’ first three propositions may be grouped and considered together. The first two propositions submit that the trial court should not have entered judgment nunc pro tunc, and should not have overruled appellants’ motion for new trial, when the court knew appellants could not secure a statement of facts for appeal.

The third proposition submits that the court erred in not preparing and filing a statement of facts when properly requested to do so.

It was admitted on the hearing of- the motion that-Judge Kenneth Foree was the presiding judge of the Fourteenth judicial district court of-Dallas county who rendered the original judgment on June 5, 1928, and that he died October 10, 1931, before the proceedings here were commenced. It was established on the hearing of the motion that the official court reporter of the Fourteenth district court did not attend the original trial, or at least did not have notes of the trial of the original hearing, and that the sole record of the action of the trial court upon the trial is the docket entry. It was also admitted that after August 9, 1935, the date at which the motion for the nunc pro tunc judgment was heard, all the court papers in the case utterly disappeared and were lost and without any fault of any one connected with the trial of this case. The court reporter, however, as best he could prepared a 108-page statement of facts which has been filed herein, and which bears a certificate of the court reporter certifying that the 108 pages statement constitutes and contains a true and correct statement, in question and answer form, of all of the facts, together with the exhibits that were introduced into evidence on the trial of the motion to enter judgment nunc pro tunc, and the motion for new trial, identifying the case, and tried on the 9th day of August, 1935, and subsequent days.

The attorneys for the> litigants by a státement in writing agree that the prepared statement by the court reporter constitutes and contains a true and correct statement in question and answer form of all the facts together with the exhibits. The presiding judge, Honorable Sarah T. Hughes, approved the statement and ordered it filed as a part of the record in the case.

Appellee in its brief calls our attention to the fact that the 108-page statement of facts does not include the first 13 pages contained in the statement; that the pages are numbered separately and distinct from the 108-page statement; that the 13 pages show certain affidavits (not offered on the hearing of the motion for the nunc pro tunc judgment, but on appellants’ motion for a new trial) which the trial court permitted to be filed after the overruling of the motion for new trial.

The opinion of our Supreme Court in Coleman v. Zapp, 105 Tex. 491, 151 S.W. 1040, 1041, is in point on the issues presented here.

It is there said the only purpose of appellee’s motion is to have the judgment entry applied for speak truly the original judgment as rendered; it neither asserts nor seeks the enforcement of any new right; it presents no issue between the original parties, permits only the accuracy of the record and otherwise involves the adjudication of nothing between them. It is powerless to reopen the controversy as closed and sealed by the original judgment, and makes no attempt to do so. As said in the opinion referred to, the inquiry in the proceedings under the motion “is not what judgment might or ought to have been rendered, but only what judgment was rendered; and such is the sole issue to be determined.” Here no amended or *244 corrected entry is sought or ordered, so that the status of the parties and their relative rights, as decreed and fixed by the judgment, remains untouched and unaltered, and in no sense adjudicated anew, but, as said in the above opinion, only judicially evidenced as originally determined. Without further quoting the verbiage of the opinion above referred to, it is there said, in effect, that it is the concern and duty of the court to have its records faithfully recite its judgments, and that a case is regarded as pending until the judgment rendered is correctly recorded.

In this case the parties agreed and stipulated in writing, in view of the fact that the papers were lost after the hearing of the motion for judgment nunc pro tunc was sustained and motion for new trial was overruled.

The stipulation is as follows:

“No. 7376 A
“Cravens, Dargan & Co. v. M. Murphy & Co. et al. In the 14th Judicial District Court.
“It is agreed by and between the parties plaintiff and defendant, acting through their respective attorneys of record, that the following stipulation contains the substance of certain papers duly filed in this cause used by the parties on the hearing on the motion for judgment nunc pro tunc and the motion for new trial, and since that time have, without fault of anyone connected with this case or without the fault of the District Clerk, been lost and cannot be found.
“The parties do hereby stipulate the contents of the lost pleadings and instruments are as follows:
“One. That on or about August 20, 1927, plaintiffs, James C. Craven, K. S. Dargan, J. R. Craven, and Floyd West, individually, and as co-partners doing business as Cravens, Dargan & Company, and the Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ltd., a corporation duly incorporated filed suit in the 14th District Court of Dallas County Texas, naming as defendants M. L. Moore, A. L. Delcambre, and J. R. Dunn, individually and as co-partners, doing business under the name of M. Murphy & Company, and G. C. Dunn and A. L. Beason as sureties on the bond hereafter described.
“Two. Plaintiffs alleged that they had in the year 1926 appointed M. L. Moore, A. L. Delcambre, and J. R. Dunn, individually and as co-partners, doing business under the name of M. Murphy & Company, as their local insurance agents. That at the time of the appointment and agreement between the plaintiffs and the defendants, doing business as M. Murphy & Company, these said defendants, doing business as M.

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97 S.W.2d 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-cravens-dargan-co-texapp-1936.