Economy Furniture, Inc. v. Jirasek

345 S.W.2d 951
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1961
Docket10834
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 345 S.W.2d 951 (Economy Furniture, Inc. v. Jirasek) 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
Economy Furniture, Inc. v. Jirasek, 345 S.W.2d 951 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

J. G. Jirasek and wife, Eleanor Virginia Jirasek, appellees, sued Economy Furniture, Inc. for damages 'to their property and for damages for personal injuries, harm, annoyance and inconvenience sustained by them as a result of the maintenance of a private nusiance by appellant at its furniture manufacturing plant northwest of Austin, and located about 1600 feet southeast of appellees’ property on which they resided.

Appellant installed an incinerator in connection with the operation of its furniture factory for the purpose of aiding in the disposal of waste products. The damages sued for were occasioned by the emission of smoke, fumes, sawdust, partially burned sawdust, ashes and soot from such incinerator.

Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellees.

Appellant’s first two points, briefed together, are that the Trial Court erred in overruling its motion to strike an affidavit attached to appellees’ answer to appellant’s cross action, and in permitting the affidavit to be amended after overruling motion for new trial and after notice of appeal was filed.

Trial was had upon appellant’s Second Amended Original Answer and Counterclaim and Appellees’ Third Amended Original Petition.

In its pleading, appellant, after making some special exceptions, pleaded as follows:

“Without waiving the foregoing, now comes Defendant for further answer herein and adopts all of the allegations in the First Amended Answer and Counter-Claim of Defendant Economy Furniture, Inc. on file herein.”

We doubt the sufficiency of this pleading to keep the previously filed answer and counterclaim alive because of the provisions of Rule 65, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides, with certain exceptions inapplicable here, that when a substituted instrument is filed the “ * * * instrument for which it is substituted shall no longer be regarded as a part of the plead *953 ing in the record of the cause * * and Rule 58, T.R.C.P., which provides that:

“Statements in a pleading may he adopted by reference in a different part of the same pleading or in another pleading or in any motion, so long as the pleading containing such statements has not been superseded by an amendment as provided by Rule 65.” 1

If there is no counterclaim, the invalidity of the answer to it would be immaterial. Even so, we proceed to state and dispose of the points made.

By reference to appellant’s First Amended Answer and Counterclaim, we find that a compromise agreement between the parties dated August 29, 1958, was pleaded, as well as its breach by appellees, for which damages were sought.

Appellees’ answer to this counterclaim was that the consideration for the compromise agreement had failed. Attached to this pleading was an affidavit dated November 11, 1959, which is complete with the exception that it is not signed by affiant, J. G. Jirasek. This instrument was filed June 11, 1959.

The trial of this case commenced April 11, 1960. Appellant’s motion for new trial was overruled May 23, 1960, and notice of appeal was then given.

In its pleadings appellant had excepted to the plea of failure of consideration because of nonverification, which the Trial Court overruled, and this ruling was assigned as error in its motion for new trial.

On May 27, 1960, appellees filed a sworn motion containing these recitations and prayer:

“On the date this cause came on for trial, namely April 11, 1960, after the parties had announced ready for trial, after the selection of the jury but prior to the taking of testimony, J. G. Jirasek, plaintiff, appeared in open court before Mrs. Charles Kohrs, a deputy clerk of Travis County, Texas, for the purpose of verifying the failure of consideration portion of the Plaintiffs’ Answer to Defendant’s Cross-Action, as required by the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
“2. At the time plaintiff J. G. Jirasek appeared he read the instrument containing the failure of consideration portion of his pleadings and after understanding same raised his right hand and on his oath stated that same were true and correct and that he swore same were true and correct. The oath was administered by the clerk in the presence of other witnesses.
“3. Plaintiff would further show unto the Court that the affidavit had been typed previously in the month of November, 1959. Therefore, it was necessary to make a clerical change in the statement of the notary which was inadvertently not done. The true facts are that the verification took place on April 11, 1960.
“Wherefore, premises considered, plaintiffs pray that this Honorable Court set a time for a hearing to take testimony on the correction of this clerical error, and that upon such hearing an order be entered changing said date so as to comport with the true fact.”

On May 31, 1960, appellant filed a motion for a nunc pro tunc order striking the affidavit dated November 11, 1959.

It appears from the testimony of Mrs. Chas. Kohrs, deputy district clerk, and from appellee Mr. Jirasek, as well as from the Trial Judge that November 11, 1959, was an incorrect date and that April 11, 1960, was the date on which Mr. Jirasek swore in open court to the truthfulness of *954 the plea of failure of consideration, but that he failed to sign the affidavit. This defect was remedied by the court at the hearing held on June 3, 1960 on the motions above mentioned. We copy and adopt, factually and legally, the following statement of the Trial Court made in granting appellees’ motion and in overruling appellant’s motion:

“The Court: Counsel will recall that at the time I overruled Defendant’s Motion for New Trial that the Court stated, after rendering my judgment in that regard, that it was my recollection that the plaintiff, Mr. Jirasek, had sworn to it here in open court, and therefore substantially complied with the requirement, so far as attaching his affidavit to the particular pleadings involved.
“One of counsel for the defendant then called my attention to the fact that it was the 11th of November that it was dated. Frankly, I was at that time quite nonplussed and quite taken aback in so far as my memory goes, because at that time my memory I was sure was clear about the matter, but I knew that I was in the hospital on November 11th and could not have been here, and I so stated to counsel that I must have been wrong, because I could ndt have been here on November 11th.
“However, with the testimony oí Mrs. Kohrs, and she apprised me of the situation shortly after that, that the dating and signing of it by the Clerk, by Mrs. Kohrs, was done at the beginning of the trial, rather than in November. That they were just blanks put there, and she filled in the blanks, and did not notice the month set out, so I still rely on my memory in that regard, because it is my recollection that Mr. Jirasek stood before the Clerk’s desk and swore to that affidavit on the 11th of April.

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Bluebook (online)
345 S.W.2d 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/economy-furniture-inc-v-jirasek-texapp-1961.