Gossler v. Lipper

93 S.W.2d 1175, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 1936
DocketNo. 10154.
StatusPublished

This text of 93 S.W.2d 1175 (Gossler v. Lipper) 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
Gossler v. Lipper, 93 S.W.2d 1175, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 399 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

For convenience and euphemism the officially designated plaintiffs in error will be herein called the Gosslers, and the defendants in error the Lippers.

On March 15 of 1934, this court granted the motion of the Gosslers to extend the time of filing the transcript herein for a period extending up to March 19th of 1934; thereafter a motion of the Lippers, filed on March 31st of 1934, to set aside such extension and to strike from the record both the transcript and the statement of facts herein was taken for decision with the cause itself and now comes on in due course of hearing, being considered in advance of a determination of the merits of the controversy; the Gosslers’ motion for a new trial was overruled below on January 19th of 1933, with allowance of 60 days thereafter within which to file the statement of facts; subsequently that court granted them two extensions of time within which to file their statement of facts, the first one on the 9th day of January of 1934 for 25 days, the order expressly reciting that it had been entered in response to good cause shown, the second one on February 24th of 1934, for 10 days’ additional time thereafter, or until the 6th of March of 1934, under like specific recitation in the order itself that it had been done “for good cause shown.” This writ of error was perfected on the 14th day of December, 1933, and, in line with the procedure stated supra, the transcript was filed in this court on the 15th of March of 1934.

The main grounds of the Lippers’ motion in this court to have its stated order of March 15th of 1934, granting the extension of time for the filing of the transcript, set aside, and both the transcript and the statement of facts stricken from its records, are in substance these:

(1) That no good cause for such extension was either alleged or shown within the meaning of R.S. art. 1839, as amended by Acts 1931, c. 66 and Acts 1933, c. 67 (Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 1839);

(2) That the motion in this court for such extension, being merely formal, un-sworn to, and not supported by any facts, *1177 ■was insufficient, especially since the Gos-■slers had failed to comply with the R.S. -arts. 2262 and 2263 in the service of citations in error on a number of the adverse parties, to wit, L. M. Weil, the Levys, and the Lischkoffs;

(3) That in addition to the failure to serve_ the adverse parties just named, the Gosslers were further guilty of inexcusable ■delay in the perfection of their appeal, in that no transcript of the record was filed in 60 days from the perfection of the writ of error, nor was any statement of facts filed within that time, “but instead — more than 15 months after rendition of final judgment and without alleging in their motion therefor any facts upon which to base this delay — they asked this court to extend the time for the filing of the transcript; that such extension is and was unwarranted”;

(4) That the trial court was without jurisdiction to make the two orders it did extending the time within which to file the statement of facts, in that the full jurisdiction in the cause and the consequent control of all orders to be made therein had already passed to this court, that is, from and after December 14th of 1933, the date ■on which the last of the defendants in error herein had accepted service o"n the writ ■of error;

(5) That the trial court’s order approving the statement of facts herein failed to comply with R.S. arts. 2241a and 2241b, as .added by Acts 1927, c. 44 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. arts. 2241a, 2241b) as modified by amended article 1839, in that the 20 days vouchsafed to the defendants in error under those statutes within which to approve or disapprove such statement of facts was in nowise accorded them;

(6) That the first order of the trial court making the 25-day extension of time for the filing of the statement of facts was contrary to amended R.S. art. 1839, in that, as shown by bill of exception taken to that action of the trial court at that time, extension was granted without good cause therefor having been shown, and without notice to or knowledge on the part of attorneys for the Lippers that such action was contemplated, no evidence having been heard as a basis therefor, nor any facts presented upon which it was granted;

(7) That no statement of facts having been filed within the first extended 25-day period, the trial court’s second attempted ■extension for an additional 10-day period for the filing of the same was beyond the jurisdiction of the court, in that such attempted final extension carried the time for filing such a statement beyond the time “for which the trial court had any authority to extend the time for the filing and approval of such statement of facts.”

None of these contentions for the motion to strike can be sustained; as concerns so much of them as attacks the two time extensions made below for filing the statement of facts, it is true the bill of exceptions brought up as supporting them recites that these extensions had been granted without the hearing of evidence thereon, or advance notice to the Lippers of an intention on the court’s part to enter them, but the contrary recitations in the judgments themselves that both orders had been made “for good cause shown,” as recited supra, prevail over these statements in the bill of exceptions: 3 Tex.Jur. pp. 789-793, inclusive, pars. 562, 563, inclusive, and footnote citations; 1934 Supplement Tex. Jur. pp. 153, 154, pars. 562, 563, and footnote citations especially.

Wherefore, not only must it be assumed on appeal that the two time extensions in the trial court were made for good cause shown, but a like presumption must be accorded here to the trial court’s final order approving the statement of facts, which was made on March 6th of 1934, as follows:

“The foregoing 278 pages being a transcript of the Reporters’ notes of the evidence in this cause, having been filed in this court on the 19th day of February, A. D. 1934, in duplicate by the defendants herein, and said defendants having on the 20th day of February, 1934, given written notice of the filing of said two copies of said transcript in the court of counsel for the plaintiff herein, and all material and well founded objections having been given proper attention by this Court, the court now finds that said transcript of the evidence is true and correct, and now approves the same on this, the 6th day of March, A. D. 1934, and it is ordered that said two copies of the transcript shall be filed among the papers of this cause, and shall become" a record therein, all as provided for in article 2238 of the Revised Statutes of *1925, as amended by an Act of the 42nd Legislature •in 1931.
“Ben F. Wilson, Judge.”

Aside, however, from the full faith and credit that presumptively should be given it, the quoted certificate is not im *1178 peached by any facts properly in the record against it; the insistence of the motion to strike is, rather, that, under the other statutes it invokes in ground (5), supra, 20 days after notice was due the Lippers within which to act upon the statement of facts.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 1175, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gossler-v-lipper-texapp-1936.