Grogan v. Robinson

8 S.W.2d 571, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 707
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1928
DocketNo. 10196.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 571 (Grogan v. Robinson) 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
Grogan v. Robinson, 8 S.W.2d 571, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 707 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This suit was instituted by J. A. Robinson, appellee, against F. W. Grogan, appellant, to recover damages for malicious prosecution. The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues and on the answers made thereto judgment was rendéred in favor of appellee for the sum of $15,500, with 6 per cent, interest per annum thereon from date, together with all costs of suit. Of the many propositions presented as a basis of this appeal, we find it necessary to discuss but one, viz.:

“The judgment of the court is null and void because the regularly elected judge of said court did not try the case, and it was not shown that he was disqualified to try the same, and the attorney sitting as special judge in the trial thereof was not designated in the manner prescribed by law, and the parties could not by agreement confer jurisdiction on the attorney trying the case in order to render a valid judgment.”

The case was tried before E. E. Hurt, a member of the Dallas county bar, as judge, as shówn by the following agreement spread upon the trial docket and signed by counsel representing the parties litigant, viz.:

“May 23, 1927. After announcement of trial and all demurrers and exceptions and continuances had been overruled, and before the selection of a jury, Judge McCallum was called out of the town, and the attorneys for plaintiff and defendant agreed that said cause should continue on trial and agreed that E. E. Hurt, an attorney of this bar, could sit as judge in trial of this cause, and E. E. Hurt was sworn to try said cause. [Signed] John N. Touchstone, Attorney for Plaintiff. [Signed] Russell & Russell, H. T. Bowyer, Attorneys for Defendant.”

The agreement of counsel selecting the special judge to try the ease was not entered in the minutes. Appellee, therefore, contends that appellant is not in position to sustain this proposition, on the ground that the agreement was merely noted on the judge’s trial docket, not entered in the minutes of the court, and therefore constitutes no part of the record of this cause. We will briefly review the cases cited in support of this counterproposition, viz.:

Swearingen v. Wilson, 2 Tex. Civ. App. 157, 21 S. W. 74. In this case, as shown by section 1 of the syllabi, it was held:

“An entry on the motion docket in the court below is no part of the record on appeal, though a copy of such entry appears in the transcript, as the judge’s notes are for his own convenience, or that of the clerk making the entry; and the appellate court will not review an alleged order overruling a motion when the record does not otherwise show that it was called to the attention of, or passed on by, the court below.”

Cow Bayou Canal Co. v. Orange County (Tex. Civ. App.) 158 S. W. 173. The trial court, on the second trial of this case, refused to hear and consider speciál exceptions then presented, on the ground that same were ruled upon in the previous trial. This ruling was only evidenced by notation upon the judge’s docket. It was held that said notation appearing in the transcript, but not in the minutes, was not sufficient, and the order formed no part of the record in the case.

Hudgins v. Meeks (Tex. Civ. App.) 1 S. W. (2d) 681. In this case certain orders were made and noted by the court on the trial docket preliminary to and including final judgment, none of which were prepared and entered in the minutes of the court, but the notations of said orders as made on the *573 court’s trial docket were included in tlie transcript.

We think that each ease presents a state of facts entirely different from the instant case, viz. appellant and appellee, acting t through their counsel of record, entered into a written agreement, spread upon the court’s trial docket, stating the reasons for the selection of a special judge, the selection of such judge, and including the statement that oath of office was duly administered, and signed by said counsel. It is true the agreement thus entered into under the very nature of its execution did not become in the usual formal way a file paper in said cause — that is, delivered and received by the clerk as a document to be placed and kept with the papers in this cause — and the act of filing was not evidenced by the “file mark” of the clerk indorsed thereon. However, it must undoubtedly be conceded that the agreement as made was of equal dignity and entitled to as much consideration and effect as if same had been made in the usual form, viz. a separate and distinct instrument duly filed with the clerk as a part of. the proceedings in the cause. Therefore we think the instant case differentiated upon the facts, in that the cited cases involved merely the question of an order that had theretofore been made and noted by the trial judge on the court’s trial docket and not entered in the minutes, while in the instant case, the agreement was in writing, spread upon the court’s trial docket, signed by the attorneys for the parties, and complete within its own terms, and upon the authority of which a member of the bar, therein agreed to as special judge, took the oath of office, and proceeded to hear and determine the matter in controversy between the parties. If this agreement had been a document separate and independent of the judge’s trial docket and filed with the clerk of the court, we do not think it would have been necessary for same to have been entered in the minutes of the court before it could be the basis for reviewing the proceedings had under said agreement. In other words, the agreement as made did not occupy the position of an order made by a judge of a court of record, viz. not to be considered as a part of the record of a judicial proceeding unless and until entered in the minutes of the court, the authentic evidence of proceedings had in the course of a judicial determination. The only effect of the agreement was to dispense with the presence of the* regular judge who, under the law, alone had authority to preside over the proceedings of the 101st judicial district court, and required to hear and determine' as such judge all matters in which he was not under the law recused.

By article 1886, R. C. S. 1925, the clerk of a court is required, when the parties to a cause therein pending have agreed upon a special judge to try their cause on account of the disqualification of the judge accredited to that court, to make a record of such proceedings, showing:

“(1) That the judge of the court was disqualified to try the cause; and
“(2) That such special judge (naming him) was, by consent agreed upon by the parties to try the cause; and
“(3) That the oath prescribed by law has been duly administered to him.”

This statute does not -require, nor in fact by its terms even contemplate, that the agreement must be reduced to writing and signed by the parties before becoming effective, but rather presupposes that the agreement will be oral and made in open court by the parties and perpetuated as a part of the record of the proceedings had by being entered in the minutes -of the court. The disqualification of the regular judge denied him the authority-to enter any material order in the case. He could note his disqualification, but could not preside in the trial of that cause in any other respect.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 571, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grogan-v-robinson-texapp-1928.