Hardin v. Hamilton

204 S.W. 679, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 671
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 1918
DocketNo. 8872.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 679 (Hardin v. Hamilton) 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
Hardin v. Hamilton, 204 S.W. 679, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 671 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the county court of Comanche county refusing to grant an application for writ of mandamus presented by appellant, W. L. Hardin. The application was disposed of upon a hearing of the facts.

The facts are substantially that: On the 27th day of December, 1916, one Nute Hall recovered a judgment against appellant for the sum of $89.30 and all costs of suit with interest in a justice court of Comanche county held by the Honorable G. C. Hamilton, justice of the peace. The judgment foreclosed an attachment lien upon certain personal property described in the judgment. Appellant, desiring to appeal from that judgment to the county court, in: due time presented his propei-ly verified affidavit so stating, and further stating that he was “unable to pay the cost of the appeal or any part thereof, or to give security therefor.” The plaintiff in the suit filed an unverified contest of this affidavit, and the justice of the peace heard evidence -and indorsed on the back of the written contest the following:

“It appearing to the court that defendant has not been diligent in trying to make an appeal bond, I refuse to send up papers. [Signed] G. C. Hamilton, J. P. Rendered January 12, 1917.”

It was later suggested in the justice court that the entry above quoted was not a final judgment, and the justice of the peace accordingly entered nunc pro tunc a judgment reciting the fact of the hearing of the contest as to the sufficiency of Hardin’s affidavit of inability to' pay or secure costs, and further recited that:

“Having heard the evidence in support of the ^aid affidavit, and the evidence against same presenting it, and having heard the argument of counsel thereon, is of the opinion that the. defendant has not made strict proof of his inability to pay the cost of appeal or any part thereof, but that the said Hardin could pay at least $25 of the cost of same, and it further appearing the said Hardin had made no consistent effort to give security therefor, the said affidavit in lieu of appeal bond is accordingly refused, and this court refuses to make out a transcript for appeal of the said case to the county court for trial de novo, on said affidavit.”

The county court heard the evidence as it was submitted to the justice of the peace on the hearing of the contest, and also further evidence which tended to show that the appellant could in fact have paid at least a part of the cost of appeal of the justice court. The evidence as submitted before the justice of the peace on the hearing of the contest was the testimony of Hardin himself. He testified at that time:

That he' was a “single man. That he had no money to pay the cost of appeal or any part of the same, and did not know whether he could get the money or any part of it to pay the cost of said appeal. That all the property he owned was a planter and cultivator used by him in farming. That he was a farmer by occupation. s ⅞ ⅜ That he had about 60 bales of peanut hay at his rent place, but that the Burks Mercantile Company of Comanche, Tex., held a mortgage on that. That the peanut hay and the planter and cultivator have been attached by Nute Hall, the plaintiff in this suit. That he had no other property whatever. That all the efforts he had made to get any one to go on his bond to appeal the case was his brother, Joe Hardin, who lived at Hasse, Tex., and that he would not agree to go on the bond. That he had lived at Hasse a number of years and was well acquainted with the people there, and that he knew if his brother Joe would not g'o on his bond no other person there would. «: ⅜ ⅜ ¡je ¡ja(j not rendered any property for taxes for the year 1916.”

It does not seem to be very earnestly insisted that the additional testimony heard by the county court is insufficient to authorize the conclusion that appellant could in fact have paid part of the cost or give security therefor at the time of the contest before the justice of the peace. Appellant’s insistence seems to be more particularly that the evidence as it was heard by the justice of the peace did not authorize such conclusion and that therefore under the statute the justice should have sent up the transcript and allowed the appeal. The justice of the peace who testified before the county court testified that the memorandum made by him upon the written contest of the affidavit did not recite all of his reasons for the ruling, and it must be remembered that the justice heard the trial of the case between Nute Hall and appellant in his court on the merits. He must therefore at the time of the hearing of the contest have had in mind the fact of the issuance of the writ of attachment and of its levy upon the property therein described and the finding of the jury in Nute Hall’s favor and the foreclosure of the lien upon the attached property. We Imow of no rule that would preclude the justice of the peace in the exercise of the discretion vested in him by law to consider such facts together with the evidence of *681 Hardin, his manner of testifying, etc., on the hearing of the contest. The record shows that Hardin testified on the contest at the instance of the plaintiff Nute Hall oyer his (Hardin’s) objection, and it is by no means very clear, as we think, that the justice of the peace on the whole abused his discretion in ruling on appellant’s contest.

[1,2] But aside from the foregoing suggestions, it is to be remembered that appellant by his application for the writ of mandamus was appealing to the county court for an exercise of equitable powers. The county court is not clothed with the power to act merely as a revisory tribunal to determine the correctness of the rulings of a justice of the peace. In cases of appeal the trial in the county court is de novo on the merits of the case, regardless of the rulings of the justice of the peace, whether erroneous or not. So that we think it was entirely proper for the county court, oq the hearing of the petition for mandamus, to hear any and all competent evidence that the court should decide to hear, in order to determine whether or not the applicant was entitled to relief by writ of mandamus. If so, as before suggested, the evidence as heard before the county judge as a whole is such as in our judgment supports his ruling refusing the application. It is a familiar rule relating to the issuance of writ of mandamus that such writ will not issue against a public officer save to compel the performance of an act clearly defined and enjoined by the law, and which is therefore ministerial in its nature, and which neither involves any discretion nor leaves any alternative. See Teat v. McGaughey, 85 Tex. 478, 22 S. W. 302; Walker v. Barnard & Co., 8 Tex. Civ. App. 14, 27 S. W. 726; De Poyster v. Baker, 89 Tex. 155, 34 S. W. 106.

[3] AVe are the more inclined to this conclusion from a reading of our statute on the subject of giving an affidavit in lieu of a bond for security of the cost of appeal. Appeals from a judgment in the justice court are in certain cases allowed by law, and the statute (Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, art. 2394) provides, among other things, that:

“Where the appellant is unable to pay the cost of appeal, or to give security therefor, he shall nevertheless be entitled to prosecute his appeal; but, in order to do so, he shall be required to make strict proof of Ms inability to pay the cost, or any part thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 679, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardin-v-hamilton-texapp-1918.