Hendrick v. Blount-Decker Lumber Co.

200 S.W. 171, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1182
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1917
DocketNo. 1862.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 171 (Hendrick v. Blount-Decker Lumber 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
Hendrick v. Blount-Decker Lumber Co., 200 S.W. 171, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1182 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

This appeal is from a verdict rendered for the defendants in response to a peremptory instruction. There is an absence from the record of any written objection to the charge of the court made before it was read fo the jury as required by statute; and unless the error here assigned is fundamental, or one apparent from the face of the record, it cannot be considered. There is among the Courts of Civil Appeals an irreconcilable conflict upon this particular question. See the cases collected in 18 Encyclopedic Digest, p. 553. Some of them hold that the giving of a perenrptory instruction is an error which the Court of Civil Appeals will consider in the absence of any objection made in the trial court, while others hold to the contrary. This-court in some earlier cases was disposed to consider such an error fundamental, but has now become fully committed to the opposite doctrine. The importance of the question, however, is such as to call for some discus.sion of the principles upon which we base our ruling. Article 1607 of the Revised *172 Civil Statutes provides, among other things, that:

“In cases of appeal or wilt of error the Courts of Civil Appeals shall determine the controversy upon a statement of facts, or agreed statement of the pleadings and proof, or the conclusions of law and fact certified by the judge below, * * * or on an error in law, either assigned or apparent on the face of the record.”

This has been the law for many years. But there has never been a definition of what is an error “apparent upon the face of the record” so clear as to prevent conflicting decisions. In Houston Oil Co. v. Kimball, 103 Tex. 94, 122 S. W. 533, 124 S. W. 85, the Supreme Court had under consideration the following, which was presented for the first time in the Court of Civil Appeals:

“The trial court erred in its charge to the jury in instructing them to find for the plaintiffs for the land described in their petition, unless they should find for the defendant upon the defense of three years’ limitation.”

The contention was there made by the plaintiff in error that the giving of that charge was an error “apparent upon the face of the record,” and that the complaint should be considered when presented for the first time on appeal. Justice Brown, who wrote the opinion in that case, after quoting article 1014 of the Revised Statutes of 1895, said:

“Webster defines the word ‘apparent’ thus: ‘Clear, or manifest to the understanding ; plain; evident; obvious; appearing to the eye or mind. This does not mean that an error whicli can be ascertained by looking into the record and considering the evidence may be considered without an assignment; for that would include every error which can be considered at. all. Nothing can be considered as an error_ which cannot be made apparent by an examination of the record; therefore the language of the statute must bo given that construction which would make it consistent with its requirements in other respects. The language, ‘apparent from the face of the record,’ indicates that it is to be seen upon looking at the face of the record, that is, the assignment itself. The fact pointed out by it must show a good and sufficient ground for the court f to interfere to prevent injustice being done 'to one - of the parties. Perhaps the best expression is that it must be a fundamental error, such error as being readily seen lies at the base and foundation of a proceeding and affects the judgment necessarily.”

In that case, however, it was held that iilnsmuch as the error referred to could not be ascertained without an examination and weighing of the evidence, it ivas not within the class referred to in the statute.

In Oar v. Davis et al., 105 Tex. 479, 151 S. W. 794, the same tribunal was considering' a case on appeal which involved the issue of fraud in the procurement of a deed and a homestead right. There was presented in the Supreme Court for the first time the following:

“The Court of Civil Appeals erred in not reversing or reforming the judgment of the district court, ordering partition of the land in controversy between the plaintiffs and intervener, because the judgment divested the defendant * * * of her one-third life estate in said land.”

It was there contended by the plaintiff in error that the error was one which the Supreme Court should consider in the absence of an assignment in the preceding courts. The Supreme Court granted a writ of error under the impression that the contention was sound; hut upon further consideration receded from that position. In discussing the question Justice Dibrell said:

“The adjudications of this court have given the expression ‘an error of law, apparent upon the face of the record,’ the meaning of such error as is fundamental in character, 'or one determining a question upon which the very right of the case depends, or such an error as being readily seen lies at the base and foundation of the proceeding and necessarily affects the judgment. Wilson v. Johnson, 94 Tex. 276 [60 S. W. 242]; Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Kimball, 103 Tex. 103 [122 S. W. 533, 124 S. W. 85].”

He then quotes with approval the following from Wilson v. Johnson: ,

“Since every error must in one sense appear upon the face of the transcript, it is difficult to tell what is meant by this language. But we incline to think it intended to signify a prominent error, either fundamental in character or one determining a question upon which the very right of the case depends.”

From the foregoing decisions we infer that the record, which must be consulted, in discovering an “apparent error,” includes not only the transcript as prepared under the rules now in vogue, but the statement of facts when there is one. It must be remembered that at the time the decision in Wilson v. Johnson, supra, was rendered the statement of facts was a part of the transcript.

[1, 2] Appellate courts are required, even in the absence of any assignments, to examine the pleadings of the parties and the judgment rendered, in order to ascertain the jurisdiction of the court and its authority to render the particular judgment brought up in the record. A judgment based upon insufficient pleadings, or one rendered in a case where the court has no jurisdiction over, the parties or the subject-matter of the suit, or one which does not conform to the pleading is fundamentally erroneous, and on appeal should be revised regardless of the legal difficulties involved in discovering the error. Such an error is one which lies at the foundation of the suit and involves the power and authority of the court to render the particular decision. But where the error is one which must be discovered by an examination of the evidence, then, in order to be considered in the absence of an assignment, it must not only be one which affects the rights of the parties to a particular kind of judgment, but one which is open and easily discovered by an inspection of that portion of the record in which the evidence is presented.

If the above be the true rule in regard to the issues of fact, then the line between what 4s and what is not apparent upon the face of *173

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 171, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrick-v-blount-decker-lumber-co-texapp-1917.