Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Parker

135 S.W. 369, 104 Tex. 162, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 137
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1911
DocketNo. 2144.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 135 S.W. 369 (Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Parker, 135 S.W. 369, 104 Tex. 162, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 137 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramsey

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 29, 1908, in the District Court of Tarrant County, J. WL Parker recovered a judgment, in a suit claiming a much larger sum, against the Houston & Texas Central Railroad Company, for the sum of five hundred dollars. This judgment was duly and properly entered at the time. Prom such judgment the railroad company appealed and on April 16, 1909, filed the transcript in the Court of Civil Appeals. This record did not, however, contain the judgment rendered in the case. By stipulations among the parties briefs of the company were filed October 18, 1909, and briefs for Parker were filed in the court below on January 15, 1910. The appeal was dismissed by the Court of Civil Appeals on February 26, 1910, because *163 tiie transcript contained no final judgment and said court was therefore without jurisdiction. Sayles’ Texas Civil Statutes, art. 1383.

A motion for rehearing as well as a motion for certiorari to perfect the record was thereupon made, which were by the Court of Civil Appeals overruled on March 12, 1910.

In its application for a writ of error to this court the railroad company, after averring the facts substantially set out above and further that the judgment of the trial court was omitted from the record by inadvertence of the District Clerk and had not been discovered by it or its counsel until after the submission of the case and the order of dismissal, submits two propositions on which it seeks, in effect, to secure an order and decree from this court directing the Court of Civil Appeals to set aside its order of dismissal, grant the writ of certiorari and on its due return proceed to hear the appeal on its merits.

These propositions are, in effect:

1. That since final judgment had in fact been rendered in the District Court it had jurisdiction to hear the appeal and that it erred in not setting aside its order dismissing the same.

2. That though, .as an original proposition, it acted within its rightful discretion in refusing to permit the record to be amended after submission, yet in this case its action was not justified since theretofore its practice had been, under similar cases, to pérmit such additions to the record and that the abrogation of such former rule and departure therefrom by the court had not been made known in any published decision or rule at the time of the filing of the record in the case or the submission thereof.

If the question presented were one of first impression, we would not hesitate to declare that the judgment of the court in this case was authorized, appropriate and timely. We think the rule laid down in Ross v. McGowen, 58 Texas, 603, where it was held that this court would not, after submission of a cause and after decision thereof, grant a rehearing and award a certiorari to perfect the record when the motion for rehearing is based on the defectiveness of the record and when no excuse is offered to show why the defect was not discovered before the submission, states a correct rule of practice. In discussing this matter Chief Justice Willie, speaking for the court, said:

"After a cause in once submitted upon a transcript supposed to be correct, as the parties have made no objection to it, and we have decided it upon such transcript, we can not undertake to reexamine such cause because the counsel for either party discovers a defect in the transcript, which, if supplied, might possibly lead us to a different conclusion. A mistake in the pleadings or facts of a single word might influence the decision. Thus discovered and remedied, a new opinion framed to suit the altered record might itself be set aside upon the discovery of some other error; and so on to numberless changes in the transcript and the decisions upon it. This practice can not, of course, be allowed, and to prevent it the right to a certiorari must be - limited to some point in the proceedings, which must not extend beyond, the date of the submission of the cause to the court for *164 decision. Indeed, this has been the rule of this court announced in frequent opinions of our predecessors, which, having been orally delivered, may not have come to the knowledge of the profession generally.”

It is not to be doubted that the enforcement of such a practice may, in individual eases, operate as a hardship, but it must be remembered that the orderly dispatch of the business of the court is a matter of general concern. A careful attention to the preparation of the record before it is filed, or any reasonable attention to the record after it is filed, but before submission, will obviate and prevent such a result. Certainly it is not asking too much of a litigant to require him to exhibit before the court in due time and in due form the judgment of which he complains. To adopt any other rule is to encourage inattention and carelessness, to work confusion in the labors of the court and to bring about delays in the administration of justice.

However, while not in terms overruled, it can not be doubted that the later decisions of this court have substantially departed from the rule laid down in Ross v. McGowen, supra, and that this later rule has been accepted and followed by practically all of the Courts of Civil Appeals.

In the case of Western Union Tel. Co. v. O’Keefe, 87 Texas, 423, where notice of appeal had been omitted from the record, it was held that it was the fact of the appeal and not the mere entry of the notice of same in the record which gave the appellate court jurisdiction, and that the Court of Civil Appeals had authority to ascertain the fact of the appeal and should set aside an order of dismissal so that the record of the court below might be perfected and brought before such court on certiorari. Judge Gaines, speaking, for the court, there says: “The statute expressly confers upon the Courts of Civil Appeals ‘the power, upon affidavit or otherwise, as by the courts may be thought proper, to ascertain such matters of fact as may b.e necessary to the proper exercise of their jurisdiction.’ Laws 1892, sec. 7, p. 27.” And adds: “We .are of opinion, that under this provision the court had the power upon the evidence which was adduced before it, if satisfied by it that the notice had as a matter of fact been given in open court, to have exercised jurisdiction over the case; though we think that the regular course would have been to -have granted the appellant’s motion to reinstate and to allow him time to perfect the record.”

Again, in the case of Wichita Val. Ry. Co. v. Perry, 87 Texas, 597, in affirming the correctness of the decision of the Western Union Tel. Co. v. O’Keefe, supra, Judge Gaines held that where the appeal had been dismissed by the Court of Civil Appeals for the reason that notice of appeal did not appear in the transcript, that it was error to overrule a motion for rehearing based upon affidavit of counsel and supported by the certificate of the judge and clerk of the court where the case was tried that such notice of appeal had been given. It is said that the Court of Civil Appeals should have set aside the order of dismissal and granted a reasonable time to amend the minutes of the District Court and to perfect the record of their own court.

It has occurred to us that there may be some distinction between

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W. 369, 104 Tex. 162, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-texas-central-railroad-v-parker-tex-1911.