Kirby Lumber Co. v. Long

224 S.W. 906, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1356
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 1916
DocketNo. 144.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 906 (Kirby Lumber Co. v. Long) 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
Kirby Lumber Co. v. Long, 224 S.W. 906, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1356 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This is a damage suit for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by C. Long, the plaintiff below, while *907 in the employ of the Kirby Lumber Company. Plaintiff’s original petition, which was filed on October 13, 1915, prays for $10,000 damages, it being alleged in said petition that plaintiff suffered injury to his right eye while in the employ of defendant, due to its negligence. The cause was tried before a jury at the December term, 1915, of the district court of Jasper county, Tex., and was by the court submitted to the jury on special issues supplemented by certain instructions concerning the law of the case. On December 21, 1915, the jury returned a. verdict in response to the issues submitted, finding that plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $5,000, and answering the other questions touching the issue of liability. It was alleged by plaintiff that he received serious injury to his right eye by reason of same being struck by a projecting limb while plaintiff was engaged in the employment as locomotive fireman on one of defendant’s locomotives on May 16, 1915. It was alleged that the locomotive was backing along one of defendant’s tracks near Browndel in Jasper county, Tex., and that plaintiff was struck by a limb in his right eye, which caused him serious, painful, and permanent injury. The negligence alleged may be stated as being the failure to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to'work, in that the tree and limb were permitted to be and remain in such proximity to the track as to be dangerous to one employed in plaintiff’s position and engaged in plaintiff’s employment.

The defendant company answered by general demurrer, general denial, and special pleas of assumed risk and contributory negligence.

The first assignment of error will be decisive of this case, and we shall not consider any of the remaining assignments. By it the action of the court is challenged as being error in not granting the defendant’s motion to suppress and strike out the depositions of plaintiff’s witness, Dr. E. D. Pope, for the reason, among other things, that said depositions on file and as offered in evidence purport to have been taken by a deputy district clerk in and for Hardin county, Tex., and that the name of the district clerk nowhere appears upon the depositions, or in connection with the certificate thereto, said officer signing his own name over the language “Deputy District Clerk in and for Hardin County, Texas’’; and it is contended that the law is that a deputy district clerk cannot act in any official capacity except in the name of his principal, and the official signature of his principal is alawys required to give any force and validity to such deputy’s acts.

We say with pleasure that this matter has been exhaustively considered in the briefs of both parties, the appellee especially having left nothing unsaid in support of his contention. An inspection shows that there were no cross-interrogatories filed. Defendant raised the point by its motion that the statutory provision is mandatory, and that a deputy district clerk must act, if at all, in the name of his principal.

The statute of 1846 provides as follows:

“It shall be the duty of the clerk, upon application of the parties filing such interrogatories, his agent or attorney, to issue a commission, directed to any chief justice, notary public or clerk of the district court, residing in the county where it is stated in the notice such witness resides, requiring him to cause such witness to appear before him, and to take his answers under oath, to such interrogatories.” Grammel’s Laws of Texas, vol. 2, pp. 1685, 1686.

The act of May 11, 1846, defining the powers and jurisdiction of district clerks, embraces the following:

“Sec. 21. Be it further enacted, that each clerk elected or appointed, shall have power to appoint one or more deputies, by a written appointment, under his hand and seal of the court, which shall be filed and recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court.”
“Sec. 23. Be it further enacted, that clerks elected or appointed and their deputies, shall have power to administer oaths in all cases required in the discharge of the duties of their office.” Gammel’s Laws of Texas, vol. 2, p. 1506.

These statutes at the time were the only provisions determining whether a deputy clerk as such, not acting in the name of his principal, could take depositions and execute a certificate. Iii the case of Hughes v. Prewitt, 5 Tex. 267-268, the court says:

“There is another question presented by the appellant in this case, that from its importance, as a point of practice at least, merits the consideration of this court. The plaintiff in the court below obtained a commission to take the testimony of a witness in Houston county by interrogatories. This commission .was addressed to any chief justice, notary public, or clerk of the district court of- Houston county, and it was executed before, and returned by, a person who assumes to be the deputy of the clerk. The defendant objected to the reading of ’evidence so taken, on the ground that the deputy of the clerk was not competent to execute and return the commission under the statute. The sixty-seventh section of the act of 1846, regulating judicial proceedings, after directing what way in which interrogatories shall be filed, proceeds: ‘It shall be the duty of the clerk, upon application of the parties filing such interrogatories, his agent or attorney, to issue a commission, directed to any chief justice, notary public, or clerk of the district court, residing in the county where it is stated in the notice such witness resides, requiring him to cause such witness to appear before him, and to take his answers under oath, to such interrogatories,’ etc. This statute imposes no liability on the person to whom the commission is directed for refusing, or failing, *908 to execute and return the same. In its terms it is not different from the regulation providing for talcing answers to interrogatories of witnesses residing without the state, in which case the commission shall be directed ‘to any judge of any court of record within the state or country, where it is stated in the notice, such witness resides, requiring such judge to cause the witness to come before him,’ etc. ⅜ * * language of command is used in each caso, and no penalty imposed in either; and in the last there can be no question but that it would have been vain and nugatory to have imposed a penalty. The twentieth section of the act organizing the district courts requires the clerk ‘to give bond for the safekeeping of the records, and the faithful discharge of the duties of his office.’ By the twenty-first section he is authorized ‘to appoint one or more deputies, by a written appointment, under his hand and seal of the court, which shall be filed and recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court.’ The twenty-third section provides that, 'the clerks elected or appointed, and their deputies, shall have power to administer oaths in all cases where required in the discharge of the duties of their •office. I believe the acts, or parts of the acts, that I have noticed, are all the legislative enactments we have that can have any influence on the question under consideration.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Evans v. Ellis
257 S.W. 294 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 906, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-lumber-co-v-long-texapp-1916.