Loper v. Hosier

148 S.W.2d 889
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1941
DocketNo. 13134.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 889 (Loper v. Hosier) 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
Loper v. Hosier, 148 S.W.2d 889 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

LOONEY, Justice.

Appellants duly perfected an 'appeal from the judgment rendered against them in the court below, and filed a transcript and statement of the facts in this court on October 19, 1940, which was more than ninety days fro,m the date the order overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial was pronounced, but less than ninety days from the date the order was entered upon the . minutes of court.

On October 19, appellee filed a motion to affirm on certificate, based on the contention that, the transcript and statement of facts were .not filed in this court within ninety days from July 12, 1940, the date the court announced the order overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial; and on October 21, filed a supplemental motion, praying that the record filed in this court by the appellants be dismissed, and that the case be affirmed on certificate, as prayed in the original motion.

At a former day, the court sustained ap-pellee’s motion, dismissed from the docket the record filed herein by appellants, and affirmed the judgment below on certificate.

The case is pending on appellants’ motion for rehearing. The contention is made that, having filed the record in this court within ninety days from the entry upon the minutes of the order overruling their motion for a new trial, they complied with the law; hence the court erred in striking from the docket the record filed by them, and in affirming the judgment on certificate.

Thus, it appears that,, the only question presented for decision is, whether the time (ninety days) for filing the record in this court is to be reckoned from the date of the pronouncement of the order overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial, or from the date of the actual entry upon the minutes of the order overruling the motion.

The right of appeal in civil cases is given by statute (Art. 2249, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St.) from “every final judgment” *891 of the district and county courts. This is a general statute, controlling in all appeals, except from interlocutory orders^ allowed by other provisions of the statute. The statute provides that notice of appeals shall be given in open court within two days “after final judgment,” or “after judgment overruling a motion for a new trial” (Art. 2253); and Art. 1839 requires the transcript and statement of facts to he filed in the Court of Civil Appeals within sixty days from the “final judgment or order, overruling motion for new trial * * * Under Articles 2092, subd. 31, and 2093a, subd. 4, of the Special Practice Act, applicable to the district courts of Dallas County, appeals are required to be perfected, within the time mentioned, after judgment or order appealed from is rendered, or after a motion for new trial is overruled; and the ninety days within which the record shall be filed in the Court of Civil Appeals is also reckoned from the date of the same events. See Hanks v. Texas Employers Ins. Ass’n, 133 Tex. 187, 128 S.W.2d 1.

We think it obvious from these provisions of the statute that the time prescribed for perfecting appeals from the district court and for filing the transcript and statement of facts in the Court of Civil Appeals is to be reckoned from the identical event, that is, the rendition of a final judgment. So, this leads to the inquiry, when is a judgment final and appealable, within the meaning of the statute? Is it when the judgment is pronounced by the judge in open court, and/or a memorandum thereof made upon the docket, or is it when the final entry is made upon the minutes as a part of the record of the court?

There is a distinction between the mere pronouncement or rendition of a judgment or order, and the entry of same upon the minutes of the court. To be ap-pealable, the judgment or order must be entered upon the minutes. This doctrine is stated in 3 Tex.Jur., sec. 51, pp. 103, 104,' as follows: “To be appealable a judgment or order must not only be pronounced by the court — that is rendered — but it must be entered upon the minutes, there being a distinction between the mere rendition and entry as a part of the record. Accordingly it has been decided that in so far as the right of appeal is .concerned it is immaterial that a judgment was rendered outside the county if regularly entered upon the minutes of the court in the proper county. As a rule a mere docket entry is not sufficient to constitute a judgment or decree of the court. So it has been held that a brief notation on the docket to the effect that a motion is overruled will not be considered as an order or judgment of the court. And with regard to a motion it has been decided that the word ‘granted,’ written upon the face of the motion and signed by the judge, without any further entry of the decision, is not a judgment from which an appeal will lie.”

This is also the doctrine the country over, as appears from the following; in 33 C.J. p. 1055, it is stated that: “An order merely directing or authorizing the entry of judgment in. the case does not constitute a judgment; to have this effect it must be so worded as to express the final sentence of the court on the matters contained in the record and to end the case at once, without contemplating any further judicial action.” And in 15 R.C.L. sec. 4, pp. 570, 571, the doctrine is announced that, “A judgment should be complete and certain in itself, and must appear to be the act and adjudication of the court, and not a mere memorandum of the action of the court. An entry in writing on the minutes of the proceedings of the court from which the record is made up does not in itself constitute the judgment, and the judge’s minutes are not records from which to ascertain the judgment of the court, where they consist of memoranda which, the judge makes upon his own docket, and which the law does not require him to make, but which are merely kept by him for his own convenience, and to enable him to see that the clerk accurately makes up the record. A judge’s calendar on which are entered the judge’s conclusions for the guidance of the clerk does not constitute a judgment. An order for judgment is not a judgment, nor does the entry of such order partake of the nature and qualities of a judgment. Thus while an order of court dismissing an action for jurisdictional reasons will • authorize the clerk of the court to enter judgment, such an order does not itself constitute a judgment, nor is it a final determination of any question. * * * In accordance with this principle it has been held that the words, ‘at this day the court ordered this cause dismissed, at plaintiff’s costs, taxed at three dollars and forty cents,’ do not constitute a final *892 judgment, but amount merely to an order directing the entry of a judgment of dismissal.”

But we are not without a controlling statute, as Art. 1899 provides that all judgments pronounced shall be entered in the minutes of court by the district clerk “under direction of the judge.” This statute reads: “Such clerks shall keep a fair record of all the acts done, and proceedings had, in their respective courts; enter all judgments of the court, tinder direction of the judge

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loper-v-hosier-texapp-1941.