Partridge v. Wooton

137 S.W. 412, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 280, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 137 S.W. 412 (Partridge v. Wooton) 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
Partridge v. Wooton, 137 S.W. 412, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 280, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 90 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

On the 13th' day of January, 1904, appellee, J. E. Wooton, instituted this suit in a Justice Court of Haskell County upon a note executed by appellant, James Partridge, dated April 30, 1903, for the sum of one hundred dollars, together with interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum and attorney’s fees of ten per cent, of the amount of the note. A trial in the Justice Court resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff in the suit, and the defendant, James Partridge, duly prosecuted an appeal to the County Court. In the County Court the defendant filed formal amended answer in writing in which, by special plea duly verified, he alleged that the note had been executed by him for the purchase money of a certain jack, bought, as the plaintiff well knew, for the purpose of breeding mules; that the plaintiff had represented the jack to be “a good foal getter”; that he had relied upon the representations made and was induced thereby to purchase the jack and execute the note; that “such representation was false and said jack was and is utterly worthless and of no value to the defendant, James Partridge.” He therefore alleged that the consideration for the note had failed, and he prayed that the note be canceled, and for general relief. Appellant further presented in the County Court a special plea in the nature of a cross action for damages in the sum of two hundred dollars because of the false representations alleged.

A trial in the County Court was had on the 20th day of January, 1908, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee, and appellant prosecuted an appeal to this court, which, on December 19, 1908, was dismissed for want of a final judgment, it not appearing that the judgment in any manner disposed of appellant’s cross plea for damages. (See unpublished conclusions in the case of James Partridge v. J. E. Wooton, No. 5876.) On the 15th day of October, 1909, appellee Wooton filed in the County Court a petition for a nunc pro tune order showing that appellant’s cross bill had been disposed of by the court’s *283 ruling upon a general demurrer 'to appellant’s said cross plea. Upon a hearing of the motion on October 20, 1909, the County Court granted it, and thereby, in effect, rendered the original judgment of the County Court final. To this proceeding appellant urged a number of objections, and has again appealed from the original judgment.

Several preliminary questions have been presented on this appeal, of which we will first dispose. Appellant first questions the admissibility of the evidence upon which the court acted in entering the nunc pro tunc order. This evidence consisted of formal bills of exception, duly made and filed at the time, to the original action of the court in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to appellant’s cross action for damages. While some authorities, including some of the earlier decisions of our own courts, seem to support appellant’s contention, we think it now settled in this State that in the correction of a judgment as authorized by the Revised Statutes (article 1356), the court may act upon his own recollection or upon such legal evidence, oral or otherwise, as to the court may seem proper. (See Ft. Worth & D. C. Ry. Co. v. Roberts, 98 Texas, 42; see, also, Freeman on Judgments, sec. 53.) FTo error, therefore, was committed in the particular mentioned.

Appellee, in turn, insists that the appeal should be dismissed because not prosecuted within the proper time, his insistence being that the time for an appeal to this court should be computed from the 20th of January, 1908, the date of the original judgment, instead of from the date of the entry of the nunc pro tunc order. If from the former date, appellant has lost his right of appeal; if from the latter date, it is conceded that the appeal now before us has been properly prosecuted. To aid us in the solution of the question thus presented no authorities of our own have been presented, nor, indeed, have we been cited to or able to find anything directly in point. In speaking of the entry of judgments nunc pro tunc, Mr. Freeman, in his work on Judgments (fourth edition), volume 1, section 67, among other things, says that: “For most purposes, the effect of the judgment is not different from what it would be had it not been entered mmc pro tunc, because until its rendition no proceedings could be taken for its enforcement. Therefore the statute of limitations does not commence to run against an action upon it until the date of its actual rendition,” citing Borer v. Chapman, 119 U. S., 587, which sustains the text.

In the case cited, among other things relating to the nunc pro tunc ■entry there considered, the court said: “The date of the entry is by a fiction of law made and considered to be the true date of the judgment for one purpose only, and that is to bind the defendant by the obligation of the judgment entered as of a date when he was in full life; but the right of the complainant in this appeal to enforce that judgment by the present proceeding certainly did not begin until after the judgment in that form was actually entered. Until that time the right was in abeyance; the litigation had, until thus ended, been continuously in progress. It can not be that the statute of limitations will *284 be allowed to commence to inn against a right until that right has accrued in a shape to be effectually enforced.”

In the case of Coe v. Erb, 59 Ohio St., 359, reported in 69 Am. St. Rep., 764, it was held that the entry of a judgment nunc pro tunc would not be held effective as a lien against a purchaser of real property from the judgment debtor without notice of the judgment, prior to its actual entry. So, in Fewlass v. Keesham, 88 Fed., 573, it was held that limitation did not begin to run against an action on a cost bond until the rendition of the judgment for costs against the principal, and that the fact that such judgment was entered nunc pro tunc as of a prior date did not affect the operation of the statute.

So that, it seems to us, whatever may be said under other circumstances, appellant’s right of appeal extended, not from the original entry of the judgment, but from the date of the entry of the nunc pro tunc order which rendered the original judgment effective. The court’s order upon general demurrer, dismissing appellant’s cross action for damages, ought to have appeared in the original judgment entry; but, as appears from the recitation in the nunc pro tunc order, its omission was due to the failure of the clerk, and appellant should not be prejudiced in his right of appeal thereby. The judgment, as formerly adjudicated by this court, was not final. Appellee recognized its unenforceability and sought its correction by the nunc pro tunc order. Until it was final we were without jurisdiction. At no period prior to the entry of the nunc pro tunc judgment could appellant successfully prosecute an appeal, and we, therefore, hold that his appeal has been taken in due time. O. C. & T. Ry. Co. v. Magee, 133 S. W., 901.

This brings us to a consideration of the merits of the appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W. 412, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 280, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/partridge-v-wooton-texapp-1910.