Renois v. Griffith

230 S.W. 1067, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 322
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1921
DocketNo. 8530.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 1067 (Renois v. Griffith) 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
Renois v. Griffith, 230 S.W. 1067, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 322 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in response to a motion filed by appellees to correct nunc pro tunc an error in the entry and record of a judgment many years previously rendered; the motion asserting a variance between the judgment theretofore uttered by the court and the minutes expressing it. The clerical error, the correction of which was sought, inheres, according to the allegations, in the identification of certain tracts of land by numbers. The original suit resulting in the judgment, the record of which is alleged to be erroneous, was a partition suit involving several tracts of land. It is alleged that a certain tract designated as tract No. 1 should have been designated as No. 4, and that referred to as No. 4 should have been indicated as No. 1. The judgment was entered in 1907. The alleged mistake was not discovered until the last of December, 1919. The land had been conveyed by those in whom appellees contend the judgment actually rendered put the title to it, and all parties seem by their attitude and conduct to have acquiesced, after the partition, in the understanding that the judgment was that for which appellees contend, until this proceeding was instituted. Upon discovering the actual terms of the judgment, as entered, appellees filed their motion, praying for an order correcting the entry to conform to and truthfully recite the judgment of the court as made. The motion having been granted, appellants duly prosecuted their appeal, and complain before this court against the decree upon various grounds.

The first assignment of error is, in effect, that the judgment is entirely unsupported by evidence, and is contrary to the undisputed evidence. This assignment of error, and the proposition and statement presented under it, set forth in comprehensive detail the position asserted. But we do not agree with appellant, and, without discussion of the evidence, hold that it was sufficient to support the judgment.

Under other assignments of error we are urged to reverse the action of the trial court, first, because appellees are guilty of delay and laches; second, because no one of the petitioners was a party to the original suit, and therefore none of them could maintain a motion to make the correction, the right *1068 to correct it being personal to the original party, against whose interest the mistake was made; and, third, because certain of appellees were permitted to intervene after certain nonresident defendants were cited, no notice of the intervention being given them.

[1] The defense of mere delay (which alone' does not constitute laches in any case) cannot be invoked in a proceeding of this nature. The court could, at any time after the judgment was entered, correct the ministerial error in the record, first giving notice to the parties at interest, in the absence of the intervention of rights of innocent parties who were not parties to the suit. No rights of any such innocent parties have intervened to be affected by the entry of the correction made.

[2] The fact that the petitioners were not parties to the original suit is immaterial. They were interested in the correction of the judgment. But, as said by the appellee’s counsel,' the right to have an error in the entry of the judgment corrected is not personal ; the right and power to make the correction are inherent in the court.

[3] The complaint against the action of the court in permitting some of the appellees to intervene without notice of the,intervention being given nonresident defendants cited to answer only the petition of the original petitioners is without merit. The interveners merely adopted the allegations of the motion already filed, proper notice of the pendency of which had been given all the appellants, and, no new matter having been alleged by the interveners, appellants could not have been injured. The presence of the inter-veners in the proceeding in no way affected the judgment entered, which would have been the same, both in form and substance, in their absence. The judgment could have been entered without the filing óf any motion at all. The opinion of the Supreme Court in the case of Coleman v. Zapp, 105 Tex. 491, 151 S. W. 1040, speaking through Chief Justice Phillips, we think effectually applies, and sustains the judgment in this case. We could dispose of it in no discussion of our own so apt as the language of the opinion in that case as follows:

“The judgment of a court is what the court pronounces. Its rendition is the judicial act by which the court settles and declares the decision of the law upon the matters at issue. Its entry is the ministerial act by which an enduring evidence of the judicial act is afforded. The failure of the minute entry to correctly or fully recite what the court judicially determined does not annul the act of the court, which remains the judgment of the court notwithstanding its imperfect record. Freeman on Judgments, § 38. Hence it is that from the earliest times the power of correcting or amending their records, by nunc pro tunc entry, so as to faithfully recite their action, has been possessed and exercised by the courts as an inherent right, independent of any statute, and, in the absence of express provision, unaffected by limitation. Freeman on Judgments, § 56; 18 Ency. PI. & Prac. p. 459. Our statutes providing for the correction of mistakes in the record of judgments and decrees (articles 1356 and 1357, Sayles’ Civil Stat.) govern the procedure of its exercise; but they are only cumulative of this inherent power of the courts to have their records at all times speak the truth. If a court is made aware that through mistake or omission its records do not recite its judgment as actually rendered, we do not doubt that it is not only the right, but the duty, of the court, of its own motion and after due notice to the parties, to order the proper, entry. The nature of a judicial record, the accuracy of which is the peculiar concern of the court, and which for that reason and to that extent remains within the court’s control, forbids that its correctness as an expression or evidence of judicial action should depend upon the inauguration of a proceeding by the parties, and it is therefore plain that such a proceeding only invokes an authority which the court may exercise of its own accord. In Ximenes v. Ximenes, 43 Tex. 458, Judge Moore quoted the following language from the opinion of Judge Wheeler in Burnett v. State, 14 Tex. 456: ‘Every court has the right to judge of its own records and minutes, and, if it appear satisfactorily to them that an order was actually made at a former term and omitted to be entered by the clerk, they may at any time direct such order to be entered on the records of the term when it was made.’ And then announced: ‘And there can be no doubt, we think, that this court may, at a subsequent term after a final judgment, if there is the proper predicate for it, correct clerical errors or mistakes, cure defects of form, or add such clause as may be necessary to carry out the judgment of . the court, make the entry in the minutes correspond with and correctly express the judgment actually rendered, as shown by the entire record.’ In Whit-taker v. Gee, 63 Tex.

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

Related

Blain v. Broussard
99 S.W.2d 993 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Bray v. City of Corsicana
280 S.W. 609 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 1067, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renois-v-griffith-texapp-1921.